This article addresses 2-dimensional layout of high-dimensional biomedical datasets, which is useful for browsing them efficiently. We employ the Isomap technique, which is based on classical MDS (multi-dimensional scaling) but seeks to preserve the intrinsic geometry of the data, as captured in the geodesic manifold distances between all pairs of data points while classical approaches can see just the Euclidean structure. According to first two of Isomap's coordinates, the high-dimensional data points are arranged in a plane. Experimental results with images of marine creatures' shapes and 3D bone renderings are presented.
Miguel Peon Quiros, Francesco Varrato, Chiara Gabella, Manuel Simon Paul Cubero-Castan
Andreas Mortensen, David Hernandez Escobar, Léa Deillon, Alejandra Inés Slagter, Eva Luisa Vogt, Jonathan Aristya Setyadji
Katie Sabrina Catherine Rosie Marsden