On Thu, Mar 31, 2011 at 7:42 AM, Jacob Keller <
j-kell...@fsm.northwestern.edu> wrote:

> Why not have the "b-factors take care of it" until some magic cutoff
> number? When they reach the cutoff, two things happen:
>
> 1. Occupancies are set to zero for those side chains, to represent our
> lack of ability to model the region,
>
> 2. B-factors are set to exactly 500, as a "flag" allowing casual
> b-factor-savvy users to identify suspicious regions, since they will
> probably not see occupancies, but *will* see b-factors. Therefore, all
> 0-occupancy atoms will automatically have b-factors = 500. I believe
> it is true that if the occupancies are zero, the b-factors are totally
> irrelevant for all calculations?
>
> Doesn't this satisfy both parties?


No, because now you're not only presenting the user with made-up
coordinates, you're giving them a made-up B-factor as well, so there is
effectively no property of those atoms that is based on experimental data
rather than subjective criteria.  Regardless of any  problems inherent in
letting the B-factors take care of all forms of disorder, they are
nonetheless a refined parameter.

-Nat

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