Sorry, perhaps what I was thinking was to use the Icalc to proportionally push 
up the Iobs to push the negative Is to positive numbers.

But I guess that would bias the Iobs .... ?

Again just questions rather than suggestions.

D 

-----Original Message-----
From: Douglas Theobald [mailto:dtheob...@brandeis.edu] 
Sent: 20 June 2013 17:49
To: Bellini, Domenico (DLSLtd,RAL,DIA); ccp4bb
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] ctruncate bug?

Seems to me that the negative Is should be dealt with early on, in the 
integration step.  Why exactly do integration programs report negative Is to 
begin with?


On Jun 20, 2013, at 12:45 PM, Dom Bellini <dom.bell...@diamond.ac.uk> wrote:

> Wouldnt be possible to take advantage of negative Is to extrapolate/estimate 
> the decay of scattering background (kind of Wilson plot of background 
> scattering) to flat out the background and push all the Is to positive values?
> 
> More of a question rather than a suggestion ...
> 
> D
> 
> 
> 
> From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of 
> Ian Tickle
> Sent: 20 June 2013 17:34
> To: ccp4bb
> Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] ctruncate bug?
> 
> Yes higher R factors is the usual reason people don't like I-based refinement!
> 
> Anyway, refining against Is doesn't solve the problem, it only postpones it: 
> you still need the Fs for maps! (though errors in Fs may be less critical 
> then).
> -- Ian
> 
> On 20 June 2013 17:20, Dale Tronrud 
> <det...@uoxray.uoregon.edu<mailto:det...@uoxray.uoregon.edu>> wrote:
>   If you are refining against F's you have to find some way to avoid 
> calculating the square root of a negative number.  That is why people 
> have historically rejected negative I's and why Truncate and cTruncate 
> were invented.
> 
>   When refining against I, the calculation of (Iobs - Icalc)^2 
> couldn't care less if Iobs happens to be negative.
> 
>   As for why people still refine against F...  When I was distributing 
> a refinement package it could refine against I but no one wanted to do 
> that.  The "R values" ended up higher, but they were looking at R 
> values calculated from F's.  Of course the F based R values are lower 
> when you refine against F's, that means nothing.
> 
>   If we could get the PDB to report both the F and I based R values 
> for all models maybe we could get a start toward moving to intensity 
> refinement.
> 
> Dale Tronrud
> 
> 
> On 06/20/2013 09:06 AM, Douglas Theobald wrote:
> Just trying to understand the basic issues here.  How could refining directly 
> against intensities solve the fundamental problem of negative intensity 
> values?
> 
> 
> On Jun 20, 2013, at 11:34 AM, Bernhard Rupp 
> <hofkristall...@gmail.com<mailto:hofkristall...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> As a maybe better alternative, we should (once again) consider to refine 
> against intensities (and I guess George Sheldrick would agree here).
> 
> I have a simple question - what exactly, short of some sort of historic 
> inertia (or memory lapse), is the reason NOT to refine against intensities?
> 
> Best, BR
> 
> 
> 
> 
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