Dear Frank,

You are forcefully arguing essentially that others are wrong if we feel an 
existing statistic continues to be useful, and instead insist that it be 
outlawed so that we may not make use of it, just in case someone misinterprets 
it.

Very well

I do however express disquiet that we as software developers feel browbeaten to 
remove the output we find useful because “the community” feel that it is 
obsolete.

I feel that Jacob’s short story on this thread illustrates that educating the 
next generation of crystallographers to understand what all of the numbers mean 
is critical, and that a numerological approach of trying to optimise any one 
statistic is essentially doomed. Precisely the same argument could be made for 
people cutting the “resolution” at the wrong place in order to improve the 
average I/sig(I) of the data set.

Denying access to information is not a solution to misinterpretation, from 
where I am sat, however I acknowledge that other points of view exist.

Best wishes Graeme


On 5 Jul 2017, at 12:11, Frank von Delft 
<frank.vonde...@sgc.ox.ac.uk<mailto:frank.vonde...@sgc.ox.ac.uk>> wrote:


Graeme, Andrew

Jacob is not arguing against an R-based statistic;  he's pointing out that 
leaving out the multiplicity-weighting is prehistoric (Diederichs & Karplus 
published it 20 years ago!).

So indeed:   Rmerge, Rpim and I/sigI give different information.  As you say.

But no:   Rmerge and Rmeas and Rcryst do NOT give different information.  
Except:

  * Rmerge is a (potentially) misleading version of Rmeas.

  * Rcryst and Rmerge and Rsym are terms that no longer have significance in 
the single cryo-dataset world.

phx.



On 05/07/2017 09:43, Andrew Leslie wrote:

I would like to support Graeme in his wish to retain Rmerge in Table 1, 
essentially for exactly the same reasons.

I also strongly support Francis Reyes comment about the usefulness of Rmerge at 
low resolution, and I would add to his list that it can also, in some 
circumstances, be more indicative of the wrong choice of symmetry (too high) 
than the statistics that come from POINTLESS (excellent though that program 
is!).

Andrew
On 5 Jul 2017, at 05:44, Graeme Winter 
<graeme.win...@gmail.com<mailto:graeme.win...@gmail.com>> wrote:

HI Jacob

Yes, I got this - and I appreciate the benefit of Rmeas for dealing with 
measuring agreement for small-multiplicity observations. Having this *as well* 
is very useful and I agree Rmeas / Rpim / CC-half should be the primary 
“quality” statistics.

However, you asked if there is any reason to *keep* rather than *eliminate* 
Rmerge, and I offered one :o)

I do not see what harm there is reporting Rmerge, even if it is just used in 
the inner shell or just used to capture a flavour of the data set overall. I 
also appreciate that Rmeas converges to the same value for large multiplicity 
i.e.:

                                           Overall  InnerShell  OuterShell
Low resolution limit                       39.02     39.02      1.39
High resolution limit                       1.35      6.04      1.35

Rmerge  (within I+/I-)                     0.080     0.057     2.871
Rmerge  (all I+ and I-)                    0.081     0.059     2.922
Rmeas (within I+/I-)                       0.081     0.058     2.940
Rmeas (all I+ & I-)                        0.082     0.059     2.958
Rpim (within I+/I-)                        0.013     0.009     0.628
Rpim (all I+ & I-)                         0.009     0.007     0.453
Rmerge in top intensity bin                0.050        -         -
Total number of observations             1265512     16212     53490
Total number unique                        17515       224      1280
Mean((I)/sd(I))                             29.7     104.3       1.5
Mn(I) half-set correlation CC(1/2)         1.000     1.000     0.778
Completeness                               100.0      99.7     100.0
Multiplicity                                72.3      72.4      41.8

Anomalous completeness                     100.0     100.0     100.0
Anomalous multiplicity                      37.2      42.7      21.0
DelAnom correlation between half-sets      0.497     0.766    -0.026
Mid-Slope of Anom Normal Probability       1.039       -         -

(this is a good case for Rpim & CC-half as resolution limit criteria)

If the statistics you want to use are there & some others also, what is the 
pressure to remove them? Surely we want to educate on how best to interpret the 
entire table above to get a fuller picture of the overall quality of the data? 
My 0th-order request would be to publish the three shells as above ;o)

Cheers Graeme



On 4 Jul 2017, at 22:09, Keller, Jacob 
<kell...@janelia.hhmi.org<mailto:kell...@janelia.hhmi.org>> wrote:

I suggested replacing Rmerge/sym/cryst with Rmeas, not Rpim. Rmeas is simply 
(Rmerge * sqrt(n/n-1)) where n is the number of measurements of that 
reflection. It's merely a way of correcting for the multiplicity-related 
artifact of Rmerge, which is becoming even more of a problem with data sets of 
increasing variability in multiplicity. Consider the case of comparing a data 
set with a multiplicity of 2 versus one of 100: equivalent data quality would 
yield Rmerges diverging by a factor of ~1.4. But this has all been covered 
before in several papers. It can be and is reported in resolution bins, so can 
used exactly as you say. So, why not "disappear" Rmerge from the software?

The only reason I could come up with for keeping it is historical reasons or 
comparisons to previous datasets, but anyway those comparisons would be 
confounded by variabities in multiplicity and a hundred other things, so come 
on, developers, just comment it out!

JPK




-----Original Message-----
From: graeme.win...@diamond.ac.uk<mailto:graeme.win...@diamond.ac.uk> 
[mailto:graeme.win...@diamond.ac.uk]
Sent: Tuesday, July 04, 2017 4:37 PM
To: Keller, Jacob <kell...@janelia.hhmi.org<mailto:kell...@janelia.hhmi.org>>
Cc: ccp4bb@jiscmail.ac.uk<mailto:ccp4bb@jiscmail.ac.uk>
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] Rmergicide Through Programming

HI Jacob

Unbiased estimate of the true unmerged I/sig(I) of your data (I find this 
particularly useful at low resolution) i.e. if your inner shell Rmerge is 10% 
your data agree very poorly; if 2% says your data agree very well provided you 
have sensible multiplicity… obviously depends on sensible interpretation. Rpim 
hides this (though tells you more about the quality of average measurement)

Essentially, for I/sig(I) you can (by and large) adjust your sig(I) values 
however you like if you were so inclined. You can only adjust Rmerge by 
excluding measurements.

I would therefore defend that - amongst the other stats you enumerate below - 
it still has a place

Cheers Graeme

On 4 Jul 2017, at 14:10, Keller, Jacob 
<kell...@janelia.hhmi.org<mailto:kell...@janelia.hhmi.org>> wrote:

Rmerge does contain information which complements the others.

What information? I was trying to think of a counterargument to what I 
proposed, but could not think of a reason in the world to keep reporting it.

JPK


On 4 Jul 2017, at 12:00, Keller, Jacob 
<kell...@janelia.hhmi.org<mailto:kell...@janelia.hhmi.org><mailto:kell...@janelia.hhmi.org>>
 wrote:

Dear Crystallographers,

Having been repeatedly chagrinned about the continued use and reporting of 
Rmerge rather than Rmeas or similar, I thought of a potential way to promote 
the change: what if merging programs would completely omit Rmerge/cryst/sym? Is 
there some reason to continue to report these stats, or are they just 
grandfathered into the software? I doubt that any journal or crystallographer 
would insist on reporting Rmerge per se. So, I wonder what developers would 
think about commenting out a few lines of their code, seeing what happens? 
Maybe a comment to the effect of "Rmerge is now deprecated; use Rmeas" would be 
useful as well. Would something catastrophic happen?

All the best,

Jacob Keller

*******************************************
Jacob Pearson Keller, PhD
Research Scientist
HHMI Janelia Research Campus / Looger lab
Phone: (571)209-4000 x3159
Email: 
kell...@janelia.hhmi.org<mailto:kell...@janelia.hhmi.org><mailto:kell...@janelia.hhmi.org>
*******************************************


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