Dear Gerard,                             (CC: Qiu-Xing, Carlos-Oscar,
Jose-Maria and all others).


Don’t be fooled by all respondents who “*have tried to stay away from these
interchanges about resolution*” and are trying to ride the moral high horse
on these matters!


I fully agree with you that with the current merging of the X-ray
crystallography and the cryo-EM structural-biology communities it would be
nice if one could “discuss the topic of resolution in a dispassionate way,
so as to jointly gain an improved and shared understanding of the matter,
without feeling  implicitly under pressure to support one side or the
other”.


I do also understand that you may be a bit shocked by the direct language I
used in responding to Jose-Maria and Carlos-Oscar.  Rest assured, there is
good reason for that as I will try to explain. Both you and I are senior
(no offence intended) researchers in structural-biology methodology and,
whereas I am a newbie in X-ray crystallography, you are new to cryo-EM. The
issues that lead to these “vivid” verbal exchanges precede your entering
into cryo-EM field by various decades, and you may not be aware of that
history:


In 1981 Joachim Frank introduced a “Differential Phase Residual” which I
directly recognised as having an erroneous normalisation (a *sum* rather
than the *product* of two amplitudes were used). I have introduced the
general FRC/FSC metrics (1982/1986) which have now become the accepted
“gold-standard” resolution metrics. Frank, in response, published a
thousand-and-one reasons why de DPR was better than the FRC/FSC, including
that it gave more “conservative” results. Because of this reluctance to
admit to an error, I even went to the effort of explicitly correcting the
flawed phase residual for them (in ~1987) …  To no avail! Frank in ~2010,
still not accepting the corrections, published a “remedy” to their flawed
DPR normalisation which is plainly hilarious (see our BioRxiv 2017 paper),
we nicknamed their “solution” the “elastic-band” resolution metric.



We now still see Jose-Maria and Carlos-Oscar spending 5 precious pages on
the flawed DPR, fully ignoring the fact that this DPR stuff was binned some
4 decades ago! And that was not even the main point of my earlier response!
I was genuinely irritated by their questioning the Hermitian symmetry of
the FTs of our 3D maps. They put out statements like that, in a
smoke-screen pseudo-mathematical formulation, and expect us to accept their
authority on that matter! They previously attacked our (2015)
camera-normalisation paper in an equally incoherent way and even lengthy
phone calls – that Jose-Maria refers to – did not resolve that issue. Their
incoherent statements against our paper remain out there in the literature
until today.



In contrast, I am pleased to see Qiu-Xing’s response who elaborates on
scientifically correct issues: inner products between signal and noise
vectors and the central limit theorem, etc. (Qiu-Xing, have you thought
about what happens when you are close to the origin in Fourier Space? Have
you seen #WhyOWhy #9?).



In this day and age, it is very easy to publish rubbish! It remains,
however, virtually impossible to remove rubbish from the literature. (See:
#WhyOWhy #17 on Twitter @marin_van_heel).  Our 2017 BioRxiv paper (
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/224402v1) is aimed at removing some
seriously flawed papers from the literature, above all the Frank & Al-Ali
1975 Nature paper.  Nature told us that our BioRxiv paper was not of
general interest... It is difficult to convince peers and peer-review
journals alike, that the emperor really has no clothes on!



More than just two pennies,

Marin

On Tue, Feb 25, 2020 at 10:04 AM Jiang,Qiu-Xing <qxji...@ufl.edu> wrote:

> Dear all,
> I am putting this off the mailing list for discussion. It is interesting
> to hear the resolution discussion again. I really appreciate the passion in
> sorting this out.
> I had a thought about this while studying the property of the Wiener's
> filter when in Rockefeller. I would like to submit  it here.
>
> Statistically, the expectation of the inner product of S (signal) and N
> (noise) should follow the large number theorem. With a Fourier Shell being
> sampled in the reciprocal space, N(k) of observations (without considering
> symmetry) is roughly 2 * pi * k^2. With a box size of 200 used in single
> particle analysis, N(5) is ~160 at ~40 fold of the pixel size. The zone of
> (k = [5,100]) appears in a good area of applying the theorem.
>
> There are  certainly other complicating factors in the calculations that
> may narrow it down. I thought that the Central Limit Theorem would justify
> this application. If doable, a variation for the calculations of FSC could
> be helpful in testing the applicability. Hope that this would add a bit to
> the discussion. Please correct me if I am completely off the scope.
>
> Best,
>
> Qiu-Xing
> Dept. Microbiology & Cell Science, IFAS, UF
>
>
> On 2/23/20, 2:42 PM, "Collaborative Computational Project in Electron
> cryo-Microscopy on behalf of Gerard Bricogne" <cc...@jiscmail.ac.uk on
> behalf of g...@globalphasing.com> wrote:
>
>     [External Email]
>
>     Gentlemen,
>
>          Please consider for a moment that by such intemperate language and
>     tone, you are making a topic of fundamental importance to both the MX
> and
>     the EM communities into a no-go area. This cannot be good for anyone's
>     reputation nor for the two fields in general. It has to be possible to
>     discuss the topic of "resolution" in a dispassionate way, so as to
> jointly
>     gain an improved and shared understanding of the matter, without
> feeling
>     implicitly under pressure to support one side or the other. An
> acrimonious
>     dispute like this one can only be putting people off getting involved
> in the
>     discussion, which is exactly the opposite of what a thread on a
> scientific
>     bulletin board should be doing.
>
>
>          With best wishes,
>
>               Gerard.
>
>     --
>     On Sun, Feb 23, 2020 at 08:15:34AM -0300, Marin van Heel wrote:
>     > Hi Carlos Oscar and Jose-Maria,
>     >
>     > I choose to answer you guys first, because it will take little of my
> time
>     > to counter your criticism and because I have long since been less
> than
>     > amused by your published, ill-conceived criticism:
>     >
>     > “*Marin, I always suffer with your reference to sloppy statistics.
> If we
>     > take your paper of 2005 where the 1/2 bit criterion was proposed,
> Eqs. 4 to
>     > 15 have completely ignored the fact that you are dealing with Fourier
>     > components, that are complex numbers, and consequently you have to
> deal
>     > with random variables that have TWO components, which moreover the
> real and
>     > imaginary part are not independent and, in their turn, they are not
>     > independent of the nearby Fourier coefficients so that for computing
> radial
>     > averages you would need to account for the correlation among
> coefficients*”
>     >
>     > I had seen this argumentation against our (2005) paper in your
>     > manuscript/paper years back. I was so stunned by the level of
>     > misunderstanding expressed in your manuscript that I chose not to
> spend any
>     > time reacting to those statements. Now that you choose to so openly
> display
>     > your thoughts on the matter, I have no other choice than to spell
> out your
>     > errors in public.
>     >
>     >
>     >
>     > All complex arrays in our 2005 paper are Hermitian (since they are
> the FTs
>     > of real data), and so are all their inner products. In all the
> integrals
>     > over rings one always averages a complex Fourier-space voxel with its
>     > Hermitian conjugate yielding *ONE* real value (times two)!  Without
> that
>     > Hermitian property, FRCs and FSCs, which are real normalised
> correlation
>     > functions would not even have been possible. I was - and still am -
> stunned
>     > by this level of misunderstanding!
>     >
>     >
>     >
>     > This is a blatant blunder that you are propagating over years, a
> blunder
>     > that does not do any good to your reputation, yet also a blunder
> that has
>     > probably damaged to our research income. The fact that you can
> divulgate
>     > such rubbish and leave it out there for years for referees to read
> (who are
>     > possibly not as well educated in physics and mathematics) will do –
> and may
>     > already have done – damage to our research.  An apology is
> appropriate but
>     > an apology is not enough.
>     >
>     >
>     >
>     > Maybe you should ask your granting agencies how to transfer 25% of
> your
>     > grant income to our research, in compensation of damages created by
> your
>     > blunder!
>     >
>     >
>     >
>     > Success with your request!
>     >
>     >
>     >
>     > Marin
>     >
>     >
>     >
>     > PS. You have also missed that our 2005 paper explicitly includes the
>     > influence of the size of the object within the sampling box (your:
> “*they
>     > are not independent of the nearby Fourier coefficients*”). I remain
>     > flabbergasted.
>     >
>     > On Fri, Feb 21, 2020 at 3:15 PM Carlos Oscar Sorzano <
> c...@cnb.csic.es>
>     > wrote:
>     >
>     > > Dear all,
>     > >
>     > > I always try to refrain myself from getting into these
> discussions, but I
>     > > cannot resist more the temptation. Here are some more ideas that I
> hope
>     > > bring more light than confusion:
>     > >
>     > > - There must be some functional relationship between the FSC and
> the SNR,
>     > > but the exact analytical form of this relationship is unknown (I
> suspect
>     > > that it must be at least monotonic, the worse the SNR, the worse
> FSC; but
>     > > even this is difficult to prove). The relationship we normally use
>     > > FSC=SNR/(1+SNR) was derived in a context that does not apply to
> CryoEM (1D
>     > > stationary signals in real space; our molecules are not
> stationary), and
>     > > consequently any reasoning of any threshold based on this
> relationship is
>     > > incorrect (see our review).
>     > >
>     > > - Still, as long as we all use the same threshold, the reported
>     > > resolutions are comparable to each other. In that regard, I am
> happy that
>     > > we have set 0.143 (although any other number would have served the
> purpose)
>     > > as the standard.
>     > >
>     > > - I totally agree with Steve that the full FSC is much more
> informative
>     > > than its crossing with the threshold. Specially, because we should
> be much
>     > > more worried about its behavior when it has high values than when
> it has
>     > > low values. Before crossing the threshold it should be as high as
> possible,
>     > > and that is the "true measure" of goodness of the map. When it
> crosses the
>     > > threshold of 0.143, it has too low SNR, and by definition, that is
> a very
>     > > unstable part of the FSC, resulting in relatively unstable reports
> of
>     > > resolution. We made some tests about the variability of the FSC
> (refining
>     > > random splits of the dataset), trying to put the error bars that
> Steve was
>     > > asking for, and it turned out to be pretty reproducible (rather low
>     > > variance except in the region when it crosses the threshold) as
> long as the
>     > > dataset was large enough (which is the current state).
>     > >
>     > > - @Marin, I always suffer with your reference to sloppy
> statistics. If we
>     > > take your paper of 2005 where the 1/2 bit criterion was proposed (
>     > >
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.sciencedirect.com_science_article_pii_S1047847705001292&d=DwIDaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=CtreZZV11Kjskmte_nXfUg&m=j6hRkCCWPpdjRisEaLTAbxGyF56D9slzoXwJuMZj6TA&s=DlbDmyxTMCcT3UlmBDVmcksQSr_fXW62W0comeRG5jc&e=
> ),
>     > > Eqs. 4 to 15 have completely ignored the fact that you are dealing
> with
>     > > Fourier components, that are complex numbers, and consequently you
> have to
>     > > deal with random variables that have two components, which
> moreover the
>     > > real and imaginary part are not independent and, in their turn,
> they are
>     > > not independent of the nearby Fourier coefficients so that for
> computing
>     > > radial averages you would need to account for the correlation among
>     > > coefficients (
>     > >
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.aimspress.com_fileOther_PDF_biophysics_20150102.pdf&d=DwIDaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=CtreZZV11Kjskmte_nXfUg&m=j6hRkCCWPpdjRisEaLTAbxGyF56D9slzoXwJuMZj6TA&s=jfE_pGGmfLVlNfmlhBwXTAqVSBEH2XnSFHZxiyCqLug&e=
> ). For
>     > > properly dealing the statistics, at least one needs to carry out a
>     > > two-dimensional reasoning, including the complex conjugate
> multiplication
>     > > which is all missing in your derivation, rather than treating
> everything as
>     > > one-dimensional, real valued random variables. Additionally,
> embedded in
>     > > your whole reasoning is the idea that the expected value of a
> ratio is the
>     > > ratio of the expected values, that is a 0-th order Taylor
> approximation of
>     > > the mean of the distribution of a ratio between two random
> variables.
>     > > Finally, I always find an extreme difficulty to understand the 1
> bit or 1/2
>     > > bit criteria, that is, what is the relationship between the
> channel's
>     > > capacity formula of Shannon (
>     > >
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__en.wikipedia.org_wiki_Shannon-25E2-2580-2593Hartley-5Ftheorem&d=DwIDaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=CtreZZV11Kjskmte_nXfUg&m=j6hRkCCWPpdjRisEaLTAbxGyF56D9slzoXwJuMZj6TA&s=ol00vkkj5THaa1SlCIi1-LhuBLpxjrFvlreKZdcxufw&e=
> ) and our
>     > > FSC (we do not have any channel through which we are
> "transmitting" our
>     > > volume, although it is true we have a model y=x+n that is the same
> as in
>     > > signal transmission, it is not true that the average information
> of a
>     > > signal is log2(1+SNR); for me, the only relationship is that the
> SNR
>     > > appears in both formulas, FSC and channel capacity, but that does
> not
>     > > automatically make them comparable and interchangeble). This is
> not a
>     > > criticism on your work. I think the FSC is a very useful tool to
> measure
>     > > some properties of the reconstruction process and the quality of
> the
>     > > dataset (not everything is measured by the FSC) and it also has its
>     > > drawbacks (for instance, systematic errors are rewarded by the FSC
> as they
>     > > are reproducible in both halves). Moreover, I think you are an
> extremely
>     > > intelligent person, who I consider a good friend, with a very good
>     > > intuition about image processing and who has brought very
> interesting ideas
>     > > and methodologies into the field. Only that we cannot become crazy
> about
>     > > the FSC threshold and the reported resolution, as the most
> interesting part
>     > > of the FSC is not when it is low, but when it is high.
>     > >
>     > > I hope I can keep refraining myself in the future :-)
>     > >
>     > > Cheers, Carlos Oscar
>     > >
>     > > On 2/21/20 6:19 PM, Ludtke, Steven J. wrote:
>     > >
>     > > I've been steadfastly refusing to get myself dragged in this time,
> but
>     > > with this very sensible statement (which I am largely in agreement
> with), I
>     > > thought I'd throw in one thought, just to stir the pot a little
> more.
>     > >
>     > > This is not a new idea, but I think it is the most sensible
> strategy I've
>     > > heard proposed, and addresses Marin's concerns in a more
> conventional way.
>     > > What we are talking about here is the statistical noise present in
> the FSC
>     > > curves themselves. Viewed from the framework of traditional error
> analysis
>     > > and propagation of uncertainties, which pretty much every
> scientist should
>     > > be familiar with since high-school, (and thus would not be
> confusing to the
>     > > non statisticians)  the 'correct' solution to this issue is not to
> adjust
>     > > the threshold, but to present FSC curves with error bars.
>     > >
>     > > One can then use a fixed threshold at a level based on expectation
> values,
>     > > and simply produce a resolution value which also has an associated
>     > > uncertainty. This is much better than using a variable threshold
> and still
>     > > producing a single number with no uncertainty estimate!  Not only
> does this
>     > > approach account for the statistical noise in the FSC curve, but
> it also
>     > > should stop people from reporting resolutions as 2.3397 Å, as it
> would be
>     > > silly to say 2.3397 +- 0.2.
>     > >
>     > > The cross terms are not ignored, but are used in the production of
> the
>     > > error bars. This is a very simple approach, which is certainly
> closer to
>     > > being correct than the fixed threshold without error-bars
> approach, and it
>     > > solves many of the issues we have with resolution reporting people
> do.  Of
>     > > course we still have people who will insist that 3.2+-0.2 is
> better than
>     > > 3.3+-0.2, but there isn't much you can do about them... (other
> than beat
>     > > them over the head with a statistics textbook).
>     > >
>     > > The caveat, of course, is that like all propagation of uncertainty
> that it
>     > > is a linear approximation, and the correlation axis isn't linear,
> so the
>     > > typical Normal distributions with linear propagation used to
> justify
>     > > propagation of uncertainty aren't _strictly_ true. However, the
>     > > approximation is fine as long as the error bars are reasonably
> small
>     > > compared to the -1 to 1 range of the correlation axis. Each
> individual
>     > > error bar is computed around its expectation value, so the overall
>     > > nonlinearity of the correlation isn't a concern.
>     > >
>     > >
>     > >
>     > >
>     > >
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>     > > Steven Ludtke, Ph.D. <slud...@bcm.edu>                      Baylor
>     > > College of Medicine
>     > > Charles C. Bell Jr., Professor of Structural Biology
>     > > Dept. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology                      (
>     > >
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.bcm.edu_biochem&d=DwIDaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=CtreZZV11Kjskmte_nXfUg&m=j6hRkCCWPpdjRisEaLTAbxGyF56D9slzoXwJuMZj6TA&s=6KOWpbi5ThELOdJUK384kKMmxqDeOnZJJEUbfgx52OI&e=
> )
>     > > Academic Director, CryoEM Core
>     (
>     > > cryoem.bcm.edu)
>     > > Co-Director CIBR Center                                    (
>     > >
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.bcm.edu_research_cibr&d=DwIDaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=CtreZZV11Kjskmte_nXfUg&m=j6hRkCCWPpdjRisEaLTAbxGyF56D9slzoXwJuMZj6TA&s=BL1XZh2Op32QixrenpbaeIqobWAy0k_asD7bCjoOTFc&e=
> )
>     > >
>     > >
>     > >
>     > > On Feb 21, 2020, at 10:34 AM, Alexis Rohou <a.ro...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>     > >
>     > > ****CAUTION:*** This email is not from a BCM Source. Only click
> links or
>     > > open attachments you know are safe.*
>     > > ------------------------------
>     > > Hi all,
>     > >
>     > > For those bewildered by Marin's insistence that everyone's been
> messing up
>     > > their stats since the bronze age, I'd like to offer what my
> understanding
>     > > of the situation. More details in this thread from a few years ago
> on the
>     > > exact same topic:
>     > >
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu_pipermail_3dem_2015-2DAugust_003939.html&d=DwIDaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=CtreZZV11Kjskmte_nXfUg&m=j6hRkCCWPpdjRisEaLTAbxGyF56D9slzoXwJuMZj6TA&s=m7ayURBE1-8iccf-3LWUDbTqGCfSjPjJbP-Kpmmb_Lo&e=
>     > > <
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu_pipermail_3dem_2015-2DAugust_003939.html&d=DwMFaQ&c=ZQs-KZ8oxEw0p81sqgiaRA&r=Dk5VoQQ-wINYVssLMZihyC5Dj_sWYKxCyKz9E4Lp3gc&m=UWn2RUCMENrXjn3JLSwlIU6Zmp_JYnRrXesjtsM1u2E&s=CZ3YcAV1LVKXsLT0KjCIRby6j3XPA6GqZcOVP3nMyK0&e=
> >
>     > >
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu_pipermail_3dem_2015-2DAugust_003944.html&d=DwIDaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=CtreZZV11Kjskmte_nXfUg&m=j6hRkCCWPpdjRisEaLTAbxGyF56D9slzoXwJuMZj6TA&s=P96CzYrwLWuCc6g8ZMHMyn8XdqCiXn_OQkDuoqI2K2s&e=
>     > > <
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu_pipermail_3dem_2015-2DAugust_003944.html&d=DwMFaQ&c=ZQs-KZ8oxEw0p81sqgiaRA&r=Dk5VoQQ-wINYVssLMZihyC5Dj_sWYKxCyKz9E4Lp3gc&m=UWn2RUCMENrXjn3JLSwlIU6Zmp_JYnRrXesjtsM1u2E&s=oG6lGnei74jC5VVGsfFAdiTpIxrZhs_IH2mH0re5QRM&e=
> >
>     > >
>     > > Notwithstanding notational problems (e.g. strict equations as
> opposed to
>     > > approximation symbols, or omission of symbols to denote
> estimation), I
>     > > believe Frank & Al-Ali and "descendent" papers (e.g. appendix of
> Rosenthal
>     > > & Henderson 2003) are fine. The cross terms that Marin is agitated
> about
>     > > indeed do in fact have an expectation value of 0.0 (in the
> ensemble; if the
>     > > experiment were performed an infinite number of times with
> different
>     > > realizations of noise). I don't believe Pawel or Jose Maria or any
> of the
>     > > other authors really believe that the cross-terms are orthogonal.
>     > >
>     > > When N (the number of independent Fouier voxels in a shell) is
> large
>     > > enough, mean(Signal x Noise) ~ 0.0 is only an approximation, but a
> pretty
>     > > good one, even for a single FSC experiment. This is why, in my
> book,
>     > > derivations that depend on Frank & Al-Ali are OK, under the strict
>     > > assumption that N is large. Numerically, this becomes apparent
> when Marin's
>     > > half-bit criterion is plotted - asymptotically it has the same
> behavior as
>     > > a constant threshold.
>     > >
>     > > So, is Marin wrong to worry about this? No, I don't think so.
> There are
>     > > indeed cases where the assumption of large N is broken. And under
> those
>     > > circumstances, any fixed threshold (0.143, 0.5, whatever) is
> dangerous.
>     > > This is illustrated in figures of van Heel & Schatz (2005). Small
> boxes,
>     > > high-symmetry, small objects in large boxes, and a number of other
>     > > conditions can make fixed thresholds dangerous.
>     > >
>     > > It would indeed be better to use a non-fixed threshold. So why am
> I not
>     > > using the 1/2-bit criterion in my own work? While numerically it
> behaves
>     > > well at most resolution ranges, I was not convinced by Marin's
> derivation
>     > > in 2005. Philosophically though, I think he's right - we should
> aim for FSC
>     > > thresholds that are more robust to the kinds of edge cases
> mentioned above.
>     > > It would be the right thing to do.
>     > >
>     > > Hope this helps,
>     > > Alexis
>     > >
>     > >
>     > >
>     > > On Sun, Feb 16, 2020 at 9:00 AM Penczek, Pawel A <
>     > > pawel.a.penc...@uth.tmc.edu> wrote:
>     > >
>     > >> Marin,
>     > >>
>     > >> The statistics in 2010 review is fine. You may disagree with
> assumptions,
>     > >> but I can assure you the “statistics” (as you call it) is fine.
> Careful
>     > >> reading of the paper would reveal to you this much.
>     > >>
>     > >> Regards,
>     > >> Pawel
>     > >>
>     > >> On Feb 16, 2020, at 10:38 AM, Marin van Heel <
>     > >> marin.vanh...@googlemail.com> wrote:
>     > >>
>     > >>
>     > >>
>     > >> ***** EXTERNAL EMAIL *****
>     > >> Dear Pawel and All others ....
>     > >>
>     > >> This 2010 review is - unfortunately - largely based on the flawed
>     > >> statistics I mentioned before, namely on the a priori assumption
> that the
>     > >> inner product of a signal vector and a noise vector are ZERO (an
>     > >> orthogonality assumption).  The (Frank & Al-Ali 1975) paper we
> have refuted
>     > >> on a number of occasions (for example in 2005, and most recently
> in our
>     > >> BioRxiv paper) but you still take that as the correct relation
> between SNR
>     > >> and FRC (and you never cite the criticism...).
>     > >> Sorry
>     > >> Marin
>     > >>
>     > >> On Thu, Feb 13, 2020 at 10:42 AM Penczek, Pawel A <
>     > >> pawel.a.penc...@uth.tmc.edu> wrote:
>     > >>
>     > >>> Dear Teige,
>     > >>>
>     > >>> I am wondering whether you are familiar with
>     > >>>
>     > >>> Resolution measures in molecular electron microscopy.
>     > >>> Penczek PA. Methods Enzymol. 2010.
>     > >>> Citation
>     > >>>
>     > >>> Methods Enzymol. 2010;482:73-100. doi:
> 10.1016/S0076-6879(10)82003-8.
>     > >>>
>     > >>> You will find there answers to all questions you asked and much
> more.
>     > >>>
>     > >>> Regards,
>     > >>> Pawel Penczek
>     > >>>
>     > >>>
>     > >>> Regards,
>     > >>> Pawel
>     > >>> _______________________________________________
>     > >>> 3dem mailing list
>     > >>> 3...@ncmir.ucsd.edu
>     > >>>
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu_mailman_listinfo_3dem&d=DwIDaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=CtreZZV11Kjskmte_nXfUg&m=j6hRkCCWPpdjRisEaLTAbxGyF56D9slzoXwJuMZj6TA&s=jlf-yG22sGDCcH9DaGYTmHJzaz1jdmrDHOR85XABrQk&e=
>     > >>> <
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu_mailman_listinfo_3dem&d=DwMFaQ&c=bKRySV-ouEg_AT-w2QWsTdd9X__KYh9Eq2fdmQDVZgw&r=yEYHb4SF2vvMq3W-iluu41LlHcFadz4Ekzr3_bT4-qI&m=3-TZcohYbZGHCQ7azF9_fgEJmssbBksaI7ESb0VIk1Y&s=XHMq9Q6Zwa69NL8kzFbmaLmZA9M33U01tBE6iAtQ140&e=
> >
>     > >>>
>     > >> _______________________________________________
>     > >> 3dem mailing list
>     > >> 3...@ncmir.ucsd.edu
>     > >>
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu_mailman_listinfo_3dem&d=DwIDaQ&c=sJ6xIWYx-zLMB3EPkvcnVg&r=CtreZZV11Kjskmte_nXfUg&m=j6hRkCCWPpdjRisEaLTAbxGyF56D9slzoXwJuMZj6TA&s=jlf-yG22sGDCcH9DaGYTmHJzaz1jdmrDHOR85XABrQk&e=
>     > >> <
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu_mailman_listinfo_3dem&d=DwMFaQ&c=ZQs-KZ8oxEw0p81sqgiaRA&r=Dk5VoQQ-wINYVssLMZihyC5Dj_sWYKxCyKz9E4Lp3gc&m=UWn2RUCMENrXjn3JLSwlIU6Zmp_JYnRrXesjtsM1u2E&s=TeEhUNYC5v59HGWMrPQCMaGK5opuX-NIG2mJvGLuiKA&e=
> >
>     > >>
>     > > _______________________________________________
>     > > 3dem mailing list
>     > > 3...@ncmir.ucsd.edu
>     > >
>     > >
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu_mailman_listinfo_3dem&d=DwICAg&c=ZQs-KZ8oxEw0p81sqgiaRA&r=Dk5VoQQ-wINYVssLMZihyC5Dj_sWYKxCyKz9E4Lp3gc&m=UWn2RUCMENrXjn3JLSwlIU6Zmp_JYnRrXesjtsM1u2E&s=TeEhUNYC5v59HGWMrPQCMaGK5opuX-NIG2mJvGLuiKA&e=
>     > >
>     > >
>     > >
>     > > _______________________________________________
>     > > 3dem mailing list3...@ncmir.ucsd.eduhttps://
> mail.ncmir.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/3dem
>     > >
>     > >
>     >
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