DADApy is a Python package for the characterization of manifolds in high-dimensional spaces.
For more details and tutorials, visit the homepage at: https://dadapy.readthedocs.io/
import numpy as np
from dadapy.data import Data
# Generate a simple 3D gaussian dataset
X = np.random.normal(0, 1, (1000, 3))
# initialize the "Data" class with the set of coordinates
data = Data(X)
# compute distances up to the 100th nearest neighbor
data.compute_distances(maxk=100)
# compute the intrinsic dimension using 2nn estimator
id, id_error, id_distance = data.compute_id_2NN()
# compute the intrinsic dimension up to the 64th nearest neighbors using Gride
id_list, id_error_list, id_distance_list = data.return_id_scaling_gride(range_max=64)
# compute the density using PAk, a point adaptive kNN estimator
log_den, log_den_error = data.compute_density_PAk()
# find the peaks of the density profile through the ADP algorithm
cluster_assignment = data.compute_clustering_ADP()
# compute the neighborhood overlap with another dataset
X2 = np.random.normal(0, 1, (1000, 5))
overlap_x2 = data.return_data_overlap(X2)
# compute the neighborhood overlap with a set of labels
labels = np.repeat(np.arange(10), 100)
overlap_labels = data.return_label_overlap(labels)
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Two-NN estimator
Facco et al., Scientific Reports (2017)
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Gride estimator
Denti et al., Scientific Reports (2022)
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I3D estimator (for both continuous and discrete spaces)
Macocco et al., Physical Review Letters (2023)
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kNN estimator
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k*NN estimator (kNN with an adaptive choice of k)
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PAk estimator
Rodriguez et al., JCTC (2018)
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point-adaptive mean-shift gradient estimator
Carli et al., ArXiv (2024)
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BMTI estimator
Carli et al., ArXiv (2024)
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Density peaks clustering
Rodriguez and Laio, Science (2014)
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Advanced density peaks clustering
d’Errico et al., Information Sciences (2021)
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k-peak clustering
Sormani, Rodriguez and Laio, JCTC (2020)
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Neighbourhood overlap
Doimo et al., NeurIPS (2020)
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Information imbalance
Glielmo et al., PNAS Nexus (2022)
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Differentiable Information Imbalance
The package is compatible with the Python versions 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, and 3.12. We currently only support Unix-based systems, including Linux and macOS. For Windows machines, we suggest using the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL).
The package requires numpy
, scipy
and scikit-learn
, and matplotlib
for the visualizations.
The package contains Cython-generated C extensions that are automatically compiled during installation.
The latest release is available through pip:
pip install dadapy
To install the latest development version, clone the source code from GitHub and install it with pip as follows:
pip install git+https://github.com/sissa-data-science/DADApy
Alternatively, if you'd like to modify the implementation of some function locally you can download the repository and install the package with:
git clone https://github.com/sissa-data-science/DADApy.git
cd DADApy
python setup.py build_ext --inplace
pip install .
A description of the package is available here.
Please consider citing it if you found this package useful for your research:
@article{dadapy,
title = {DADApy: Distance-based analysis of data-manifolds in Python},
journal = {Patterns},
pages = {100589},
year = {2022},
issn = {2666-3899},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.patter.2022.100589},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666389922002070},
author = {Aldo Glielmo and Iuri Macocco and Diego Doimo and Matteo Carli and Claudio Zeni and Romina Wild and Maria d’Errico and Alex Rodriguez and Alessandro Laio},
}