Heat map
A heat map is a graphical representation of data where the values taken by a variable in a two-dimensional table are represented as colors. Fractal maps and tree maps both often use a similar system of color-coding to represent the values taken by a variable in a hierarchy. The term is also used to mean its thematic application as a choropleth map.
Heat maps originated in 2D displays of the values in a data matrix. Larger values were represented by small dark gray or black squares (pixels) and smaller values by lighter squares. Sneath (1957) displayed the results of a cluster analysis by permuting the rows and the columns of a matrix to place similar values near each other according to the clustering. Jacques Bertin used a similar representation to display data that conformed to a Guttman scale. The idea for joining cluster trees to the rows and columns of the data matrix originated with Robert Ling in 1973. Ling used overstruck printer characters to represent different shades of gray, one character-width per pixel. Leland Wilkinson developed the first computer program in 1994 (SYSTAT) to produce cluster heat maps with high-resolution color graphics. The Eisen et al. display shown in the figure is a replication of the earlier SYSTAT design.
There are several different kinds of heat map:
- Web heat maps have been used for displaying areas of a Web page most frequently scanned by visitors.
- Biology heat maps are typically used in molecular biology to represent the level of expression of many genes across a number of comparable samples (e.g. cells in different states, samples from different patients) as they are obtained from DNA microarrays.
- The tree map is a 2D hierarchical partitioning of data that visually resembles a heat map.
- A mosaic plot is a tiled heat map for representing a two-way or higher-way table of data. As with treemaps, the rectangular regions in a mosaic plot are hierarchically organized. The means that the regions are rectangles instead of squares. Friendly (1994) surveys the history and usage of this graph.
Software Implementations
Several heat map software implementations are listed here (the list is not complete):
- FusionCharts Heat Map, a charting component for visual data, has support for real-time, interactive heat maps [1]
- R Statistics, a free software environment for statistical computing and graphics, contains several functions to trace heat maps [2]
- Gnuplot, a universal and free command-line plotting program, can trace 2D and 3D heat maps [3]
- The Google Docs spreadsheet application includes a Heat Map gadget.
- Qlucore includes a heat map that is dynamically updated when filter parameters are changed.
- The ESPN Gamecast for soccer games uses heat maps to show where certain players have spent time on the field.
- By searching the List of bioinformatics companies more tools for heat maps can be found.
- Microsoft Excel can be used to generate heat maps using the Surface Chart. Though the default color range for Surface Charts in Excel is not conducive to heat maps, the colors can be edited to generate user-friendly and intuitive heat maps.
References
- Bertin, J. (1967). Sémiologie Graphique. Les diagrammes, les réseaux, les cartes. Gauthier-Villars.
- Eisen, M.B., Spellman, P.T., Brown, P.O. & Botstein, D. (1998). "Cluster analysis and display of genome-wide expression patterns". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95 (25): 14863–14868. doi:10.1073/pnas.95.25.14863. PMC 24541. PMID 9843981. http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/95/25/14863.
- Friendly, M. (1994). "Mosaic displays for multi-way contingency tables". Journal of the American Statistical Association (American Statistical Association) 89 (425): 190–200. doi:10.2307/2291215. JSTOR 2291215. http://www.math.yorku.ca/SCS/Papers/drew.
- Ling, R.F. (1973). "A computer generated aid for cluster analysis". Communications of the ACM 16 (6): 355–361. doi:10.1145/362248.362263.
- Sneath, P.H.A. (1957). "The application of computers to taxonomy". Journal of General Microbiology 17 (1): 201–226. PMID 13475686.
- Wilkinson, L. (1994). Advanced Applications: Systat for DOS Version 6. SYSTAT Inc.. ISBN 9780134472850.
External links