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Resolution: standard / high Figure 8.
Displaying multiple annotations through expansion points. (a) A detail from the Explorer showing an open expansion point. The blue outer columns
represent a set of Refseq genes, the green inner columns represent the GO terms mapped
to those genes. As there are many GO annotations per gene, the property is represented
by an expansion point. The second expansion point is expanded and the others collapsed.
One can see that the expansion is represented by the product of the subject and objects
of that property. The repeated subject cells are shaded for clarity. Expansion points
in the header allow each property to be expanded or collapsed in bulk per column.
(b) A detail from the Explorer showing various expansion point states. Notice that the
third Refseq gene does not have an expansion point because it has only one GO annotation.
The fourth and sixth genes have no GO annotations at all, as represented by the hatched
cells. The first, second and fifth genes have multiple GO annotations, all collapsed.
(c) A detail from the Explorer showing conflicting expansion points. The user is now viewing
the set of Refseq genes, their GO annotations and their virtual tags (lilac), along
with the sequences of those virtual tags (purple). Properties 'GO Terms' and 'Virtual
Tags' are sibling one-to-many properties of the class Refseq gene and are, therefore,
'in competition'. The user has expanded the GO annotations of the second Refseq gene
and the product is being displayed. Notice that the respective 'expansion point' for
the virtual tags property is now dimmed and the first virtual tag is now repeated
as part of the GO product. If the dimmed 'expansion point' is expanded, then the open
competing property (GO Terms) will automatically be closed.
Robertson et al. Genome Biology 2007 8:R6 doi:10.1186/gb-2007-8-1-r6 |