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An pedigree is an object that contains a pedigree along with a set of
information that allows for pretty plotting. This information consists
of two parts: a set of vertical and horizontal plotting coordinates
along with the identifier of the subject to be plotted at each position,
and a list of connections to be made between parent/child,
spouse/spouse, and twin/twin. Creating this aligment turned out to be
one of the more difficult parts of the project, and is the area where
significant further work could be done.
All the routines in this section completely ignore the [[id]] component
of a pedigree; everyone is indexed solely by their row number in the
object.
The default starting values for all of these are simple: founders are
processed in the order in which they appear in the data set, children
appear in the order they are found in the data set, husbands are to the
left of their wives, and a marriage is plotted at the leftmost spouse. A
simple example where we want to bend these rules is when two families
marry, and the pedigrees for both extend above the wedded pair.
In the joint pedigree the pair should appear as the right-most child in
the left hand family, and as the left-most child in the right hand
family. With respect to founders, assume that a family has three
lineages with a marriage between 1 and 2, and another between 2 and 3.
In the joint pedigree the sets should be 1, 2, 3 from left to right.
The hints consist of a list with two components. The first is a
vector of numbers of the same length as the pedigree, used to order the
female founders and to order siblings within family. For subjects not
part of either of these the value can be arbitrary.
The second is a 3 column matrix of spouse pairs, each row indicates the
left-hand member of the pair, the right-hand member, and which of the
two is the anchor, i.e., directly connected to thier parent.
Double and triple marriages can start to get interesting.
The routine makes no attempt to reorder founders. It just is nott smart enough to figure that out.
The first thing to be done is to check on twins. They are a nuisance,
since twins need to move together. The [[ped$relation]] object has a
factor in it, so first turn that into numeric. We create 3 vectors:
[[twinrel]] is a matrix containing pairs of twins and their relation, it
is a subset of the incoming [[relation]] matrix. The [[twinset]] vector
identifies twins, it is 0 for anyone who is not a part of a
multiple-birth set, and a unique id for each member of a set.
We use the minimum row number of the members of the set as the id.
[[twinord]] is a starting order vector for the set; it mostly makes sure
that there are no ties (who knows what a user may have used for starting
values.)
A recent addition is to carry forward packaged and align to kindepth and align.pedigree.
Next is an internal function that rearranges someone to be the
leftmost or rightmost of his/her siblings. The only real complication is
twins – if one of them moves the other has to move too.
And we need to keep the monozygotics together within a band of triplets.
Algorithm: if the person to be moved is part of a twinset, first move
all the twins to the left end (or right as the case may be), then move
all the monozygotes to the left, then move the subject himself to the
left.
Now, get an ordering of the pedigree to use as the starting
point.
The numbers start at 1 on each level. We do not need the final
prettify step, hence align=F. If there is a hints structure
entered, we retain its non-zero entries, otherwise people are put into
the order of the data set. We allow the hints input to be only an order
vector. Twins are then further reordered.
Now, walk down through the levels one by one. A candidate subject is one who appears twice on the level, once under his/her parents and once somewhere else as a spouse. Move this person and spouse the the ends of their sibships and add a marriage hint. Figure \(\ref{fig:auto1}\) shows a simple case. The input data set has the subjects ordered from 1–11, the left panel is the result without hints which processes subjects in the order encountered. The return values from [align.pedigree] have subject 9 shown twice. The first is when he is recognized as the spouse of subject 4, the second as the child of 6–7.
The basic logic isThis logic works 9 times out of 10, at least for human pedigrees. We’ll look at more complex cases below when looking at the [[duporder]] (order the duplicates) function, which returns a matrix with columns 1 and 2 being a pair of duplicates, and 3 a direction. Note that in the following code [[idlist]] refers to the row numbers of each subject in the pedigree, not to their label [[ped$id]].
For the case shown in figure \(\ref{fig:align1}\) the [[duporder]]
function will return a single row array with values (2, 6, 1), the first
two being the positions of the duplicated subject.
The anchor will be 2 since that is the copy connected to parents The
direction is TRUE, since the spouse is to the left of the anchor point.
The id is 9, sibs are 8, 9, 10, and the shift function will create
position hints of 2,1,3, which will cause them to be listed in the order
9, 8, 10.
The value of spouse is 3 (third position in the row), subjects 3,4,
and 5 are reordered, and finally the line (4,9,1) is added to the sptemp
matrix.
In this particular case the final element could be a 1 or a 2, since
both are connected to their parents.
Figure \(\ref{fig:align2}\) shows a more complex case with several arcs. In the upper left is a double marry-in. The [[anchor]] variable in the above code will be (2,2) since both copies have an anchored spouse. The left and right sets of sibs are reordered (even though the left one does not need it), and two lines are added to the sptemp matrix: (5,11,1) and (11,9,2).
On the upper right is a pair of overlapping arcs. In the final tree we want to put sibling 28 to the right of 29 since that will allow one node to join, but if we process the subjects in lexical order the code will first shift 28 to the right and then later shift over 29. The duporder function tries to order the duplicates into a matrix so that the closest ones are processed last. The definition of close is based first on whether the families touch, and second on the actual distance. The third column of the matrix hints at whether the marriage should be plotted at the left (1) or right (2) position of the pair. The goal for this is to spread apart families of cousins; in the example to not have the children of 28/31 plotted under the 21/22 grandparents, and those for 29/32 under the 25/26 grandparents. The logic for this column is very ad hoc: put children near the edges.
Finally, here are two helper routines. Finding my spouse can be interesting – suppose we have a listing with Shirley, Fred, Carl, me on the line with the first three marked as spouse=TRUE – it means that she has been married to all 3 of us. First we find the string from rpos to lpos that is a marriage block; 99% of the time this will be of length 2 of course. Then find the person in that block who is opposite sex, and check that they are connected. The routine is called with a left-right position in the alignment arrays and returns a position.
The findsibs function starts with a position and returns a position as well, and is much simpler than findspouse.
At this point the most common situation will be what is shown in figure. The variable [[anchor]] is (2,1) showing that the left hand copy of subject 9 is connected to an anchored spouse and the right hand copy is himself anchored. The proper addition to the spouselist is [[(4, 9, dpairs)]], where the last is the hint from the dpairs routine as to which of the parents is the one to follow further when drawing the entire pedigree. (When drawing a pedigree and there is a child who can be reached from multiple founders, we only want to find the child once.)
The double marry-in found in figure \(\ref{fig:auto2}\), subject 11, leads to value of (2,2) for the [[anchor]] variable. The proper addition to the [[sptemp]] matrix in this case will be two rows, (5, 11, 1) indicating that 5 should be plotted left of 11 for the 5-11 marriage, with the first partner as the anchor, and a second row (11, 9, 2). This will cause the common spouse to be plotted in the middle.
Multiple marriages can lead to unanchored subjects.
In the left hand portion of figure \(\ref{fig:auto3}\) we have two double
marriages, one on the left and one on the right with anchor values of
(0,2) and (2,0), respectively.
We add two marriages to the return list to ensure that both print in the
correct left-right order; the 14-4 one is correct by default but it is
easier to output a line than check sex orders.
The left panel of figure \(\ref{fig:auto3}\) shows a case where
subject 11 marries into the pedigree but also has a second spouse. The
[[anchor]] variable for this case will be (2, 0); the first instance of
11 has a spouse tied into the tree above, the second instance has no
upward connections. In the top row, subject 6 has values of (0, 0) since
neither connection has an upward parent.
In the right hand panel subject 2 has an anchor variable of (0,1).
When importing data from autohint, that routine’s spouse matrix has column 1 = subject plotted on the left, 2 = subject plotted on the right. The [[spouselist]] array has column 1=husband, 2=wife. Hence the clumsy looking ifelse below. The autohint format is more congenial to users, who might modify the output, the spouselist format easier for the code.
Call [alignped1] sequentially with each
founder pair and merge the results.
A founder pair is a married pair, neither of which has a father.
At this point the pedigree has been arranged, with the positions in each row going from 1 to (number of subjects in the row). (For a packed pedigree, which is the usual case). Having everything pushed to the left margin is not very pretty, now we fix that. Note that alignped4 wants a T/F spouse matrix: it does not care about your degree of relationship to the spouse.
The return argument is a set of matrices as described in section \(\ref{sect:alignped}\), along with the spouselist matrix. The latter has marriages removed as they are processed.
Note that the [[spouselist]] matrix will only contain spouse pairs that are not yet processed. The logic for anchoring is slightly tricky. First, if row 4 of the spouselist matrix is 0, we anchor at the first opportunity, i.e. now.. Also note that if spouselist[,3]==spouselist[,4] it is the husband who is the anchor (just write out the possibilities).
Create the set of 3 return structures, which will be matrices with (1+nspouse) columns. If there are children then other routines will widen the result.
Now we have a list of spouses that should be dealt with and the the
correponding columns of the spouselist matrix.
Create the two complimentary lists lspouse and rspouse to denote those
plotted on the left and on the right. For someone with lots of spouses
we try to split them evenly. If the number of spouses is odd, then men
should have more on the right than on the left, women more on the right.
Any hints in the spouselist matrix override. We put the undecided
marriages closest to [[x]], then add predetermined ones to the left and
right. The majority of marriages will be undetermined singletons, for
which nleft will be 1 for female (put my husband to the left) and 0 for
male. In one bug found by plotting canine data, lspouse could initially
be empty but length(rspouse)> 1. This caused nleft>length(indx). A
fix was to not let indx to be indexed beyond its length, fix by JPS
5/2013.
The spouses are in the pedigree, now look below. For each spouse get the list of children. If there are any we call alignped2 to generate their tree and then mark the connection to their parent. If multiple marriages have children we need to join the trees. ### alignped1 -part5
To finish up we need to splice together the tree made up from all the
kids, which only has data from lev+1 down, with the data here.
There are 3 cases. The first and easiest is when no children were found.
The second, and most common, is when the tree below is wider than the
tree here, in which case we add the data from this level onto theirs.
The third is when below is narrower, for instance an only child.
This routine takes a collection of siblings, grows the tree for each, and appends them side by side into a single tree. The input arguments are the same as those to [alignped1] with the exception that [[x]] will be a vector. This routine does nothing to the spouselist matrix, but needs to pass it down the tree and back since one of the routines called by [alignped2] might change the matrix.
The code below has one non-obvious special case. Suppose that two
sibs marry.
When the first sib is processed by [alignped1]
then both partners (and any children) will be added to the rval
structure below. When the second sib is processed they will come back as
a 1 element tree (the marriage will no longer be on the spouselist),
which should be added onto rval. The rule thus is to not add any 1
element tree whose value (which must be x[i]) is already in the rval
structure for this level. (Where did Curt Olswold. find these
families?)
The third alignment co-routine merges two pedigree trees which are side by side into a single object. The primary special case is when the rightmost person in the left tree is the same as the leftmost person in the right tree; we need not plot two copies of the same person side by side. (When initializing the output structures do not worry about this - there is no harm if they are a column bigger than finally needed.) Beyond that the work is simple bookkeeping.
For the unpacked case, which is the traditional way to draw a pedigree when we can assume the paper is infinitely wide, all parents are centered over their children. In this case we think if the two trees to be merged as solid blocks. On input they both have a left margin of 0. Compute how far over we have to slide the right tree.
The alignped4 routine is the final step of alignment. It attempts to
line up children under parents and put spouses and siblings `close’ to
each other, to the extent possible within the constraints of page width.
This routine used to be the most intricate and complex of the set, until
I realized that the task could be cast as constrained quadradic
optimization. The current code does necessary setup and then calls the
[[quadprog]] function.
At one point I investigated using one of the simpler least-squares
routines where \(\beta\) is constrained
to be non-negative. However a problem can only be translated into that
form if the number of constraints is less than the number of parameters,
which is not true in this problem.
There are two important parameters for the function. One is the user specified maximum width. The smallest possible width is the maximum number of subjects on a line, if the user suggestion is too low it is increased to that 1+ that amount (to give just a little wiggle room). The other is a vector of 2 alignment parameters \(a\) and \(b\). For each set of siblings \({x}\) with parents at \(p_1\) and \(p_2\) the alignment penalty is \[ (1/k^a)\sum{i=1}{k} (x_i - (p_1 + p_2)^2 \] where \(k\) is the number of siblings in the set. Using the fact that \(\sum(x_i-c)^2 = \sum(x_i-\mu)^2 + k(c-\mu)^2\), when \(a=1\) then moving a sibship with \(k\) sibs one unit to the left or right of optimal will incur the same cost as moving one with only 1 or two sibs out of place. If \(a=0\) then large sibships are harder to move than small ones, with the default value \(a=1.5\) they are slightly easier to move than small ones. The rationale for the default is as long as the parents are somewhere between the first and last siblings the result looks fairly good, so we are more flexible with the spacing of a large family. By tethering all the sibs to a single spot they tend are kept close to each other. The alignment penalty for spouses is \(b(x_1 - x_2)^2\), which tends to keep them together. The size of \(b\) controls the relative importance of sib-parent and spouse-spouse closeness.
We start by adding in these penalties. The total number of parameters
in the alignment problem (what we hand to quadprog) is the set of
[[sum(n)]] positions. A work array myid keeps track of the parameter
number for each position so that it is easy to find. There is one extra
penalty added at the end. Because the penalty amount would be the same
if all the final positions were shifted by a constant, the penalty
matrix will not be positive definite; solve.QP does not like
this. We add a tiny amount of leftward pull to the widest line.
Next come the constraints. If there are \(k\) subjects on a line there will be \(k+1\) constraints for that line. The first point must be \(\ge 0\), each subesquent one must be at least 1 unit to the right, and the final point must be \(\le\) the max width.
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