The figures below show variations on Row Profile
plots that can be easily made using Mira 7. The same methods can be
used to create and work with column profile plots. As with column
profile plots and histogram plots, row profile plots use the
image cursor to define the region of points to
plot.
The row plots shown below are created using
commands in the Image Window'sPlot
Menu and
Context Menu, and from buttons on the
Image Plot Toolbar when an image window has the
focus. These plots show a single image but an entire image set can
be plotted by changing the state of the button on the
Image Bar.
Start with the Target Image
These plots use the image shown below. This image
is with other sample images in the
folder "<Documents>\Mira Pro x64\Sample Data".
The image cursor outlines the region of interest containing points
to plot.
Plotting a Single Row
The next figure shows a simple row plot for a
single row at the middle of the image cursor. There are various
ways to create this plot:
Click the down-arrow on the button of the main Image
Plot Toolbar, then select Single
Row from the menu.
Click Plot > Horizontal > Single Row on
the main menu.
Right-click on the image to open the
Image Context Menu, then click Plot > Row on the
context menu.
Plotting the Mean of all Rows
The next plot shows the mean row obtained by
averaging all the rows inside the image cursor into a single plot
series as shown below. Various averaging modes are available,
including mean, median, and sum; these are selected from the
drop-down menu or from the other
menus mentioned previously. To create this plot, click the
down-arrow and select Mean Row. If Mean Row is not shown in the
menu, use the Averaging Mode > Mean command to change the mode
and then select Mean Row.
Plotting the Median of all Rows
The next plot shows the median row obtained by
combining all the rows inside the image cursor into a single plot
series as shown below. For each column coordinate, x, the values at
the same x in parallel rows are combined by the median to produce
the plotted value. To make a median plot, click the down-arrow on
the button and select Median Row. If
Median Row is not shown in the menu, use the Averaging Mode >
Median command to change the mode and then select Median Row.
Plotting All Rows and Plot Animation
The next figure shows all rows plotted together in
Overplot mode. This plot was created using the Range of Rows
command in the drop down menu of the button. The colors of the various plot series
are set on the
Plot Properties page. All plots could have been
assigned the same color, such as black, or a different line
width.
The next plot shows the same range of rows with the
window switched to one of the animation modes using the Plot
Context Menu. These modes show one plot series at a time, allowing
you to step or animate through the plot set. This effectively
sweeps upward or downward through the rectangle outlined by the
image cursor. To change the mode, right-click on the plot window to
open the Plot Context Menu and then select the mode from the Plot
Series Mode > submenu. Use the
Plot Animation Bar on the bottom window border to
step or animate the plot set.
Copying and Pasting Plot Data
Now let us combine the data plotted in 2 separate
windows into a single Plot Window. To do this, click on the title
bar of the Median Row Plot from above, then use Ctrl+C to copy its plot data. Then click the
title bar of the Mean Row Plot we made above and pressCtrl+V to paste the median row plot into the
window showing the mean row plot. We now have a plot set of 2
series in the window which can be viewed singly or together, as
described above. The result looks like this:
To change the properties individual plot series
after they are plotted, use the
Plot Series Properties window. Here, we will
change the color of the series containing the mean row plot. To do
this, use Ctrl+Shift+A (or right
click on the
Plot Bar) to open the
Plot Series Properties window. Change the
series properties as desired and then click[OK] to close the window.
Now, add the Single Row plot to the same target
window using the Ctrl+C + Ctrl+V
method. This gives 3 plot series in the window. Open the Plot
Properties window and change the color of Series 3 to green as
shown below.
We now have a plot that directly compares a single
row with its neighborhood mean and neighborhood median.