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(v1.3.0.9035) mdro() for EUCAST 3.2, examples cleanup

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2020-09-29 23:35:46 +02:00
parent 68e6e1e329
commit 4e0374af29
94 changed files with 1143 additions and 1165 deletions

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@ -23,21 +23,22 @@ With ambiguous user input in \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}} and all the \code{\li
where:
\itemize{
\item \eqn{x} is the user input;
\item \eqn{n} is a taxonomic name (genus, species and subspecies) as found in \code{\link[=microorganisms]{microorganisms$fullname}};
\item \eqn{l_{n}}{l_n} is the length of \eqn{n};
\item \eqn{\operatorname{lev}}{lev} is the \href{https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levenshtein_distance}{Levenshtein distance function};
\item \eqn{p_{n}}{p_n} is the human pathogenic prevalence of \eqn{n}, categorised into group \eqn{1}, \eqn{2} and \eqn{3} (see \emph{Details} in \code{?as.mo}), meaning that \eqn{p = \{1, 2 , 3\}}{p = {1, 2, 3}};
\item \eqn{k_{n}}{k_n} is the kingdom index of \eqn{n}, set as follows: Bacteria = \eqn{1}, Fungi = \eqn{2}, Protozoa = \eqn{3}, Archaea = \eqn{4}, and all others = \eqn{5}, meaning that \eqn{k = \{1, 2 , 3, 4, 5\}}{k = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}}.
\item \eqn{n} is a taxonomic name (genus, species, and subspecies);
\item \eqn{l_n}{l_n} is the length of \eqn{n};
\item lev is the \href{https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levenshtein_distance}{Levenshtein distance function}, which counts any insertion, deletion and substitution as 1 that is needed to change \eqn{x} into \eqn{n};
\item \eqn{p_n}{p_n} is the human pathogenic prevalence group of \eqn{n}, as described below;
\item \eqn{k_n}{p_n} is the taxonomic kingdom of \eqn{n}, set as Bacteria = 1, Fungi = 2, Protozoa = 3, Archaea = 4, others = 5.
}
This means that the user input \code{x = "E. coli"} gets for \emph{Escherichia coli} a matching score of 68.8\% and for \emph{Entamoeba coli} a matching score of 7.9\%.
The grouping into human pathogenic prevalence (\eqn{p}) is based on experience from several microbiological laboratories in the Netherlands in conjunction with international reports on pathogen prevalence. \strong{Group 1} (most prevalent microorganisms) consists of all microorganisms where the taxonomic class is Gammaproteobacteria or where the taxonomic genus is \emph{Enterococcus}, \emph{Staphylococcus} or \emph{Streptococcus}. This group consequently contains all common Gram-negative bacteria, such as \emph{Pseudomonas} and \emph{Legionella} and all species within the order Enterobacterales. \strong{Group 2} consists of all microorganisms where the taxonomic phylum is Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria or Sarcomastigophora, or where the taxonomic genus is \emph{Absidia}, \emph{Acremonium}, \emph{Actinotignum}, \emph{Alternaria}, \emph{Anaerosalibacter}, \emph{Apophysomyces}, \emph{Arachnia}, \emph{Aspergillus}, \emph{Aureobacterium}, \emph{Aureobasidium}, \emph{Bacteroides}, \emph{Basidiobolus}, \emph{Beauveria}, \emph{Blastocystis}, \emph{Branhamella}, \emph{Calymmatobacterium}, \emph{Candida}, \emph{Capnocytophaga}, \emph{Catabacter}, \emph{Chaetomium}, \emph{Chryseobacterium}, \emph{Chryseomonas}, \emph{Chrysonilia}, \emph{Cladophialophora}, \emph{Cladosporium}, \emph{Conidiobolus}, \emph{Cryptococcus}, \emph{Curvularia}, \emph{Exophiala}, \emph{Exserohilum}, \emph{Flavobacterium}, \emph{Fonsecaea}, \emph{Fusarium}, \emph{Fusobacterium}, \emph{Hendersonula}, \emph{Hypomyces}, \emph{Koserella}, \emph{Lelliottia}, \emph{Leptosphaeria}, \emph{Leptotrichia}, \emph{Malassezia}, \emph{Malbranchea}, \emph{Mortierella}, \emph{Mucor}, \emph{Mycocentrospora}, \emph{Mycoplasma}, \emph{Nectria}, \emph{Ochroconis}, \emph{Oidiodendron}, \emph{Phoma}, \emph{Piedraia}, \emph{Pithomyces}, \emph{Pityrosporum}, \emph{Prevotella},\\\emph{Pseudallescheria}, \emph{Rhizomucor}, \emph{Rhizopus}, \emph{Rhodotorula}, \emph{Scolecobasidium}, \emph{Scopulariopsis}, \emph{Scytalidium},\emph{Sporobolomyces}, \emph{Stachybotrys}, \emph{Stomatococcus}, \emph{Treponema}, \emph{Trichoderma}, \emph{Trichophyton}, \emph{Trichosporon}, \emph{Tritirachium} or \emph{Ureaplasma}. \strong{Group 3} consists of all other microorganisms.
All matches are sorted descending on their matching score and for all user input values, the top match will be returned.
All matches are sorted descending on their matching score and for all user input values, the top match will be returned. This will lead to the effect that e.g., \code{"E. coli"} will return the microbial ID of \emph{Escherichia coli} (\eqn{m = 0.688}, a highly prevalent microorganism found in humans) and not \emph{Entamoeba coli} (\eqn{m = 0.079}, a less prevalent microorganism in humans), although the latter would alphabetically come first.
}
\examples{
as.mo("E. coli")
mo_uncertainties()
mo_matching_score("E. coli", "Escherichia coli")
mo_matching_score(x = "E. coli",
n = c("Escherichia coli", "Entamoeba coli"))
}