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mirror of https://github.com/msberends/AMR.git synced 2025-07-08 20:02:04 +02:00

make rsi work in more cases, documentation update

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2023-02-22 14:38:57 +01:00
parent 380cbec0e8
commit dad25302f2
87 changed files with 401 additions and 327 deletions

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@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
\alias{mo_failures}
\alias{mo_reset_session}
\alias{mo_cleaning_regex}
\title{Transform Input to a Microorganism Code}
\title{Transform Arbitrary Input to Valid Microbial Taxonomy}
\usage{
as.mo(
x,
@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ as.mo(
keep_synonyms = getOption("AMR_keep_synonyms", FALSE),
reference_df = get_mo_source(),
ignore_pattern = getOption("AMR_ignore_pattern", NULL),
remove_from_input = mo_cleaning_regex(),
cleaning_regex = getOption("AMR_cleaning_regex", mo_cleaning_regex()),
language = get_AMR_locale(),
info = interactive(),
...
@ -40,27 +40,27 @@ mo_cleaning_regex()
\arguments{
\item{x}{a \link{character} vector or a \link{data.frame} with one or two columns}
\item{Becker}{a \link{logical} to indicate whether staphylococci should be categorised into coagulase-negative staphylococci ("CoNS") and coagulase-positive staphylococci ("CoPS") instead of their own species, according to Karsten Becker \emph{et al.} (see Source).
\item{Becker}{a \link{logical} to indicate whether staphylococci should be categorised into coagulase-negative staphylococci ("CoNS") and coagulase-positive staphylococci ("CoPS") instead of their own species, according to Karsten Becker \emph{et al.} (see \emph{Source}). Please see \emph{Details} for a full list of staphylococcal species that will be converted.
This excludes \emph{Staphylococcus aureus} at default, use \code{Becker = "all"} to also categorise \emph{S. aureus} as "CoPS".}
\item{Lancefield}{a \link{logical} to indicate whether a beta-haemolytic \emph{Streptococcus} should be categorised into Lancefield groups instead of their own species, according to Rebecca C. Lancefield (see Source). These streptococci will be categorised in their first group, e.g. \emph{Streptococcus dysgalactiae} will be group C, although officially it was also categorised into groups G and L.
\item{Lancefield}{a \link{logical} to indicate whether a beta-haemolytic \emph{Streptococcus} should be categorised into Lancefield groups instead of their own species, according to Rebecca C. Lancefield (see \emph{Source}). These streptococci will be categorised in their first group, e.g. \emph{Streptococcus dysgalactiae} will be group C, although officially it was also categorised into groups G and L. . Please see \emph{Details} for a full list of streptococcal species that will be converted.
This excludes enterococci at default (who are in group D), use \code{Lancefield = "all"} to also categorise all enterococci as group D.}
\item{minimum_matching_score}{a numeric value to set as the lower limit for the \link[=mo_matching_score]{MO matching score}. When left blank, this will be determined automatically based on the character length of \code{x}, its \link[=microorganisms]{taxonomic kingdom} and \link[=mo_matching_score]{human pathogenicity}.}
\item{keep_synonyms}{a \link{logical} to indicate if old, previously valid taxonomic names must be preserved and not be corrected to currently accepted names. The default is \code{FALSE}, which will return a note if old taxonomic names were processed. The default can be set with the option \code{\link[=AMR-options]{AMR_keep_synonyms}}, i.e. \code{options(AMR_keep_synonyms = TRUE)} or \code{options(AMR_keep_synonyms = FALSE)}.}
\item{keep_synonyms}{a \link{logical} to indicate if old, previously valid taxonomic names must be preserved and not be corrected to currently accepted names. The default is \code{FALSE}, which will return a note if old taxonomic names were processed. The default can be set with the \link[=AMR-options]{package option} \code{\link[=AMR-options]{AMR_keep_synonyms}}, i.e. \code{options(AMR_keep_synonyms = TRUE)} or \code{options(AMR_keep_synonyms = FALSE)}.}
\item{reference_df}{a \link{data.frame} to be used for extra reference when translating \code{x} to a valid \code{\link{mo}}. See \code{\link[=set_mo_source]{set_mo_source()}} and \code{\link[=get_mo_source]{get_mo_source()}} to automate the usage of your own codes (e.g. used in your analysis or organisation).}
\item{ignore_pattern}{a \link[base:regex]{regular expression} (case-insensitive) of which all matches in \code{x} must return \code{NA}. This can be convenient to exclude known non-relevant input and can also be set with the option \code{\link[=AMR-options]{AMR_ignore_pattern}}, e.g. \code{options(AMR_ignore_pattern = "(not reported|contaminated flora)")}.}
\item{ignore_pattern}{a Perl-compatible \link[base:regex]{regular expression} (case-insensitive) of which all matches in \code{x} must return \code{NA}. This can be convenient to exclude known non-relevant input and can also be set with the \link[=AMR-options]{package option} \code{\link[=AMR-options]{AMR_ignore_pattern}}, e.g. \code{options(AMR_ignore_pattern = "(not reported|contaminated flora)")}.}
\item{remove_from_input}{a \link[base:regex]{regular expression} (case-insensitive) to clean the input of \code{x}. Everything matched in \code{x} will be removed. At default, this is the outcome of \code{\link[=mo_cleaning_regex]{mo_cleaning_regex()}}, which removes texts between brackets and texts such as "species" and "serovar".}
\item{cleaning_regex}{a Perl-compatible \link[base:regex]{regular expression} (case-insensitive) to clean the input of \code{x}. Every matched part in \code{x} will be removed. At default, this is the outcome of \code{\link[=mo_cleaning_regex]{mo_cleaning_regex()}}, which removes texts between brackets and texts such as "species" and "serovar". The default can be set with the \link[=AMR-options]{package option} \code{\link[=AMR-options]{AMR_cleaning_regex}}.}
\item{language}{language to translate text like "no growth", which defaults to the system language (see \code{\link[=get_AMR_locale]{get_AMR_locale()}})}
\item{info}{a \link{logical} to indicate if a progress bar should be printed if more than 25 items are to be coerced, defaults to \code{TRUE} only in interactive mode}
\item{info}{a \link{logical} to indicate if a progress bar should be printed if more than 25 items are to be coerced - the default is \code{TRUE} only in interactive mode}
\item{...}{other arguments passed on to functions}
}
@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ This excludes enterococci at default (who are in group D), use \code{Lancefield
A \link{character} \link{vector} with additional class \code{\link{mo}}
}
\description{
Use this function to determine a valid microorganism code (\code{\link{mo}}). Determination is done using intelligent rules and the complete taxonomic kingdoms Animalia, Archaea, Bacteria and Protozoa, and most microbial species from the kingdom Fungi (see \emph{Source}). The input can be almost anything: a full name (like \code{"Staphylococcus aureus"}), an abbreviated name (such as \code{"S. aureus"}), an abbreviation known in the field (such as \code{"MRSA"}), or just a genus. See \emph{Examples}.
Use this function to get a valid microorganism code (\code{\link{mo}}) based on arbitrary user input. Determination is done using intelligent rules and the complete taxonomic tree of the kingdoms Animalia, Archaea, Bacteria, and Protozoa, and most microbial species from the kingdom Fungi (see \emph{Source}). The input can be almost anything: a full name (like \code{"Staphylococcus aureus"}), an abbreviated name (such as \code{"S. aureus"}), an abbreviation known in the field (such as \code{"MRSA"}), or just a genus. See \emph{Examples}.
}
\details{
A microorganism (MO) code from this package (class: \code{\link{mo}}) is human readable and typically looks like these examples:
@ -91,12 +91,16 @@ Values that cannot be coerced will be considered 'unknown' and will be returned
Use the \code{\link[=mo_property]{mo_*}} functions to get properties based on the returned code, see \emph{Examples}.
The \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}} function uses a novel \link[=mo_matching_score]{matching score algorithm} (see \emph{Matching Score for Microorganisms} below) to match input against the \link[=microorganisms]{available microbial taxonomy} in this package. This will lead to the effect that e.g. \code{"E. coli"} (a microorganism highly prevalent in humans) will return the microbial ID of \emph{Escherichia coli} and not \emph{Entamoeba coli} (a microorganism less prevalent in humans), although the latter would alphabetically come first. The algorithm uses data from the List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN) and the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) (see \link{microorganisms}).
The \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}} function uses a novel \link[=mo_matching_score]{matching score algorithm} (see \emph{Matching Score for Microorganisms} below) to match input against the \link[=microorganisms]{available microbial taxonomy} in this package. This will lead to the effect that e.g. \code{"E. coli"} (a microorganism highly prevalent in humans) will return the microbial ID of \emph{Escherichia coli} and not \emph{Entamoeba coli} (a microorganism less prevalent in humans), although the latter would alphabetically come first.
With \code{Becker = TRUE}, the following 85 staphylococci will be converted to the \strong{coagulase-negative group}: \emph{S. argensis}, \emph{S. arlettae}, \emph{S. auricularis}, \emph{S. borealis}, \emph{S. caeli}, \emph{S. caledonicus}, \emph{S. canis}, \emph{S. capitis}, \emph{S. capitis capitis}, \emph{S. capitis urealyticus}, \emph{S. capitis ureolyticus}, \emph{S. caprae}, \emph{S. carnosus}, \emph{S. carnosus carnosus}, \emph{S. carnosus utilis}, \emph{S. casei}, \emph{S. caseolyticus}, \emph{S. chromogenes}, \emph{S. cohnii}, \emph{S. cohnii cohnii}, \emph{S. cohnii urealyticum}, \emph{S. cohnii urealyticus}, \emph{S. condimenti}, \emph{S. croceilyticus}, \emph{S. debuckii}, \emph{S. devriesei}, \emph{S. durrellii}, \emph{S. edaphicus}, \emph{S. epidermidis}, \emph{S. equorum}, \emph{S. equorum equorum}, \emph{S. equorum linens}, \emph{S. felis}, \emph{S. fleurettii}, \emph{S. gallinarum}, \emph{S. haemolyticus}, \emph{S. hominis}, \emph{S. hominis hominis}, \emph{S. hominis novobiosepticus}, \emph{S. jettensis}, \emph{S. kloosii}, \emph{S. lentus}, \emph{S. lloydii}, \emph{S. lugdunensis}, \emph{S. massiliensis}, \emph{S. microti}, \emph{S. muscae}, \emph{S. nepalensis}, \emph{S. pasteuri}, \emph{S. petrasii}, \emph{S. petrasii croceilyticus}, \emph{S. petrasii jettensis}, \emph{S. petrasii petrasii}, \emph{S. petrasii pragensis}, \emph{S. pettenkoferi}, \emph{S. piscifermentans}, \emph{S. pragensis}, \emph{S. pseudoxylosus}, \emph{S. pulvereri}, \emph{S. ratti}, \emph{S. rostri}, \emph{S. saccharolyticus}, \emph{S. saprophyticus}, \emph{S. saprophyticus bovis}, \emph{S. saprophyticus saprophyticus}, \emph{S. schleiferi}, \emph{S. schleiferi schleiferi}, \emph{S. sciuri}, \emph{S. sciuri carnaticus}, \emph{S. sciuri lentus}, \emph{S. sciuri rodentium}, \emph{S. sciuri sciuri}, \emph{S. simulans}, \emph{S. stepanovicii}, \emph{S. succinus}, \emph{S. succinus casei}, \emph{S. succinus succinus}, \emph{S. taiwanensis}, \emph{S. urealyticus}, \emph{S. ureilyticus}, \emph{S. veratri}, \emph{S. vitulinus}, \emph{S. vitulus}, \emph{S. warneri}, and \emph{S. xylosus}.\cr The following 16 staphylococci will be converted to the \strong{coagulase-positive group}: \emph{S. agnetis}, \emph{S. argenteus}, \emph{S. coagulans}, \emph{S. cornubiensis}, \emph{S. delphini}, \emph{S. hyicus}, \emph{S. hyicus chromogenes}, \emph{S. hyicus hyicus}, \emph{S. intermedius}, \emph{S. lutrae}, \emph{S. pseudintermedius}, \emph{S. roterodami}, \emph{S. schleiferi coagulans}, \emph{S. schweitzeri}, \emph{S. simiae}, and \emph{S. singaporensis}.
With \code{Lancefield = TRUE}, the following streptococci will be converted to their corresponding Lancefield group: \emph{S. agalactiae} (Group B), \emph{S. anginosus anginosus} (Group F), \emph{S. anginosus whileyi} (Group F), \emph{S. anginosus} (Group F), \emph{S. canis} (Group G), \emph{S. dysgalactiae dysgalactiae} (Group C), \emph{S. dysgalactiae equisimilis} (Group C), \emph{S. dysgalactiae} (Group C), \emph{S. equi equi} (Group C), \emph{S. equi ruminatorum} (Group C), \emph{S. equi zooepidemicus} (Group C), \emph{S. equi} (Group C), \emph{S. pyogenes} (Group A), \emph{S. salivarius salivarius} (Group K), \emph{S. salivarius thermophilus} (Group K), \emph{S. salivarius} (Group K), and \emph{S. sanguinis} (Group H).
\subsection{Coping with Uncertain Results}{
Results of non-exact taxonomic input are based on their \link[=mo_matching_score]{matching score}. The lowest allowed score can be set with the \code{minimum_matching_score} argument. At default this will be determined based on the character length of the input, and the \link[=microorganisms]{taxonomic kingdom} and \link[=mo_matching_score]{human pathogenicity} of the taxonomic outcome. If values are matched with uncertainty, a message will be shown to suggest the user to evaluate the results with \code{\link[=mo_uncertainties]{mo_uncertainties()}}, which returns a \link{data.frame} with all specifications.
To increase the quality of matching, the \code{remove_from_input} argument can be used to clean the input (i.e., \code{x}). This must be a \link[base:regex]{regular expression} that matches parts of the input that should be removed before the input is matched against the \link[=microorganisms]{available microbial taxonomy}. It will be matched Perl-compatible and case-insensitive. The default value of \code{remove_from_input} is the outcome of the helper function \code{\link[=mo_cleaning_regex]{mo_cleaning_regex()}}.
To increase the quality of matching, the \code{cleaning_regex} argument can be used to clean the input (i.e., \code{x}). This must be a \link[base:regex]{regular expression} that matches parts of the input that should be removed before the input is matched against the \link[=microorganisms]{available microbial taxonomy}. It will be matched Perl-compatible and case-insensitive. The default value of \code{cleaning_regex} is the outcome of the helper function \code{\link[=mo_cleaning_regex]{mo_cleaning_regex()}}.
There are three helper functions that can be run after using the \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}} function:
\itemize{
@ -156,7 +160,7 @@ Furthermore,
\item Any genus present in the \strong{established} list also has \code{prevalence = 1.0} in the \link{microorganisms} data set;
\item Any other genus present in the \strong{putative} list has \code{prevalence = 1.25} in the \link{microorganisms} data set;
\item Any other species or subspecies of which the genus is present in the two aforementioned groups, has \code{prevalence = 1.5} in the \link{microorganisms} data set;
\item Any \emph{non-bacterial} genus, species or subspecies of which the genus is present in the following list, has \code{prevalence = 1.5} in the \link{microorganisms} data set: \emph{Absidia}, \emph{Acanthamoeba}, \emph{Acremonium}, \emph{Aedes}, \emph{Alternaria}, \emph{Amoeba}, \emph{Ancylostoma}, \emph{Angiostrongylus}, \emph{Anisakis}, \emph{Anopheles}, \emph{Apophysomyces}, \emph{Aspergillus}, \emph{Aureobasidium}, \emph{Basidiobolus}, \emph{Beauveria}, \emph{Blastocystis}, \emph{Blastomyces}, \emph{Candida}, \emph{Capillaria}, \emph{Chaetomium}, \emph{Chrysonilia}, \emph{Cladophialophora}, \emph{Cladosporium}, \emph{Conidiobolus}, \emph{Contracaecum}, \emph{Cordylobia}, \emph{Cryptococcus}, \emph{Curvularia}, \emph{Demodex}, \emph{Dermatobia}, \emph{Dientamoeba}, \emph{Diphyllobothrium}, \emph{Dirofilaria}, \emph{Echinostoma}, \emph{Entamoeba}, \emph{Enterobius}, \emph{Exophiala}, \emph{Exserohilum}, \emph{Fasciola}, \emph{Fonsecaea}, \emph{Fusarium}, \emph{Giardia}, \emph{Haloarcula}, \emph{Halobacterium}, \emph{Halococcus}, \emph{Hendersonula}, \emph{Heterophyes}, \emph{Histomonas}, \emph{Histoplasma}, \emph{Hymenolepis}, \emph{Hypomyces}, \emph{Hysterothylacium}, \emph{Leishmania}, \emph{Malassezia}, \emph{Malbranchea}, \emph{Metagonimus}, \emph{Meyerozyma}, \emph{Microsporidium}, \emph{Microsporum}, \emph{Mortierella}, \emph{Mucor}, \emph{Mycocentrospora}, \emph{Necator}, \emph{Nectria}, \emph{Ochroconis}, \emph{Oesophagostomum}, \emph{Oidiodendron}, \emph{Opisthorchis}, \emph{Pediculus}, \emph{Phlebotomus}, \emph{Phoma}, \emph{Pichia}, \emph{Piedraia}, \emph{Pithomyces}, \emph{Pityrosporum}, \emph{Pneumocystis}, \emph{Pseudallescheria}, \emph{Pseudoterranova}, \emph{Pulex}, \emph{Rhizomucor}, \emph{Rhizopus}, \emph{Rhodotorula}, \emph{Saccharomyces}, \emph{Sarcoptes}, \emph{Scolecobasidium}, \emph{Scopulariopsis}, \emph{Scytalidium}, \emph{Spirometra}, \emph{Sporobolomyces}, \emph{Stachybotrys}, \emph{Strongyloides}, \emph{Syngamus}, \emph{Taenia}, \emph{Toxocara}, \emph{Trichinella}, \emph{Trichobilharzia}, \emph{Trichoderma}, \emph{Trichomonas}, \emph{Trichophyton}, \emph{Trichosporon}, \emph{Trichostrongylus}, \emph{Trichuris}, \emph{Tritirachium}, \emph{Trombicula}, \emph{Trypanosoma}, \emph{Tunga} or \emph{Wuchereria};
\item Any \emph{non-bacterial} genus, species or subspecies of which the genus is present in the following list, has \code{prevalence = 1.5} in the \link{microorganisms} data set: \emph{Absidia}, \emph{Acanthamoeba}, \emph{Acremonium}, \emph{Aedes}, \emph{Alternaria}, \emph{Amoeba}, \emph{Ancylostoma}, \emph{Angiostrongylus}, \emph{Anisakis}, \emph{Anopheles}, \emph{Apophysomyces}, \emph{Aspergillus}, \emph{Aureobasidium}, \emph{Basidiobolus}, \emph{Beauveria}, \emph{Blastocystis}, \emph{Blastomyces}, \emph{Candida}, \emph{Capillaria}, \emph{Chaetomium}, \emph{Chrysonilia}, \emph{Cladophialophora}, \emph{Cladosporium}, \emph{Conidiobolus}, \emph{Contracaecum}, \emph{Cordylobia}, \emph{Cryptococcus}, \emph{Curvularia}, \emph{Demodex}, \emph{Dermatobia}, \emph{Dientamoeba}, \emph{Diphyllobothrium}, \emph{Dirofilaria}, \emph{Echinostoma}, \emph{Entamoeba}, \emph{Enterobius}, \emph{Exophiala}, \emph{Exserohilum}, \emph{Fasciola}, \emph{Fonsecaea}, \emph{Fusarium}, \emph{Giardia}, \emph{Haloarcula}, \emph{Halobacterium}, \emph{Halococcus}, \emph{Hendersonula}, \emph{Heterophyes}, \emph{Histomonas}, \emph{Histoplasma}, \emph{Hymenolepis}, \emph{Hypomyces}, \emph{Hysterothylacium}, \emph{Leishmania}, \emph{Malassezia}, \emph{Malbranchea}, \emph{Metagonimus}, \emph{Meyerozyma}, \emph{Microsporidium}, \emph{Microsporum}, \emph{Mortierella}, \emph{Mucor}, \emph{Mycocentrospora}, \emph{Necator}, \emph{Nectria}, \emph{Ochroconis}, \emph{Oesophagostomum}, \emph{Oidiodendron}, \emph{Opisthorchis}, \emph{Pediculus}, \emph{Phlebotomus}, \emph{Phoma}, \emph{Pichia}, \emph{Piedraia}, \emph{Pithomyces}, \emph{Pityrosporum}, \emph{Pneumocystis}, \emph{Pseudallescheria}, \emph{Pseudoterranova}, \emph{Pulex}, \emph{Rhizomucor}, \emph{Rhizopus}, \emph{Rhodotorula}, \emph{Saccharomyces}, \emph{Sarcoptes}, \emph{Scolecobasidium}, \emph{Scopulariopsis}, \emph{Scytalidium}, \emph{Spirometra}, \emph{Sporobolomyces}, \emph{Stachybotrys}, \emph{Strongyloides}, \emph{Syngamus}, \emph{Taenia}, \emph{Toxocara}, \emph{Trichinella}, \emph{Trichobilharzia}, \emph{Trichoderma}, \emph{Trichomonas}, \emph{Trichophyton}, \emph{Trichosporon}, \emph{Trichostrongylus}, \emph{Trichuris}, \emph{Tritirachium}, \emph{Trombicula}, \emph{Trypanosoma}, \emph{Tunga}, or \emph{Wuchereria};
\item All other records have \code{prevalence = 2.0} in the \link{microorganisms} data set.
}