Scientific Visualization
Overview
Scientific visualization transforms data into clear, accurate figures for publication. Create journal-ready plots with multi-panel layouts, error bars, significance markers, and colorblind-safe palettes. Export as PDF/EPS/TIFF using matplotlib, seaborn, and plotly for manuscripts.
When to Use This Skill
This skill should be used when:
- Creating plots or visualizations for scientific manuscripts
- Preparing figures for journal submission (Nature, Science, Cell, PLOS, etc.)
- Ensuring figures are colorblind-friendly and accessible
- Making multi-panel figures with consistent styling
- Exporting figures at correct resolution and format
- Following specific publication guidelines
- Improving existing figures to meet publication standards
- Creating figures that need to work in both color and grayscale
Quick Start Guide
Basic Publication-Quality Figure
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
# Apply publication style (from scripts/style_presets.py)
from style_presets import apply_publication_style
apply_publication_style('default')
# Create figure with appropriate size (single column = 3.5 inches)
fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(3.5, 2.5))
# Plot data
x = np.linspace(0, 10, 100)
ax.plot(x, np.sin(x), label='sin(x)')
ax.plot(x, np.cos(x), label='cos(x)')
# Proper labeling with units
ax.set_xlabel('Time (seconds)')
ax.set_ylabel('Amplitude (mV)')
ax.legend(frameon=False)
# Remove unnecessary spines
ax.spines['top'].set_visible(False)
ax.spines['right'].set_visible(False)
# Save in publication formats (from scripts/figure_export.py)
from figure_export import save_publication_figure
save_publication_figure(fig, 'figure1', formats=['pdf', 'png'], dpi=300)
Using Pre-configured Styles
Apply journal-specific styles using the matplotlib style files in assets/:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
# Option 1: Use style file directly
plt.style.use('assets/nature.mplstyle')
# Option 2: Use style_presets.py helper
from style_presets import configure_for_journal
configure_for_journal('nature', figure_width='single')
# Now create figures - they'll automatically match Nature specifications
fig, ax = plt.subplots()
# ... your plotting code ...
Quick Start with Seaborn
For statistical plots, use seaborn with publication styling:
import seaborn as sns
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from style_presets import apply_publication_style
# Apply publication style
apply_publication_style('default')
sns.set_theme(style='ticks', context='paper', font_scale=1.1)
sns.set_palette('colorblind')
# Create statistical comparison figure
fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(3.5, 3))
sns.boxplot(data=df, x='treatment', y='response',
order=['Control', 'Low', 'High'], palette='Set2', ax=ax)
sns.stripplot(data=df, x='treatment', y='response',
order=['Control', 'Low', 'High'],
color='black', alpha=0.3, size=3, ax=ax)
ax.set_ylabel('Response (μM)')
sns.despine()
# Save figure
from figure_export import save_publication_figure
save_publication_figure(fig, 'treatment_comparison', formats=['pdf', 'png'], dpi=300)
Core Principles and Best Practices
1. Resolution and File Format
Critical requirements (detailed in references/publication_guidelines.md):
- Raster images (photos, microscopy): 300-600 DPI
- Line art (graphs, plots): 600-1200 DPI or vector format
- Vector formats (preferred): PDF, EPS, SVG
- Raster formats: TIFF, PNG (never JPEG for scientific data)
Implementation:
# Use the figure_export.py script for correct settings
from figure_export import save_publication_figure
# Saves in multiple formats with proper DPI
save_publication_figure(fig, 'myfigure', formats=['pdf', 'png'], dpi=300)
# Or save for specific journal requirements
from figure_export import save_for_journal
save_for_journal(fig, 'figure1', journal='nature', figure_type='combination')
2. Color Selection - Colorblind Accessibility
Always use colorblind-friendly palettes (detailed in references/color_palettes.md):
Recommended: Okabe-Ito palette (distinguishable by all types of color blindness):
# Option 1: Use assets/color_palettes.py
from color_palettes import OKABE_ITO_LIST, apply_palette
apply_palette('okabe_ito')
# Option 2: Manual specification
okabe_ito = ['#E69F00', '#56B4E9', '#009E73', '#F0E442',
'#0072B2', '#D55E00', '#CC79A7', '#000000']
plt.rcParams['axes.prop_cycle'] = plt.cycler(color=okabe_ito)
For heatmaps/continuous data:
- Use perceptually uniform colormaps:
viridis,plasma,cividis - Avoid red-green diverging maps (use
PuOr,RdBu,BrBGinstead) - Never use
jetorrainbowcolormaps
Always test figures in grayscale to ensure interpretability.
3. Typography and Text
Font guidelines (detailed in references/publication_guidelines.md):
- Sans-serif fonts: Arial, Helvetica, Calibri
- Minimum sizes at final print size:
- Axis labels: 7-9 pt
- Tick labels: 6-8 pt
- Panel labels: 8-12 pt (bold)
- Sentence case for labels: "Time (hours)" not "TIME (HOURS)"
- Always include units in parentheses
Implementation:
# Set fonts globally
import matplotlib as mpl
mpl.rcParams['font.family'] = 'sans-serif'
mpl.rcParams['font.sans-serif'] = ['Arial', 'Helvetica']
mpl.rcParams['font.size'] = 8
mpl.rcParams['axes.labelsize'] = 9
mpl.rcParams['xtick.labelsize'] = 7
mpl.rcParams['ytick.labelsize'] = 7
4. Figure Dimensions
Journal-specific widths (detailed in references/journal_requirements.md):
- Nature: Single 89 mm, Double 183 mm
- Science: Single 55 mm, Double 175 mm
- Cell: Single 85 mm, Double 178 mm
Check figure size compliance:
from figure_export import check_figure_size
fig = plt.figure(figsize=(3.5, 3)) # 89 mm for Nature
check_figure_size(fig, journal='nature')
5. Multi-Panel Figures
Best practices:
- Label panels with bold letters: A, B, C (uppercase for most journals, lowercase for Nature)
- Maintain consistent styling across all panels
- Align panels along edges where possible
- Use adequate white space between panels
Example implementation (see references/matplotlib_examples.md for complete code):
from string import ascii_uppercase
fig = plt.figure(figsize=(7, 4))
gs = fig.add_gridspec(2, 2, hspace=0.4, wspace=0.4)
ax1 = fig.add_subplot(gs[0, 0])
ax2 = fig.add_subplot(gs[0, 1])
# ... create other panels ...
# Add panel labels
for i, ax in enumerate([ax1, ax2, ...]):
ax.text(-0.15, 1.05, ascii_uppercase[i], transform=ax.transAxes,
fontsize=10, fontweight='bold', va='top')
Common Tasks
Task 1: Create a Publication-Ready Line Plot
See references/matplotlib_examples.md Example 1 for complete code.
Key steps:
- Apply publication style
- Set appropriate figure size for target journal
- Use colorblind-friendly colors
- Add error bars with correct representation (SEM, SD, or CI)
- Label axes with units
- Remove unnecessary spines
- Save in vector format
Using seaborn for automatic confidence intervals:
import seaborn as sns
fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(5, 3))
sns.lineplot(data=timeseries, x='time', y='measurement',
hue='treatment', errorbar=('ci', 95),
markers=True, ax=ax)
ax.set_xlabel('Time (hours)')
ax.set_ylabel('Measurement (AU)')
sns.despine()
Task 2: Create a Multi-Panel Figure
See references/matplotlib_examples.md Example 2 for complete code.
Key steps:
- Use
GridSpecfor flexible layout - Ensure consistent styling across panels
- Add bold panel labels (A, B, C, etc.)
- Align related panels
- Verify all text is readable at final size
Task 3: Create a Heatmap with Proper Colormap
See references/matplotlib_examples.md Example 4 for complete code.
Key steps:
- Use perceptually uniform colo