Gate (cytometry)

A gate in cytometry is a set of value limits (boundaries) that serve to isolate a specific group of cytometric events from a large set. Gates can be defined by discrimination analysis, or can simply be drawn around a given set of data points on a printout and then converted to a computer-useful form. Gates can be implemented with a physical blinder. Gates may be used either to selectively gather data or to segregate data for analysis.

Division

Gates are divided mathematically into inclusive gates and exclusive gates. Inclusive gates select data that falls within the limits set, while exclusive gates select data that falls outside the limits.

Live gate

A live gate is a term used for a process that prevents the acquisition by the computer of non-selected data from the flow cytometer.

gollark: It's not rocket surgery.
gollark: Oh no, not MATHEMATIC ™!
gollark: Please verify this elsewhere because I don't really maths, but logarithms are basically just the inverse of exponents.
gollark: It might be the other way round sometimes. On fancier systems the base is written as a subscript.
gollark: Some calculators will support `log` with two parameters, one of which is the base, so just `log(number, base)`.
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