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data visualization - Visualize distance matrix as a graph

I am doing a clustering task and I have a distance matrix. I wish to visualize this distance matrix as a 2D graph. Please let me know if there is any way to do it online or in programming languages like R or python. My distance matrix is as follows, enter image description here I used the classical Multidimensional scaling functionality (in R) and obtained a 2D plot that looks like: enter image description here But What I am looking for is a graph with nodes and weighted edges running between them.

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Possibility 1

I assume, that you want a 2dimensional graph, where distances between nodes positions are the same as provided by your table.

In python, you can use networkx for such applications. In general there are manymethods of doing so, remember, that all of them are just approximations (as in general it is not possible to create a 2 dimensional representataion of points given their pairwise distances) They are some kind of stress-minimizatin (or energy-minimization) approximations, trying to find the "reasonable" representation with similar distances as those provided.

As an example you can consider a four point example (with correct, discrete metric applied):

     p1 p2 p3 p4
  ---------------
  p1  0  1  1  1
  p2  1  0  1  1
  p3  1  1  0  1
  p4  1  1  1  0

In general, drawing actual "graph" is redundant, as you have fully connected one (each pair of nodes is connected) so it should be sufficient to draw just points.

Python example

import networkx as nx
import numpy as np
import string

dt = [('len', float)]
A = np.array([(0, 0.3, 0.4, 0.7),
               (0.3, 0, 0.9, 0.2),
               (0.4, 0.9, 0, 0.1),
               (0.7, 0.2, 0.1, 0)
               ])*10
A = A.view(dt)

G = nx.from_numpy_matrix(A)
G = nx.relabel_nodes(G, dict(zip(range(len(G.nodes())),string.ascii_uppercase)))    

G = nx.to_agraph(G)

G.node_attr.update(color="red", style="filled")
G.edge_attr.update(color="blue", width="2.0")

G.draw('distances.png', format='png', prog='neato')

In R you can try multidimensional scaling

# Classical MDS
# N rows (objects) x p columns (variables)
# each row identified by a unique row name

d <- dist(mydata) # euclidean distances between the rows
fit <- cmdscale(d,eig=TRUE, k=2) # k is the number of dim
fit # view results

# plot solution 
x <- fit$points[,1]
y <- fit$points[,2]
plot(x, y, xlab="Coordinate 1", ylab="Coordinate 2", 
  main="Metric  MDS",    type="n")
text(x, y, labels = row.names(mydata), cex=.7)

Possibility 2

You just want to draw a graph with labeled edges

Again, networkx can help:

import networkx as nx   

# Create a graph
G = nx.Graph()

# distances
D = [ [0, 1], [1, 0] ]

labels = {}
for n in range(len(D)):
    for m in range(len(D)-(n+1)):
        G.add_edge(n,n+m+1)
        labels[ (n,n+m+1) ] = str(D[n][n+m+1])

pos=nx.spring_layout(G)

nx.draw(G, pos)
nx.draw_networkx_edge_labels(G,pos,edge_labels=labels,font_size=30)

import pylab as plt
plt.show()

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