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Compute spatial statistics for spatial transcriptomics data using Squidpy. Calculate Moran's I, Geary's C, spatial autocorrelation, co-occurrence analysis, and neighborhood enrichment.

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Updated 2/5/2026

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SKILL.md

Spatial Statistics

Compute spatial statistics and identify spatially variable features.

Required Imports

import squidpy as sq
import scanpy as sc
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np

Compute Spatial Autocorrelation (Moran's I)

# Requires spatial neighbors
sq.gr.spatial_neighbors(adata, coord_type='generic', n_neighs=6)

# Compute Moran's I for all genes (can be slow)
sq.gr.spatial_autocorr(adata, mode='moran')

# Or for specific genes
sq.gr.spatial_autocorr(adata, mode='moran', genes=['GENE1', 'GENE2', 'GENE3'])

# Results stored in adata.uns['moranI']
moran_results = adata.uns['moranI']
print(moran_results.head(20))

Interpret Moran's I

# Moran's I ranges from -1 to 1
# I > 0: positive spatial autocorrelation (similar values cluster)
# I = 0: random spatial distribution
# I < 0: negative spatial autocorrelation (dissimilar values cluster)

# Get significantly spatially variable genes
svg = moran_results[moran_results['pval_norm'] < 0.05].sort_values('I', ascending=False)
print(f'Found {len(svg)} spatially variable genes (p < 0.05)')
print('\nTop 10 spatially variable genes:')
print(svg.head(10)[['I', 'pval_norm']])

Compute Geary's C

# Alternative spatial autocorrelation measure
sq.gr.spatial_autocorr(adata, mode='geary')

# Results in adata.uns['gearyC']
geary_results = adata.uns['gearyC']
# C < 1: positive spatial autocorrelation
# C = 1: random
# C > 1: negative spatial autocorrelation

Co-occurrence Analysis

# Analyze co-localization of cell types/clusters
# First, ensure you have cluster labels
sc.pp.neighbors(adata)
sc.tl.leiden(adata)

# Compute co-occurrence
sq.gr.co_occurrence(adata, cluster_key='leiden')

# Results in adata.uns['leiden_co_occurrence']
# Visualize co-occurrence
sq.pl.co_occurrence(adata, cluster_key='leiden')

Interpret Co-occurrence

co_occ = adata.uns['leiden_co_occurrence']
occ_matrix = co_occ['occ']  # Occurrence matrix
interval = co_occ['interval']  # Distance intervals

# occ_matrix[i, j, k] = occurrence of cluster j around cluster i at distance interval k
print(f'Occurrence matrix shape: {occ_matrix.shape}')
print(f'Distance intervals: {interval}')

Neighborhood Enrichment

# Test if clusters are enriched in each other's neighborhoods
sq.gr.nhood_enrichment(adata, cluster_key='leiden')

# Results in adata.uns['leiden_nhood_enrichment']
# zscore > 0: clusters co-localize more than expected
# zscore < 0: clusters avoid each other

# Visualize
sq.pl.nhood_enrichment(adata, cluster_key='leiden')

Extract Enrichment Z-scores

enrichment = adata.uns['leiden_nhood_enrichment']
zscore = enrichment['zscore']
clusters = adata.obs['leiden'].cat.categories

# Convert to DataFrame
zscore_df = pd.DataFrame(zscore, index=clusters, columns=clusters)
print('Neighborhood enrichment z-scores:')
print(zscore_df)

Ripley's Statistics

# Ripley's K/L function for point pattern analysis (single-cell resolution data)
sq.gr.ripley(adata, cluster_key='leiden', mode='L')

# Results in adata.uns['leiden_ripley']
sq.pl.ripley(adata, cluster_key='leiden')

Centrality Scores

# Compute centrality of each cell type
sq.gr.centrality_scores(adata, cluster_key='leiden')

# Results in adata.uns['leiden_centrality_scores']
centrality = adata.uns['leiden_centrality_scores']
print(centrality)

Interaction Matrix

# Build interaction matrix between clusters
sq.gr.interaction_matrix(adata, cluster_key='leiden')

# Results in adata.uns['leiden_interactions']
interactions = adata.uns['leiden_interactions']
print(interactions)

Custom Spatial Statistic

from scipy.stats import pearsonr

def spatial_correlation(adata, gene1, gene2):
    '''Compute spatial correlation between two genes'''
    expr1 = adata[:, gene1].X.toarray().flatten()
    expr2 = adata[:, gene2].X.toarray().flatten()
    r, p = pearsonr(expr1, expr2)
    return r, p

r, p = spatial_correlation(adata, 'GENE1', 'GENE2')
print(f'Spatial correlation: r={r:.3f}, p={p:.2e}')

Local Moran's I (LISA)

from esda.moran import Moran_Local
from libpysal.weights import KNN

# Build weights matrix
coords = adata.obsm['spatial']
w = KNN.from_array(coords, k=6)
w.transform = 'r'

# Compute local Moran's I for a gene
gene_expr = adata[:, 'GENE1'].X.toarray().flatten()
lisa = Moran_Local(gene_expr, w)

# Add to adata
adata.obs['GENE1_lisa'] = lisa.Is
adata.obs['GENE1_lisa_q'] = lisa.q  # Quadrant (HH, HL, LH, LL)

Batch Spatial Statistics

# Compute Moran's I for top variable genes only
hvg = adata.var_names[adata.var['highly_variable']][:500]
sq.gr.spatial_autocorr(adata, mode='moran', genes=hvg)

results = adata.uns['moranI']
significant = results[results['pval_norm'] < 0.01]
print(f'{len(significant)} genes with significant spatial autocorrelation')

Related Skills

  • spatial-neighbors - Build spatial graphs (prerequisite)
  • spatial-domains - Identify spatial domains
  • spatial-visualization - Visualize spatial statistics

Install

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Requires askill CLI v1.0+

AI Quality Score

95/100Analyzed 2/12/2026

An excellent, high-density technical reference for performing spatial statistics on transcriptomics data using Squidpy. It provides clear, actionable code snippets for multiple statistical methods (Moran's I, Geary's C, Co-occurrence, etc.), explains how to interpret the results, and is highly reusable.

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Metadata

Licenseunknown
Version-
Updated2/5/2026
Publishermajiayu000

Tags

ci-cdtesting