Bivariate analysis (Dilbilir): A scattergram visualizes the joint distribution of two variables. While each variable's marginal distribution (histogram) shows univariate structure, the joint distribution reveals relationships: correlation, clustering, and non-linear associations. Two markers might both appear normally distributed in their individual histograms, but their scattergram reveals two distinct clusters — a bimodal joint distribution that is invisible in either marginal alone.
Colocalization metrics (Pawley): In confocal microscopy, scattergrams of two fluorescence channels are used to assess colocalization. Pearson's correlation coefficient R measures intensity correlation (-1 to +1). Manders' coefficients M1 and M2 measure the proportion of each channel that overlaps with the other. But Pawley warns: colocalization quantifies codistribution, not molecular interaction — the microscope's resolution (~200 nm) means molecules in the same voxel could be hundreds of nanometers apart. The same caution applies to tissue cytometry scattergrams: co-expression of two markers in the same cell doesn't necessarily mean the proteins interact.
The compensation analogy: In flow cytometry, spectral overlap between fluorophores produces false correlations in raw scattergrams — cells that are positive for only one marker appear to express both. Compensation (spectral unmixing) removes this artifact. In tissue cytometry, spectral unmixing serves the same purpose: the scattergram of unmixed signals shows true co-expression, while the raw scattergram may show artifactual correlation from spectral bleed-through.
Scattergrams reveal what histograms hide — the relationship between two measurements. Two markers that each look like smooth distributions alone might form distinct clusters when plotted together. These clusters are cell populations, and the gaps between them are natural gates. Just remember: markers co-expressed in the same cell doesn't necessarily mean the proteins interact — it means both are present, not that they're in contact.