Function takes a ply file and its landmark coordinates uses the thin-plate spline method (Bookstein 1989)
to warp the mesh into the shape defined by a second set of landmark coordinates, usually those of the
mean shape for a set of aligned specimens. It is highly recommended that the mean shape is used as the
reference for warping (see Rohlf 1998). The workflow is as follows:
Choose an actual specimen to use for the warping. The specimen used as the template for this warping
is recommended as one most similar in shape to the average of the sample, but can be any reasonable
specimen - do this by eye, or use findMeanSpecWarp this specimen into the mean shape using warpRefMeshUse this average mesh where it asks for a mesh= in the analysis functions and visualization functions
References
Bookstein, F. L. 1989 Principal Warps: Thin-Plate Splines and the Decomposition
of Deformations. IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence 11(6):567-585.
Rohlf, F. J. 1998. On Applications of Geometric Morphometrics to Studies of Ontogeny and Phylogeny. Systematic Biology. 47:147-158.