Hi Sofia,
You can use 3 time points with the functional data explorer tool if the shape of the curve if the shape of the curve is essential in your understanding. As @Mark_Bailey mentioned, 3 time points does reduce your resolution - but you can still generate models with FDE that give valuable insight if you're happy with it only showing 3 time points.
To show, I've attached an example of simplified growth curve with just 3 time points recorded with a categorical (cell line) and numeric (maltose %) factor and generated a model with the Functional Data Analyser and with the Fit Curve/Curve DoE tool (just click the green script buttons on the left of the data table). The Fit Curve is useful for modelling curves with an expected/pre-determined shape (i.e. sigmoidal, growth/decay) based on your theoretical understanding and can 'smooth' your curves.
![Ben_Ingham_0-1698247371734.png Ben_Ingham_0-1698247371734.png](https://community.jmp.com/t5/image/serverpage/image-id/57957i510A566C28822E0B/image-size/medium?v=v2&px=400)
Output from a FDE
![Ben_Ingham_1-1698247403862.png Ben_Ingham_1-1698247403862.png](https://community.jmp.com/t5/image/serverpage/image-id/57958i2B37AB3A499CF92F/image-size/medium?v=v2&px=400)
Output from a Curve DoE with Fit Curve - note how the time series is now smoothed to fit a 'Logistic 3P' sigmoid curve
Let me know if that helps.
Thanks,
Ben
“All models are wrong, but some are useful”