Using R For Data Analysis and Graphics Introduction, Code and Commentary
Using R For Data Analysis and Graphics Introduction, Code and Commentary
J H Maindonald Centre for Mathematics and Its Applications, Australian National University.
J. H. Maindonald 2000, 2004, 2008. A licence is granted for personal study and classroom use. Redistribution in any other form is prohibited. Languages shape the way we think, and determine what we can think about (Benjamin Whorf.). This latest revision has corrected several errors. I plan, in due course, to post a new document that will largely replace this now somewhat dated document, taking more adequate account of recent changes and enhancements to the R system and its associated packages since 2002. 19 January 2008
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Lindenmayer, D. B., Viggers, K. L., Cunningham, R. B., and Donnelly, C. F. : Morphological variation among populations of the mountain brushtail possum, trichosurus caninus Ogibly (Phalangeridae:Marsupialia). Australian Journal of Zoology 43: 449-459, 1995.
possum n. 1 Any of many chiefly herbivorous, long-tailed, tree-dwelling, mainly Australian marsupials, some of which are gliding animals (e.g. brush-tailed possum, flying possum). 2 a mildly scornful term for a person. 3 an affectionate mode of address. From the Australian Oxford Paperback Dictionary, 2nd ed, 1996.
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Introduction...........................................................................................................................................................1 The R System..................................................................................................................................................1 The Look and Feel of R ..................................................................................................................................1 The Use of these Notes ...................................................................................................................................2 The R Project ..................................................................................................................................................2 Web Pages and Email Lists.............................................................................................................................2 Datasets that relate to these notes....................................................................................................................2 _________________________________________________________________________ .......................2 1. Starting Up ........................................................................................................................................................3 1.1 1.2 1.3 Getting started under Windows.................................................................................................................3 Use of an Editor Script Window................................................................................................................4 A Short R Session .....................................................................................................................................5 Entry of Data at the Command Line...................................................................................................6
1.3.1
1.3.2 Entry and/or editing of data in an editor window...................................................................................6 1.3.3 Options for read.table() ..........................................................................................................................6 1.3.4 Options for plot() and allied functions ...................................................................................................7 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Further Notational Details.......................................................................................................................7 On-line Help.............................................................................................................................................7 The Loading or Attaching of Datasets......................................................................................................7 Exercises ..................................................................................................................................................8
2. An Overview of R..............................................................................................................................................9 2.1 The Uses of R ................................................................................................................................................9 2.1.1 R may be used as a calculator. ...............................................................................................................9 2.1.2 R will provide numerical or graphical summaries of data .....................................................................9 2.1.3 R has extensive graphical abilities .......................................................................................................10 2.1.4 R will handle a variety of specific analyses .........................................................................................10 2.1.5 R is an Interactive Programming Language .........................................................................................11 2.2 R Objects.....................................................................................................................................................11 *2.3 Looping .....................................................................................................................................................12 2.3.1 More on looping...................................................................................................................................12 2.4 Vectors ........................................................................................................................................................12 2.4.1 Joining (concatenating) vectors............................................................................................................13 2.4.2 Subsets of Vectors................................................................................................................................13 2.4.3 The Use of NA in Vector Subscripts....................................................................................................13 2.4.4 Factors..................................................................................................................................................14 2.5 Data Frames ...............................................................................................................................................15 2.5.1 Data frames as lists ..............................................................................................................................15 2.5.2 Inclusion of character string vectors in data frames.............................................................................15 2.5.3 Built-in data sets ..................................................................................................................................15
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2.6 Common Useful Functions..........................................................................................................................16 2.6.1 Applying a function to all columns of a data frame .............................................................................16 2.7 Making Tables.............................................................................................................................................17 2.7.1 Numbers of NAs in subgroups of the data ...........................................................................................17 2.8 The Search List ...........................................................................................................................................17 2.9 Functions in R .............................................................................................................................................18 2.9.1 An Approximate Miles to Kilometers Conversion...............................................................................18 2.9.2 A Plotting function...............................................................................................................................18 2.10 More Detailed Information .......................................................................................................................19 2.11 Exercises ...................................................................................................................................................19 3. Plotting.............................................................................................................................................................21 3.1 plot () and allied functions ..........................................................................................................................21 3.1.1 Plot methods for other classes of object...............................................................................................21 3.2 Fine control Parameter settings...............................................................................................................21 3.2.1 Multiple plots on the one page .............................................................................................................22 3.2.2 The shape of the graph sheet................................................................................................................22 3.3 Adding points, lines and text .......................................................................................................................22 3.3.1 Size, colour and choice of plotting symbol ..........................................................................................23 3.3.2 Adding Text in the Margin...................................................................................................................24 3.4 Identification and Location on the Figure Region ......................................................................................24 3.4.1 identify() ..............................................................................................................................................24 3.4.2 locator()................................................................................................................................................25 3.5 Plots that show the distribution of data values ...........................................................................................25 3.5.1 Histograms and density plots ...............................................................................................................25 3.5.3 Boxplots ...............................................................................................................................................26 3.5.4 Normal probability plots ......................................................................................................................26 3.6 Other Useful Plotting Functions .................................................................................................................27 3.6.1 Scatterplot smoothing ..........................................................................................................................27 3.6.2 Adding lines to plots ............................................................................................................................28 3.6.3 Rugplots ...............................................................................................................................................28 3.6.4 Scatterplot matrices..............................................................................................................................28 3.6.5 Dotcharts ..............................................................................................................................................28 3.7 Plotting Mathematical Symbols ..................................................................................................................29 3.8 Guidelines for Graphs.................................................................................................................................29 3.9 Exercises .....................................................................................................................................................29 3.10 References .................................................................................................................................................30 4. Lattice graphics...............................................................................................................................................31 4.1 Examples that Present Panels of Scatterplots Using xyplot() ...........................................................31 4.2 Some further examples of lattice plots ........................................................................................................32 4.2.1 Plotting columns in parallel .................................................................................................................32
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4.2.2 Fixed, sliced and free scales.................................................................................................................33 4.3 An incomplete list of lattice Functions........................................................................................................33 4.4 Exercises .....................................................................................................................................................33 5. Linear (Multiple Regression) Models and Analysis of Variance ................................................................35 5.1 The Model Formula in Straight Line Regression........................................................................................35 5.2 Regression Objects......................................................................................................................................35 5.3 Model Formulae, and the X Matrix.............................................................................................................36 5.3.1 Model Formulae in General .................................................................................................................37 *5.3.2 Manipulating Model Formulae ..........................................................................................................38 5.4 Multiple Linear Regression Models ............................................................................................................38 5.4.1 The data frame Rubber.........................................................................................................................38 5.4.2 Weights of Books.................................................................................................................................40 5.5 Polynomial and Spline Regression..............................................................................................................41 5.5.1 Polynomial Terms in Linear Models....................................................................................................41 5.5.2 What order of polynomial? ..................................................................................................................42 5.5.3 Pointwise confidence bounds for the fitted curve ................................................................................43 5.5.4 Spline Terms in Linear Models............................................................................................................43 5.6 Using Factors in R Models .........................................................................................................................43 5.6.1 The Model Matrix ................................................................................................................................44 *5.6.2 Other Choices of Contrasts ................................................................................................................45 5.7 Multiple Lines Different Regression Lines for Different Species .............................................................46 5.8 aov models (Analysis of Variance)..............................................................................................................47 5.8.1 Plant Growth Example .........................................................................................................................47 *5.8.2 Shading of Kiwifruit Vines ................................................................................................................48 5.9 Exercises .....................................................................................................................................................49 5.10 References .................................................................................................................................................50 6. Multivariate and Tree-based Methods..........................................................................................................51 6.1 Multivariate EDA, and Principal Components Analysis.............................................................................51 6.2 Cluster Analysis ..........................................................................................................................................52 6.3 Discriminant Analysis .................................................................................................................................52 6.4 Decision Tree models (Tree-based models) ................................................................................................53 6.5 Exercises .....................................................................................................................................................54 6.6 References ...................................................................................................................................................54 *7. R Data Structures .........................................................................................................................................55 7.1 Vectors ........................................................................................................................................................55 7.1.1 Subsets of Vectors................................................................................................................................55 7.1.2 Patterned Data ......................................................................................................................................55 7.2 Missing Values ............................................................................................................................................55 7.3 Data frames.................................................................................................................................................56 7.3.1 Extraction of Component Parts of Data frames....................................................................................56
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7.3.2 Data Sets that Accompany R Packages................................................................................................56 7.4 Data Entry Issues........................................................................................................................................57 7.4.1 Idiosyncrasies.......................................................................................................................................57 7.4.2 Missing values when using read.table()................................................................................57 7.4.3 Separators when using read.table()............................................................................................57 7.5 Factors and Ordered Factors .....................................................................................................................57 7.6 Ordered Factors..........................................................................................................................................58 7.7 Lists.............................................................................................................................................................59 *7.8 Matrices and Arrays..................................................................................................................................59 7.8.1 Arrays...................................................................................................................................................60 7.8.2 Conversion of Numeric Data frames into Matrices..............................................................................61 7.9 Exercises .....................................................................................................................................................61 8. Functions..........................................................................................................................................................62 8.1 Functions for Confidence Intervals and Tests.............................................................................................62 8.1.1 The t-test and associated confidence interval.......................................................................................62 8.1.2 Chi-Square tests for two-way tables.....................................................................................................62 8.2 Matching and Ordering ..............................................................................................................................62 8.3 String Functions..........................................................................................................................................62 *8.3.1 Operations with Vectors of Text Strings A Further Example .........................................................62 8.4 Application of a Function to the Columns of an Array or Data Frame ......................................................63 8.4.1 apply() ..................................................................................................................................................63 8.4.2 sapply() ................................................................................................................................................63 *8.5 aggregate() and tapply() ...........................................................................................................................63 *8.6 Merging Data Frames...............................................................................................................................64 8.7 Dates ...........................................................................................................................................................64 8.8. Writing Functions and other Code.............................................................................................................65 8.8.1 Syntax and Semantics ..........................................................................................................................65 8.8.2 A Function that gives Data Frame Details ...........................................................................................66 8.8.3 Compare Working Directory Data Sets with a Reference Set..............................................................66 8.8.4 Issues for the Writing and Use of Functions ........................................................................................66 8.8.5 Functions as aids to Data Management................................................................................................67 8.8.6 Graphs ..................................................................................................................................................67 8.8.7 A Simulation Example .........................................................................................................................67 8.8.8 Poisson Random Numbers ...................................................................................................................68 8.9 Exercises .....................................................................................................................................................68 *9. GLM, and General Non-linear Models .......................................................................................................70 9.1 A Taxonomy of Extensions to the Linear Model .........................................................................................70 9.2 Logistic Regression .....................................................................................................................................71 9.2.1 Anesthetic Depth Example...................................................................................................................72 9.3 glm models (Generalized Linear Regression Modelling)............................................................................74
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9.3.2 Data in the form of counts....................................................................................................................74 9.3.3 The gaussian family .............................................................................................................................74 9.4 Models that Include Smooth Spline Terms..................................................................................................74 9.4.1 Dewpoint Data .....................................................................................................................................74 9.5 Survival Analysis.........................................................................................................................................74 9.6 Non-linear Models ......................................................................................................................................75 9.7 Model Summaries........................................................................................................................................75 9.8 Further Elaborations ..................................................................................................................................75 9.9 Exercises .....................................................................................................................................................75 9.10 References .................................................................................................................................................75 *10. Multi-level Models, Repeated Measures and Time Series .......................................................................76 10.1 Multi-Level Models, Including Repeated Measures Models .....................................................................76 10.1.1 The Kiwifruit Shading Data, Again ...................................................................................................76 10.1.2 The Tinting of Car Windows .............................................................................................................78 10.1.3 The Michelson Speed of Light Data .................................................................................................79 10.2 Time Series Models ...................................................................................................................................80 10.3 Exercises ...................................................................................................................................................80 10.4 References .................................................................................................................................................81 *11. Advanced Programming Topics ................................................................................................................82 11.1. Methods....................................................................................................................................................82 11.2 Extracting Arguments to Functions ..........................................................................................................82 11.3 Parsing and Evaluation of Expressions ....................................................................................................83 11.4 Plotting a mathematical expression ..........................................................................................................84 11.5 Searching R functions for a specified token. .............................................................................................85 12. Appendix 1.....................................................................................................................................................86 12.1 R Packages for Windows...........................................................................................................................86 12.2 Contributed Documents and Published Literature ...................................................................................86 12.3 Data Sets Referred to in these Notes.........................................................................................................86 12.4 Answers to Selected Exercises ..................................................................................................................87 Section 1.6 ....................................................................................................................................................87 Section 2.7 ....................................................................................................................................................87 Section 3.9 ....................................................................................................................................................87 Section 7.9 ....................................................................................................................................................87
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Introduction
These notes are designed to allow individuals who have a basic grounding in statistical methodology to work through examples that demonstrate the use of R for a range of types of data manipulation, graphical presentation and statistical analysis. Books that provide a more extended commentary on the methods illustrated in these examples include Maindonald and Braun (2003).
The R System
R implements a dialect of the S language that was developed at AT&T Bell Laboratories by Rick Becker, John Chambers and Allan Wilks. Versions of R are available, at no cost, for 32-bit versions of Microsoft Windows for Linux, for Unix and for Macintosh OS X. (There are are older versions of R that support 8.6 and 9.) It is available through the Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN). Web addresses are given below. The citation for John Chambers 1998 Association for Computing Machinery Software award stated that S has forever altered how people analyze, visualize and manipulate data. The R project enlarges on the ideas and insights that generated the S language. Here are points that potential users might note: R has extensive and powerful graphics abilities, that are tightly linked with its analytic abilities. The R system is developing rapidly. New features and abilities appear every few months. Simple calculations and analyses can be handled straightforwardly. Chapters 1 and 2 indicate the range of abilities that are immediately available to novice users. If simple methods prove inadequate, there can be recourse to the huge range of more advanced abilities that R offers. Adaptation of available abilities allows even greater flexibility. The R community is widely drawn, from application area specialists as well as statistical specialists. It is a community that is sensitive to the potential for misuse of statistical techniques and suspicious of what might appear to be mindless use. Expect scepticism of the use of models that are not susceptible to some minimal form of data-based validation. Because R is free, users have no right to expect attention, on the R-help list or elsewhere, to queries. Be grateful for whatever help is given. Users who want a point and click interface should investigate the R Commander (Rcmdr package) interface. While R is as reliable as any statistical software that is available, and exposed to higher standards of scrutiny than most other systems, there are traps that call for special care. Some of the model fitting routines are leading edge, with a limited tradition of experience of the limitations and pitfalls. Whatever the statistical system, and especially when there is some element of complication, check each step with care. The skills needed for the computing are not on their own enough. Neither R nor any other statistical system will give the statistical expertise needed to use sophisticated abilities, or to know when nave methods are inadequate. Anyone with a contrary view may care to consider whether a butchers meat-cleaving skills are likely to be adequate for effective animal (or maybe human!) surgery. Experience with the use of R is however, more than with most systems, likely to be an educational experience. Hurrah for the R development team!
The structure of an R program has similarities with programs that are written in C or in its successors C++ and Java. Important differences are that R has no header files, most declarations are implicit, there are no pointers, and vectors of text strings can be defined and manipulated directly. The implementation of R uses a computing model that is based on the Scheme dialect of the LISP language.
The R Project
The initial version of R was developed by Ross Ihaka and Robert Gentleman, both from the University of Auckland. Development of R is now overseen by a `core team of about a dozen people, widely drawn from different institutions worldwide. Like Linux, R is an open source system. Source-code is available for inspection, or for adaptation to other systems. Exposing code to the critical scrutiny of highly expert users has proved an extremely effective way to identify bugs and other inadequacies, and to elicit ideas for enhancement. Reported bugs are commonly fixed in the next minor-minor release, which will usually appear within a matter of weeks. Novice users will notice small but occasionally important differences between the S dialect that R implements and the commercial S-PLUS implementation of S. Those who write substantial functions and (more importantly) packages will find large differences. The R language environment is designed to facilitate the development of new scientific computational tools. The packages give access to up-to-date methodology from leading statistical and other researchers. Computerintensive components can, if computational efficiency demands, be handled by a call to a function that is written in the C or Fortran language. With the very large address spaces now possible, and as a result of continuing improvements in the efficiency of Rs coding and memory management, Rs routines can readily process data sets that by historical standards seem large e.g., on a Unix machine with 2GB of memory, a regression with 500,000 cases and 100 variables is feasible. With very large datasets, the main issue is often manipulation of data, and systems that are specifically designed for such manipulation may be preferable. Note that data structure is, typically, an even more important issue for large data sets than for small data sets. Additionally, repeated smaller analyses with subsets of the total data may give insight that is not available from a single global analysis.
_________________________________________________________________________
Jeff Wood (CMIS, CSIRO), Andreas Ruckstuhl (Technikum Winterthur Ingenieurschule, Switzerland) and John Braun (University of Western Ontario) gave me exemplary help in getting the earlier S-PLUS version of this document somewhere near shipshape form. John Braun gave valuable help with proofreading, and provided several of the data sets and a number of the exercises. I take full responsibility for the errors that remain. I am grateful, also, to various scientists named in the notes who have allowed me to use their data.
1. Starting Up
R must be installed on your system! If it is not, follow the installation instructions appropriate to the operating system. Installation is now especially straightforward for Windows users. Copy down the latest SetupR.exe from the relevant base directory on the nearest CRAN site, click on its icon to start installation, and follow instructions. Packages that do not come with the base distribution must be downloaded and installed separately. It pays to have a separate working directory for each major project. For more details. see the README file that is included with the R distribution. Users of Microsoft Windows may wish to create a separate icon for each such working directory. First create the directory. Then right click|copy2 to copy an existing R icon, it, right click|paste to place a copy on the desktop, right click|rename on the copy to rename it3, and then finally go to right click|properties to set the Start in directory to be the working directory that was set up earlier.
1.1
Click on the R icon. Or if there is more than one icon, choose the icon that corresponds to the project that is in hand. For this demonstration I will click on my r-notes icon. In interactive use under Microsoft Windows there are several ways to input commands to R. Figures 1 and 2 demonstrate two of the possibilities. Either or both of the following may be used at the users discretion. This document mostly assumes that users will type commands into the command window, at the command line prompt. Figure 1 shows the command window as it appears when version 2.0.0 of R has just been started.
Fig. 1: The upper left portion of the R console (command line) window, for version 2.0.0 of R, immediately after starting up.
The command line prompt, i.e. the >, is an invitation to start typing in your commands. For example, type 2+2 and press the Enter key. Here is what appears on the screen:
> 2+2 [1] 4 >
Here the result is 4. The[1] says, a little strangely, first requested element will follow. Here, there is just one element. The > indicates that R is ready for another command.
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This is a shortcut for right click, then left click on the copy menu item.
Enter the name of your choice into the name field. For ease of remembering, choose a name that closely matches the name of the workspace directory, perhaps the name itself.
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For later reference, note that the exit or quit command is
> q()
Alternatives to the use of q() are to click on the File menu and then on Exit, or to click on the in the top right hand corner of the R window. There will be a message asking whether to save the workspace image. Clicking Yes (the safe option) will save all the objects that remain in the workspace any that were there at the start of the session and any that have been added since.
1.2
The screen snapshot in Figure2 shows a script file window. This allows input to R of statements from a file that has been set up in advance, or that have been typed or copied into the window. To get a script file window, go to the File menu. If a new blank window is required, click on New script. To load an existing file, click on Open script; you will be asked for the name of a file whose contents are then displayed in the window. In Figure 2 the file was firstSteps.R. Highlight the commands that are intended for input to R. Click on the `Run line or selection icon, which is the middle icon of the script file editor toolbar in Figs. 2 and 3, to send commands to R.
Fig. 2: The focus is on an R display file window, with the console window in the background.
Fig. 3: This shows the five icons that appear when the focus is on a script file window. The icons are, starting from the left: Open script, Save script, Run line or selection, Return focus to console, and Print. The text in a script file window can be edited, or new text added. Display file windows, which have a somewhat similar set of icons but do not allow editing, are another possibility.
Under Unix, the standard form of input is the command line interface. Under both Microsoft Windows and Linux (or Unix), a further possibility is to run R from within the emacs editor4. Under Microsoft Windows,
This requires emacs, and ESS which runs under emacs. Both are free. Look under Software|Other on the CRAN page.
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attractive options are to use either the R-WinEdt utility that is designed for use with the shareware WinEdt editor, or to use the free tinn-R editor5.
1.3
Year
A Short R Session
NSW Vic. Qld 683 873 993 SA 440 565 589 646 873 WA Tas. 306 392 457 502 688 879 193 211 233 257 326 375 NT ACT Aust. 5 4 6 11 21 3 8 11 17 38 4941 6182 6836 7579 9640
We will read into R a file that holds population figures for Australian states and territories, and total population, at various times since 1917, then using this file to create a graph. The data in the file are:
1917 1904 1409 1927 2402 1727 1937 2693 1853
62 103 11799
1977 5002 3837 2130 1286 1204 1987 5617 4210 2675 1393 1496 1997 6274 4605 3401 1480 1798
415 104 214 14192 449 158 265 16264 474 187 310 18532
The following reads in the data from the file austpop.txt on a disk in drive d:
> austpop <- read.table(d:/austpop.txt, header=TRUE)
The <- is a left diamond bracket (<) followed by a minus sign (-). It means is assigned to. Use of header=TRUE causes R to use= the first line to get header information for the columns. If column headings are not included in the file, the argument can be omitted. Now type in austpop at the command line prompt, displaying the object on the screen:
> austpop Year NSW Vic. Qld 683 873 SA 440 565 WA Tas. 306 392 193 211 NT ACT Aust. 5 4 3 8 4941 6182 1 1917 1904 1409 2 1927 2402 1727 . . .
The object austpop is, in R parlance, a data frame. Data frames that consist entirely of numeric data have the same form of rectangular layout as numeric matrices. Here is a plot (Figure 4) of the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) population between 1917 and 1997 (Figure 4).
Figure 4: Population of Australian Capital Territory, at various times between 1917 and 1997. Code to plot the graph is:
plot(ACT ~ Year, data=austpop, pch=16)
Note that in the version of the dataset that is in the DAAG package, year has a lower case y.
The R-WinEdt utility, which is free, is a plugin for WinEdt. For links to the relevant web pages, for WinEdt R-WinEdt and various other editors that work with R, look under Software|Other on the CRAN web page.
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A simple way to get the plot is:
> plot(ACT ~ Year, data=austpop, pch=16) # For the DAAG version, replace Year by year
The option pch=16 sets the plotting character to a solid black dot. This plot can be improved greatly. We can specify more informative axis labels, change size of the text and of the plotting symbol, and so on.
1.3.1
A data frame is a rectangular array of columns of data. Here we will have two columns, and both columns will be numeric. The following data gives, for each amount by which an elastic band is stretched over the end of a ruler, the distance that the band moved when released: stretch distance 46 148 54 182 48 173 50 166 44 109 42 141 52 166
The function data.frame() can be used to input these (or other) data directly at the command line. We will give the data frame the name elasticband:
elasticband <- data.frame(stretch=c(46,54,48,50,44,42,52), distance=c(148,182,173,166,109,141,166))
1.4
>
As noted earlier, the command line prompt is R commands (expressions) are typed following this prompt6. There is also a continuation prompt, used when, following a carriage return, the command is still not complete. By default, the continuation prompt is
+
In these notes, we often continue commands over more than one line, but omit the + that will appear on the commands window if the command is typed in as we show it. For the names of R objects or commands, case is significant. Thus Austpop is different from austpop. For file names however, the Microsoft Windows conventions apply, and case does not distinguish file names. On Unix systems letters that have a different case are treated as different. Anything that follows a # on the command line is taken as comment and ignored by R. Note: Recall that, in order to quit from the R session we had to type q(). This is because q is a function. Typing q on its own, without the parentheses, displays the text of the function on the screen. Try it!
1.5
On-line Help
To get a help window (under R for Windows) with a list of help topics, type:
> help()
In R for Windows, an alternative is to click on the help menu item, and then use key words to do a search. To get help on a specific R function, e.g. plot(), type in
> help(plot)
The two search functions help.search() and apropos() can be a huge help in finding what one wants. Examples of their use are:
> help.search("matrix") (This lists all functions whose help pages have a title or alias in which the text string matrix appears.) > apropos(matrix)
(This lists all function names that include the text matrix.) The function help.start() opens a browser window that gives access to the full range of documentation for syntax, packages and functions. Experimentation often helps clarify the precise action of an R function.
1.6
The recommended way to access datasets that are supplied for use with these notes is to attach the file usingR.RData., available from the author's web page. Place this file in the working directory and, from within the R session, type:
> attach("usingR.RData")
Files that are mentioned in these notes, and that are not supplied with R (e.g., from the datasets or MASS packages) should then be available without need for any further action.
Multiple commands may appear on the one line, with the semicolon (;) as the separator.
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Users can also load (use load()) or attach (use attach()) specific files. These have a similar effect, the difference being that with attach() datasets are loaded into memory only when required for use. Distinguish between the attaching of image files and the attaching of data frames. The attaching of data frames will be discussed later in these notes.
1.7
Exercises
1. In the data frame elasticband from section 1.3.1, plot distance against stretch. 2. The following ten observations, taken during the years 1970-79, are on October snow cover for Eurasia. (Snow cover is in millions of square kilometers):
year snow.cover 1970 6.5 1971 12.0 1972 14.9 1973 10.0 1974 10.7 1975 7.9 1976 21.9 1977 12.5 1978 14.5 1979 9.2
i. Enter the data into R. [Section 1.3.1 showed one way to do this. To save keystrokes, enter the successive years as 1970:1979] ii. Plot snow.cover versus year. iii Use the hist() command to plot a histogram of the snow cover values. iv. Repeat ii and iii after taking logarithms of snow cover. 3. Input the following data, on damage that had occurred in space shuttle launches prior to the disastrous launch of Jan 28 1986. These are the data, for 6 launches out of 24, that were included in the pre-launch charts that were used in deciding whether to proceed with the launch. (Data for the 23 launches where information is available is in the data set orings, from the DAAG package.)
Temperature Erosion (F) 53 57 63 70 70 75 3 1 1 1 1 0 Blowby 2 0 0 0 0 2 Total incidents 5 1 1 1 1 1 incidents incidents
Enter these data into a data frame, with (for example) column names temperature, erosion, blowby and total. (Refer back to Section 1.3.1). Plot total incidents against temperature.
We may for example require information on ranges of variables. Thus the range of distances (first column) is from 2 miles to 28 miles, while the range of times (third column) is from 15.95 (minutes) to 204.6 minutes. We will discuss graphical summaries in the next section.
There are also versions in the DAAG package and in the Venables and Ripley MASS package.
Suppose we wish to calculate logarithms, and then calculate correlations. We can do all this in one step, thus:
> cor(log(hills)) distance climb distance climb time time 1.00 0.700 0.890 0.70 1.000 0.724 0.89 0.724 1.000
Unfortunately R was not clever enough to relabel distance as log(distance), climb as log(climb), and time as log(time). Notice that the correlations between time and distance, and between time and climb, have reduced. Why has this happened? Straight Line Regression: Here is a straight line regression calculation. The data are stored in the data frame elasticband (DAAG package). The variable names are the names of columns in that data frame. The formula that is supplied to the lm() command asks for the regression of distance travelled by the elastic band (distance) on the amount by which it is stretched (stretch).
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> plot(distance ~ stretch,data=elasticband, pch=16) > elastic.lm <- lm(distance~stretch,data=elasticband) > lm(distance ~stretch,data=elasticband) Call: lm(formula = distance ~ stretch, data = elasticband) Coefficients: (Intercept) -63.571 stretch 4.554
Try it!
2.2 R Objects
All R entities, including functions and data structures, exist as objects. They can all be operated on as data. Type in ls() to see the names of all objects in your workspace. An alternative to ls() is objects(). In both cases there is provision to specify a particular pattern, e.g. starting with the letter `p8. Typing the name of an object causes the printing of its contents. Try typing q, mean, etc. In a long session, it makes sense to save the contents of the working directory from time to time. It is also possible to save individual objects, or collections of objects into a named image file. Some possibilities are:
save.image() # Save contents of workspace, into the file .RData # Save into the file archive.RData save.image(file="archive.RData")
Image files, from the working directory or (with the path specified) from another directory, can be attached, thus making objects in the file available on request. For example
attach("tempscales.RData") ls(pos=2) # Check the contents of the file that has been attached
The parameter pos gives the position on the search list. (The search list is discussed later in this chapter, in Section 2.9.) Important: On quitting, R offers the option of saving the workspace image, by default in the file .RData in the working directory. This allows the retention, for use in the next session in the same workspace, any objects that were created in the current session. Careful housekeeping may be needed to distinguish between objects that are
Type in help(ls) and help(grep) to get details. The pattern matching conventions are those used for grep(), which is modelled on the Unix grep command.
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to be kept and objects that will not be used again. Before typing q() to quit, use rm() to remove objects that are no longer required. Saving the workspace image will then save everything remains. The workspace image will be automatically loaded upon starting another session in that directory.
*92.3 Looping
A simple example of a for loop is10
for (i in 1:10) print(i)
Here is another example of a for loop, to do in a complicated way what we did very simply in section 2.1.5:
> # Celsius to Fahrenheit > for (celsius in 25:30) + print(c(celsius, 9/5*celsius + 32)) [1] 25 77 [1] 26.0 78.8 [1] 27.0 80.6 [1] 28.0 82.4 [1] 29.0 84.2 [1] 30 86
The calculation iteratively builds up the object answer, using the successive values of j listed in the vector (31,51,91). i.e. Initially, j=31, and answer is assigned the value 31 + 0 = 31. Then j=51, and answer is assigned the value 51 + 31 = 82. Finally, j=91, and answer is assigned the value 91 + 81 = 173. Then the procedure ends, and the contents of answer can be examined by typing in answer and pressing the Enter key. There is a more straightforward way to do this calculation:
> sum(c(31,51,91)) [1] 173
Skilled R users have limited recourse to loops. There are often, as in this and earlier examples, better alternatives.
2.4 Vectors
Examples of vectors are
c(2,3,5,2,7,1) 3:10 # The numbers 3, 4, .., 10 c(TRUE,FALSE,FALSE,FALSE,TRUE,TRUE,FALSE) c(Canberra,Sydney,Newcastle,Darwin)
Vectors may have mode logical, numeric or character11. The first two vectors above are numeric, the third is logical (i.e. a vector with elements of mode logical), and the fourth is a string vector (i.e. a vector with elements of mode character).
Asterisks (*) identify sections that are more technical and might be omitted at a first reading Other looping constructs are: repeat <expression> ## break must appear somewhere inside the loop
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while (x>0) <expression> Here <expression> is an R statement, or a sequence of statements that are enclosed within braces
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The missing value symbol, which is NA, can be included as an element of a vector.
2. Specify a vector of logical values. The elements that are extracted are those for which the logical value is T. Thus suppose we want to extract values of x that are greater than 10.
> x>10 # This generates a vector of logical (T or F) [1] F T F T T > x[x>10] [1] 11 15 12
Arithmetic relations that may be used in the extraction of subsets of vectors are <, <=, >, >=, ==, and !=. The first four compare magnitudes, == tests for equality, and != tests for inequality.
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It will, later in these notes, be important to know the class of such objects. This determines how the method used by such generic functions as print(), plot() and summary(). Use the function class() to determine the class of an object.
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A third more subtle method is available when vectors have named elements. One can then use a vector of names to extract the elements, thus:
> c(Andreas=178, John=185, Jeff=183)[c("John","Jeff")] John Jeff 185 183
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Be warned that y[y==NA] <- 0 leaves y unchanged. The reason is that all elements of y==NA evaluate to NA. This does not select an element of y, and there is no assignment. To replace all NAs by 0, use
y[is.na(y)] <- 0
2.4.4 Factors
A factor is stored internally as a numeric vector with values 1, 2, 3, k, where k is the number of levels. An attributes table gives the level for each integer value13. Factors provide a compact way to store character strings. They are crucial in the representation of categorical effects in model and graphics formulae. The class attribute of a factor has, not surprisingly, the value factor. Consider a survey that has data on 691 females and 692 males. If the first 691 are females and the next 692 males, we can create a vector of strings that that holds the values thus:
gender <- c(rep(female,691), rep(male,692))
(The usage is that rep(female, 691) creates 691 copies of the character string female, and similarly for the creation of 692 copies of male.) We can change the vector to a factor, by entering:
gender <- factor(gender)
Internally the factor gender is stored as 691 1s, followed by 692 2s. It has stored with it the table:
1
2
female male
Once stored as a factor, the space required for storage is reduced. In most cases where the context seems to demand a character string, the 1 is translated into female and the 2 into male. The values female and male are the levels of the factor. By default, the levels are in alphanumeric order, so that female precedes male. Hence:
> levels(gender) # Assumes gender is a factor, created as above [1] "female" "male"
The order of the levels in a factor determines the order in which the levels appear in graphs that use this information, and in tables. To cause male to come before female, use
gender <- relevel(gender, ref=male)
An alternative is
gender <- factor(gender, levels=c(male, female))
This last syntax is available both when the factor is first created, or later when one wishes to change the order of levels in an existing factor. Incorrect spelling of the level names will generate an error message. Try
gender <- factor(c(rep(female,691), rep(male,692))) table(gender) gender <- factor(gender, levels=c(male, female)) table(gender) gender <- factor(gender, levels=c(Male, female)) # Erroneous - "male" rows now hold missing values table(gender) rm(gender) # Remove gender
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The data frame has row labels (access with row.names(Cars93.summary)) Compact, Large, . . . The column names (access with names(Cars93.summary)) are Min.passengers (i.e. the minimum number of passengers for cars in this category), Max.passengers, No.of.cars., and abbrev. The first three columns have mode numeric, and the fourth has mode character. Columns can be vectors of any mode. The column abbrev could equally well be stored as a factor. Any of the following14 will pick out the fourth column of the data frame Cars93.summary, then storing it in the vector type.
type <- Cars93.summary$abbrev type <- Cars93.summary[,4] type <- Cars93.summary[,abbrev] type <- Cars93.summary[[4]] # in the fourth list element. # Take the object that is stored
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Also legal is Cars93.summary[2]. This gives a data frame with the single column Type. In general forms of list, elements that are of arbitrary type. They may be any mixture of scalars, vectors, functions, etc.
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> summary(trees) Girth Min. : 8.30 Min. 1st Qu.:11.05 Median :12.90 Mean Max. :13.25 :20.60 3rd Qu.:15.25 Height :63 Min. 1st Qu.:72 Median :76 Mean Max. :76 :87 3rd Qu.:80 Volume :10.20 1st Qu.:19.40 Median :24.20 Mean Max. :30.17 :77.00 3rd Qu.:37.30
Type data() to get a list of built-in data sets in the packages that have been attached16.
The functions mean(), median(), range(), and a number of other functions, take the argument na.rm=T; i.e. remove NAs, then proceed with the calculation. By default, sort() omits any NAs. The function order() places NAs last. Hence:
> x <- c(1, 20, > order(x) [1] 1 3 2 5 4 > x[order(x)] [1] [1] 1 1 2 20 22 NA 2 20 22 > sort(x) 2, NA, 22)
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The list include all packages that are in the current environment.
Source: Ash, J. and Southern, W. 1982: Forest biomass at Butlers Creek, Edith & Joy London Foundation, New South Wales, Unpublished manuscript. See also Ash, J. and Helman, C. 1990: Floristics and vegetation biomass of a forest catchment, Kioloa, south coastal N.S.W. Cunninghamia, 2(2): 167-182.
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The functions mean() and range(), and a number of other functions, take the parameter na.rm. For example
> range(rainforest$branch, na.rm=TRUE) [1] 4 120 # Omit NAs, then determine the range
One can specify na.rm=TRUE as a third argument to the function sapply. This argument is then automatically passed to the function that is specified in the second argument position. For example:
> sapply(rainforest[,-7], range, na.rm=TRUE) dbh wood bark root rootsk branch [1,] [2,] 4 3 8 105 2 135 0.3 24.0 4 120 56 1530
Chapter 8 has further details on the use of sapply(). There is an example that shows how to use it to count the number of missing values in each column of data.
WARNING: NAs are by default ignored. The action needed to get NAs tabulated under a separate NA category depends, annoyingly, on whether or not the vector is a factor. If the vector is not a factor, specify exclude=NULL. If the vector is a factor then it is necessary to generate a new factor that includes NA as a level. Specify x <- factor(x,exclude=NULL)
> x <- c(1,5,NA,8) > x <- factor(x) > x [1] 1 Levels: [1] 1 Levels: 5 5 NA 8 1 5 8 NA 8 1 5 8 NA
> factor(x,exclude=NULL)
Thus for Acacia mabellae there are 6 NAs for the variable branch (i.e. number of branches over 2cm in diameter), out of a total of 16 data values.
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[4] "package:graphics" [7] "package:datasets" "package:grDevices" "package:utils" "Autoloads" "package:base"
Notice that the loading of a new package extends the search list.
> library(MASS) > search() [1] ".GlobalEnv" [4] "package:stats" [7] "package:utils" [10] "package:base" "package:MASS" "package:graphics" "package:datasets" "package:methods" "package:grDevices" "Autoloads"
Use of attach() likewise extends the search list. This function can be used to attach data frames or lists (use the name, without quotes) or image (.RData) files (the file name is placed in quotes). The following demonstrates the attaching of the data frame primates:
> names(primates) [1] "Bodywt" > Bodywt Error: Object "Bodywt" not found > attach(primates) > Bodywt [1] 10.0 207.0 62.0 6.8 52.2 # R will now know where to find Bodywt "Brainwt"
Once the data frame primates has been attached, its columns can be accessed by giving their names, without further reference to the name of the data frame. In technical terms, the data frame becomes a database, which is searched as required for objects that the user may specify. Remember to detach an attached data frame, e.g., detach(primates), when it is no longer required. Note also the function with(), which attaches the data frame that is given as its first argument for the duration of the calculation that is specified by its second argument. For example:
> av <- with(primates, mean(Bodywt))
2.9 Functions in R
We give two simple examples of R functions.
The return value is the value of the final (and in this instance only) expression that appears in the function body18. Use the function thus
> miles.to.km(175) [1] 280 # Approximate distance to Sydney, in miles
The function will do the conversion for several distances all at once. To convert a vector of the three distances 100, 200 and 300 miles to distances in kilometers, specify:
> miles.to.km(c(100,200,300)) [1] 160 320 480
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Alternatively a return value may be given using an explicit return() statement. This is however an uncommon construction
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Here is a function that makes it possible to plot the figures for any pair of candidates.
plot.florida <- function(xvar=BUSH, yvar=BUCHANAN){ x <- florida[,xvar] y <- florida[,yvar] plot(x, y, xlab=xvar,ylab=yvar) mtext(side=3, line=1.75, Votes in Florida, by county, in \nthe 2000 US Presidential election) }
Note that the function body is enclosed in braces ({ }). Figure 6 shows the graph produced by plot.florida(), i.e. parameter settings are left at their defaults.
Figure 6: Election night count of votes received, by county, in the US 2000 Presidential election. As well as plot.florida(), the function allows, e.g.
plot.florida(yvar=NADER) # yvar=NADER over-rides the default plot.florida(xvar=GORE, yvar=NADER)
2.11 Exercises
1. For each of the following code sequences, predict the result. Then do the computation: a) answer <- 0
for (j in 3:5){ answer <- j+answer }
b) answer<- 10
for (j in 3:5){ answer <- j+answer }
c) answer <- 10
for (j in 3:5){ answer <- j*answer }
2. Look up the help for the function prod(), and use prod() to do the calculation in 1(c) above. Alternatively, how would you expect prod() to work? Try it! 3. Add up all the numbers from 1 to 100 in two different ways: using for and using sum. Now apply the function to the sequence 1:100. What is its action?
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4. Multiply all the numbers from 1 to 50 in two different ways: using for and using prod. 5. The volume of a sphere of radius r is given by 4 r3/3. For spheres having radii 3, 4, 5, , 20 find the corresponding volumes and print the results out in a table. Use the technique of section 2.1.5 to construct a data frame with columns radius and volume. 6. Use sapply() to apply the function is.factor to each column of the supplied data frame tinting. For each of the columns that are identified as factors, determine the levels. Which columns are ordered factors? [Use is.ordered()].
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3. Plotting
The functions plot(), points(), lines(), text(), mtext(), axis(), identify() etc. form a suite that plots points, lines and text. To see some of the possibilities that R offers, enter
demo(graphics)
Comment on the appearance that these graphs present. Is it obvious that these points lie on a sine curve? How can one make it obvious? (Place the cursor over the lower border of the graph sheet, until it becomes a doublesided arror. Drag the border in towards the top border, making the graph sheet short and wide.) Here are two further examples.
attach(elasticband) # R now knows where to find distance & stretch plot(distance ~ stretch) plot(ACT ~ Year, data=austpop, type="l") plot(ACT ~ Year, data=austpop, type="b")
The points() function adds points to a plot. The lines() function adds lines to a plot19. The text() function adds text at specified locations. The mtext() function places text in one of the margins. The axis() function gives fine control over axis ticks and labels. Here is a further possibility
attach(austpop) plot(spline(Year, ACT), type="l") detach(austpop) # Fit smooth curve through points # In S-PLUS, specify detach(austpop)
increases the text and plot symbol size 25% above the default.
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Actually these functions differ only in the default setting for the parameter type. The default setting for points() is type = "p", and for lines() is type = "l". Explicitly setting type = "p" causes either function to plot points, type = "l" gives lines.
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On the first use of par() to make changes to the current device, it is often useful to store existing settings, so that they can be restored later. For this, specify
oldpar <- par(cex=1.25, mex=1.25) # mex=1.25 expands the margin by 25%
This stores the existing settings in oldpar, then changes parameters (here cex and mex) as requested. To restore the original parameter settings at some later time, enter par(oldpar). Here is an example:
attach(elasticband) oldpar <- par(cex=1.5) plot(distance ~ stretch) par(oldpar) detach(elasticband) # Restores the earlier settings
Type in help(par) to get details of all the parameter settings that are available with par().
Observe that the row names store labels for each row20.
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Row names can be created in several different ways. They can be assigned directly, e.g.
row.names(primates) <- c("Potar monkey","Gorilla","Human", "Rhesus monkey","Chimp")
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attach(primates) # Needed if primates is not already attached. plot(Bodywt, Brainwt) text(x=Bodywt, y=Brainwt, labels=row.names(primates), pos=4) # pos=4 positions text to the right of the point
Figure 7: Plot of the primates data, with labels on points. Figure 8B improves on Figure 8A. Figure 7A would be adequate for identifying points, but is not a presentation quality graph. We now show how to improve it. Figure 7B uses the xlab (x-axis) and ylab (y-axis) parameters to specify meaningful axis titles. It uses the parameter setting pos=4 to move the labelling to the right of the points. It sets pch=16 to make the plot character a heavy black dot. This helps make the points stand out against the labelling. Here is the R code for Figure 7B:
plot(x=Bodywt, y=Brainwt, pch=16, xlab="Body weight (kg)", ylab="Brain weight (g)", xlim=c(0,280), ylim=c(0,1350)) # Specify xlim so that there is room for the labels text(x=Bodywt, y=Brainwt, labels=row.names(primates), pos=4) detach(primates)
The following, added to the plot that results from the above three statements, demonstrates other choices of pch.
points(1:7,rep(2.5,7), pch=(0:6)+7) text((1:7), rep(2.5,7), paste((0:6)+7), pos=4) points(1:7,rep(2,7), pch=(0:6)+14) # Plot symbols 7 to 13 # Label with symbol number # Plot symbols 14 to 20
When using read.table() to input data, the parameter row.names is available to specify, by number or name, a column that holds the row names.
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Note the use of pos=4 to position the text to the right of the point (1=below, 2=left, 3=top, 4=right). Here (Figure 8) is the plot:
Figure 8: Different plot symbols, colours and sizes A variety of color palettes are available. Here is a function that displays some of the possibilities:
view.colours <- function(){ plot(1, 1, xlim=c(0,14), ylim=c(0,3), type="n", axes=F, xlab="",ylab="") text(1:6, rep(2.5,6), paste(1:6), col=palette()[1:6], cex=2.5) text(10, 2.5, "Default palette", adj=0) rainchars <- c("R","O","Y","G","B","I","V") text(1:7, rep(1.5,7), rainchars, col=rainbow(7), cex=2.5) text(10, 1.5, "rainbow(7)", adj=0) cmtxt <- substring("cm.colors", 1:9,1:9) # Split cm.colors into its 9 characters text(1:9, rep(0.5,9), cmtxt, col=cm.colors(9), cex=3) text(10, 0.5, "cm.colors(9)", adj=0) }
3.4.1 identify()
This function requires specification of a vector x, a vector y, and a vector of text strings that are available for use a labels. The data set florida has the votes for the various Presidential candidates, county by county in
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the state of Florida. We plot the vote for Buchanan against the vote for Bush, then invoking identify() so that we can label selected points on the plot.
attach(florida) plot(BUSH, BUCHANAN, xlab=Bush, ylab=Buchanan) identify(BUSH, BUCHANAN, County) detach(florida)
Click to the left or right, and slightly above or below a point, depending on the preferred positioning of the label. When labelling is terminated (click with the right mouse button), the row numbers of the observations that have been labelled are printed on the screen, in order.
3.4.2 locator()
Left click at the locations whose coordinates are required
attach(florida) locator() detach(florida) # if not already attached plot(BUSH, BUCHANAN, xlab=Bush, ylab=Buchanan)
The function can be used to mark new points (specify type=p) or lines (specify type=l) or both points and lines (specify type=b).
Figure 9: Panel A shows a histogram with a frequency scale. Panel B is drawn with a density scale, so that a density curve can be readily superimposed. Panel C has a different choice of breakpoints, so that the histogram gives a rather different impression of the distribution of the data. The density curve is, again, superimposed. Here is the code used to plot the histogram in Figure 10A.
attach(possum) here <- sex == "f" hist(totlngth[here], breaks = 72.5 + (0:5) * 5, ylim = c(0, 22), xlab="Total length", main ="A: Breaks at 72.5, 77.5, ...") detach(possum)
Density plots, now that they are available, are often a preferred alternative to a histogram. A histogarm is, in fact, a very crude form of density plot.
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Density plots do not depend on a choice of breakpoints. The choice of width and type of window, controlling the nature and amount of smoothing, does affect the appearance of the plot. The main effect is to make it more or less smooth. The following will give a density plot:
attach(possum) plot(density(totlngth[here]),type="l") detach(possum)
In Figure 9B the y-axis for the histogram is labelled so that the area of a rectangle is the density for that rectangle, i.e., the frequency for the rectangle is divided by the width of the rectangle. This gives a scale that is appropriate for superimposing a density curve estimate. The only difference between Figure 9C and Figure 9B is that a different choice of breakpoints is used for the histogram, so that the histogram gives a rather different impression of the distribution of the data. The code for Figure 9B is:
attach(possum) here <- sex == "f" dens <- density(totlngth[here]) xlim <- range(dens$x) ylim <- range(dens$y) hist(totlngth[here], breaks = 72.5 + (0:5) * 5, probability = TRUE, xlim = xlim, ylim = ylim, xlab="Total length", main="") lines(dens) detach(possum)
3.5.3 Boxplots
We now (Figure 10) make a boxplot of the above data:
Figure 10: Boxplot of female possum lengths, with additional labelling information. The code for the boxplot is
attach(possum) boxplot(totlngth[here], horizontal=TRUE) rug(totlngth[here], side=1) detach(possum)
on a straight line if the distribution is Normal. In order to calibrate the eye to recognise plots that indicate nonnormal variation, it is helpful to do several normal probability plots for random samples of the relevant size from a normal distribution.
x11(width=8, height=6) # This is a better shape for this plot
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attach(possum) here <- sex == "f" par(mfrow=c(2,4)) y <- totlngth[here] qqnorm(y,xlab="", ylab="Length", main="Possums") for(i in 1:7)qqnorm(rnorm(43),xlab="", ylab="Simulated lengths", main="Simulated") detach(possum) # Before continuing, type dev.off() # A 2 by 4 layout of plots
Figure 11 shows the plots. There is one unusually small value. Otherwise the points for the female possum lengths are as close to a straight line as in many of the plots for random normal data.
Figure 11: Normal probability plots. If data are from a normal distribution then points should fall, approximately, along a line. The plot in the top left hand corner shows the 43 lengths of female possums. The other plots are for independent normal random samples of size 43. The idea is an important one. In order to judge whether data are normally distributed, examine a number of randomly generated samples of the same size from a normal distribution. It is a way to train the eye. By default, rnorm() generates random samples from a distribution with mean 0 and standard deviation 1.
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Data relate to the paper: Telford, R.D. and Cunningham, R.B. 1991: Sex, sport and body-size dependency of hematology in highly trained athletes. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 23: 788-794.
3.6.3 Rugplots
By default rug(x) adds, along the x-axis of the current plot, vertical bars showing the distribution of values of x. It can however be particularly useful for showing the actual values along the side of a boxplot. Figure 12 shows a boxplot of the distribution of height of female athletes, with a rugplot added on the y-axis.
Figure 12: Distribution of heights of female athletes. The bars on the left plot show actual data values. Here is the code
attach(ais) here <- sex == "f" oldpar <- par(mar=c(4.1,1.1,1.1, 1.1), mgp=c(2.25, 0.75,0)) boxplot(ht[here], boxwex = 0.35, ylab = "Height", horizontal=TRUE) rug(ht[here], side = 1) par(oldpar) detach(ais)
3.6.5 Dotcharts
These can be a good alternative to barcharts. They have a much higher information to ink ratio! Try
dotchart(islands) # vector of named numeric values, in the datasets base package
Unfortunately there are many names, and there is substantial overlap. The following is better, but shrinks the sizes of the points so that they almost disappear:
dotchart(islands, cex=0.5)
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Figure 13: The y-axis label is a mathematical expression. Notice that in expression(Area == pi*r^2), there is a double equals sign (==), although what will appear on the plot is Area = pi*r^2, with a single equals sign. See help(plotmath) for detailed information on the plotting of mathematical expressions. There is a further example in chapter 12. The final plot from
demo(graphics)
3.9 Exercises
1. The data set huron that accompanies these notes has mean July average water surface elevations, in feet,
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IGLD (1955) for Harbor Beach, Michigan, on Lake Huron, Station 5014, for 1860-198622. (Alternatively work with the vector LakeHuron from the datasets package, that has mean heights for 1875-1772 only.) a) Plot mean.height against year. b) Use the identify function to label points for the years that correspond to the lowest and highest mean levels. That is, type
identify(huron$year,huron$mean.height,labels=huron$year)
and use the left mouse button to click on the lowest point and highest point on the plot. To quit, press both mouse buttons simultaneously. c) As in the case of many time series, the mean levels are correlated from year to year. To see how each year's mean level is related to the previous year's mean level, use
lag.plot(huron$mean.height)
This plots the mean level at year i against the mean level at year i-1.
2. Plot the graph of brain weight (brain) versus body weight (body) for the data set Animals from the
MASS package. Label the axes appropriately. Alongside on the same graphics page, log(brain weight) versus
log(body weight). Use the row labels to label the points with the three largest body weight values. Label the axes in untransformed units. [To access this data frame, specify library(MASS)] 3. Check the distributions of head lengths (hdlngth) in the possum23 data set that accompanies these notes. Compare the following forms of display: a) a histogram (hist(possum$hdlngth)); b) a stem and leaf plot (stem(qqnorm(possum$hdlngth)); c) a normal probability plot (qqnorm(possum$hdlngth)); and d) a density plot (plot(density(possum$hdlngth)). What are the advantages and disadvantages of these different forms of display? 4. Try x <- rnorm(10). Print out the numbers that you get. Look up the help for rnorm. Now generate a sample of size 10 from a normal distribution with mean 170 and standard deviation 4. 5. Use mfrow() to set up the layout for a 3 by 4 array of plots. In the top 4 rows, show normal probability plots (section 3.4.2) for four separate `random samples of size 10, all from a normal distribution. In the middle 4 rows, display plots for samples of size 100. In the bottom four rows, display plots for samples of size 1000. Comment on how the appearance of the plots changes as the sample size changes. 6. The function runif() generates a sample from a uniform distribution, by default on the interval 0 to 1. Try x <- runif(10), and print out the numbers you get. Then repeat exercise 6 above, but taking samples from a uniform distribution rather than from a normal distribution. What shape do the points follow? *7. If you find exercise 6 interesting, you might like to try it for some further distributions. For example x <rchisq(10,1) will generate 10 random values from a chi-squared distribution with degrees of freedom 1. The statement x <- rt(10,1) will generate 10 random values from a t distribution with degrees of freedom one. Make normal probability plots for samples of various sizes from these distributions. 8. For the first two columns of the data frame hills, examine the distribution using: (a) histogram; (b) density plots; (c) normal probability plots. Repeat (a), (b) and (c), now working with the logarithms of the data values.
3.10 References
The web page http://www.math.yorku.ca/SCS/StatResource.html#DataVis has links to many different collections of information on statistical graphics.
22
Source: Great Lakes Water Levels, 1860-1986. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and AtmosphericAdministration, National Ocean Survey.
23
Data relate to the paper: Lindenmayer, D. B., Viggers, K. L., Cunningham, R. B., and Donnelly, C. F. 1995. Morphological variation among populations of the mountain brush tail possum, Trichosurus caninus Ogilby (Phalangeridae: Marsupialia). Australian Journal of Zoology 43: 449-458.
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4. Lattice graphics
Lattice plots allow the use of the layout on the page to reflect meaningful aspects of data structure. They offer abilities similar to those in the S-PLUS trellis library. The lattice package sits on top of the grid package. To use lattice graphics, both these packages must be installed. Providing it is installed, the grid package will be loaded automatically when lattice is loaded. The older coplot() function that is in the base package has some of same abilities as xyplot( ), but with a limitation to two conditioning factors or variables only.
Figure 14: csoa versus it, for each combination of females/males and elderly/young. The two targets (low, + = high contrast) are shown with different symbols. In a simplified version of Figure 16 above, we might plot csoa against it for each combination of sex and agegp. For this simplified version, it would be enough to type:
xyplot(csoa ~ it | sex * agegp, data=tinting) # Simple use of xyplot()
Here is the statement used to get Figure 16. The two different symbols distinguish between low contrast and high contrast targets.
24
Data relate to the paper: Burns, N. R., Nettlebeck, T., White, M. and Willson, J. 1999. Effects of car window tinting on visual performance: a comparison of elderly and young drivers. Ergonomics 42: 428-443.
32
xyplot(csoa~it|sex*agegp, data=tinting, groups=target, auto.key=list(columns=2))
If colour is available, different colours will be used for the different groups. A striking feature is that the very high values, for both csoa and it, occur only for elderly males. It is apparent that the long response times for some of the elderly males occur, as we might have expected, with the low contrast target. The following puts smooth curves through the data, separately for the two target types:
xyplot(csoa~it|sex*agegp, data=tinting, panel=panel.superpose, groups=target, type=c("p","smooth")
The relationship between csoa and it seems much the same for both levels of contrast. Finally, we do a plot (Figure 15) that uses different symbols (in black and white) for different levels of tinting. The longest times are for the high level of tinting.
xyplot(csoa~it|sex*agegp, data=tinting, groups=tint, auto.key=list(columns=3))
Figure 15: csoa versus it, for each combination of females/males and elderly/young. The different levels of tinting (no, +=low, >=high) are shown with different symbols.
33
In the final plot, note the use of simpleTheme() as a simple mechanism for controlling common parameter settings. Use of the parameter par.settings makes the change for the current plot only. Use trellis.par.set() to make the changes for the duration of the current device, unless reset.
In each instance, conditioning variables can be added. In most cases, a groups parameter can be specified, i.e., the plot is repeated for the groupings within the one panel.
4.4 Exercises
1. The following data gives milk volume (g/day) for smoking and nonsmoking mothers25: Smoking Mothers: 621, 793, 593, 545, 753, 655, 895, 767, 714, 598, 693 Nonsmoking Mothers: 947, 945, 1086, 1202, 973, 981, 930, 745, 903, 899, 961 Present the data (i) in side by side boxplots (use bwplot()); (ii) using a dotplot form of display (use dotplot()). 2. For the possum data set, generate the following plots: a) histograms of hdlngth use histogram(); b) normal probability plots of hdlngth use qqmath(); c) density plots of hdlngth use densityplot(). Investigate the effect of varying the density bandwidth (bw). 12. The following exercises relate to the data frame possum that accompanies these notes: (a) Using the xyplot function, explore the relation between hdlngth and totlngth, taking into account sex and Pop.
25
Data are from the paper ``Smoking During Pregnancy and Lactation and Its Effects on Breast Milk Volume'' (Amer. J. of Clinical Nutrition).
34
(b) Construct a contour plot of chest versus belly and totlngth use levelplot() or contourplot(). (c) Construct box and whisker plots for hdlngth, using site as a factor. (d) Use qqmath() to construct normal probability plots for hdlgth, for each separate level of sex and Pop. Is there evidence that the distribution of hdlgth varies with the level of these other factors. 13. The frame airquality that is in the datasets package has columns Ozone, Solar.R, Wind, Temp, Month and Day. Plot Ozone against Solar.R for each of three temperature ranges, and each of three wind ranges.
35
5. Linear (Multiple Regression) Models and Analysis of Variance 5.1 The Model Formula in Straight Line Regression
We begin with the straight line regression example that appeared earlier, in section 2.1.4. First, plot the data:
plot(distance ~ stretch, data=elasticband)
Here distance ~ stretch is a model formula. Other model formulae will appear in the course of this chapter. Figure 16 shows the plot:
Figure 16: Plot of distance versus stretch for the elastic band data, with fitted least squares line The output from the regression is an lm object, which we have called elastic.lm . Now examine a summary of the regression results. Notice that the output documents the model formula that was used:
> options(digits=4) > summary(elastic.lm) Call: lm(formula = distance ~ stretch, data = elasticband) Residuals: 1 2.107 2 -0.321 3 18.000 4 5 6 13.321 7 -7.214 1.893 -27.786
Coefficients: Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) stretch -63.57 4.55 74.33 1.54 -0.86 2.95 0.431 0.032
Residual standard error: 16.3 on 5 degrees of freedom Multiple R-Squared: 0.635, Adjusted R-squared: 0.562 p-value: 0.0319 F-statistic: 8.71 on 1 and 5 degrees of freedom,
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[5] "fitted.values" "assign" [9] "xlevels" "call" "qr" "terms" "df.residual" "model"
Various functions are available for extracting information that you might want from the list. This is better than manipulating the list directly. Examples are:
> coef(elastic.lm) (Intercept) -63.571 1 2.1071 2 -0.3214 stretch 4.554 3 18.0000 4 5 6 13.3214 7 -7.2143
The function most often used to inspect regression output is summary(). It extracts the information that users are most likely to want. For example, in section 5.1, we had
summary(elastic.lm)
There is a plot method for lm objects that gives the diagnostic information shown in Figure 17.
Figure 17: Diagnostic plot of lm object, obtained by plot(elastic.lm). To get Figure 17, type:
x11(width=7, height=2, pointsize=10) par(mfrow = c(1, 4), mar=c(5.1,4.1,2.1,1.1)) plot(elastic.lm) par(mfrow=c(1,1))
By default the first, second and fourth plot use the row names to identify the three most extreme residuals. [If explicit row names are not given for the data frame, then the row numbers are used.]
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The parameters that are to be estimated are a and b. Fitted values are given by multiplying each column of the model matrix by its corresponding parameter, i.e. the first column by a and the second column by b, and adding. Another name is predicted values. The aim is to reproduce, as closely as possible, the values in the y-column. The residuals are the differences between the values in the y-column and the fitted values. Least squares regression, which is the form of regression that we describe in this course, chooses a and b so that the sum of squares of the residuals is as small as possible. The function model.matrix() prints out the model matrix. Thus:
> model.matrix(distance ~ stretch, data=elasticband) (Intercept) stretch 1 2 3 4 . . . attr(,assign) [1] 0 1 1 1 1 1 46 54 48 50
The following are the fitted values and residuals that we get with the estimates of a (= -63.6) and b ( = 4.55) that result from least squares regression X Stretch (mm) -63.6 1 1 1 1 4.55
y
(Fitted) -63.6 + 4.55 -63.6 + 4.55 -63.6 + 4.55 -63.6 + 4.55 -63.6 + 4.55 Stretch 46 = 145.7 54 = 182.1 48 = 154.8 50 = 163.9
y"y
(Residual) Observed Fitted 148-145.7 = 2.3 182-182.1 = -0.1 173-154.8 = 18.2 166-163.9 = 2.1
!
46 54 48 50
We might alternatively fit the simpler (no intercept) model. For this we have y=x b+e
! where e is a random variable with mean 0. The X matrix then consists of a single column, the xs.
Model formulae are widely used to set up most of the model calculations in R. Notice the similarity between model formulae and the formulae that are used for specifying coplots. Thus, recall that the graph formula for a coplot that gives a plot of y against x for each different combination of levels of fac1 (across the page) and fac2 (up the page) is:
y ~ x | fac1+fac2
or
formyxz <- formula(y~x+z)
The argument to formula() can, as just demonstrated, be a text string. This makes it straightforward to paste the argument together from components that are stored in text strings. For example
> names(elasticband) [1] "stretch" "distance" > nam <- names(elasticband) > formds <- formula(paste(nam[1],"~",nam[2])) > lm(formds, data=elasticband) Call: lm(formula = formds, data = elasticband) Coefficients: (Intercept) 26.3780 distance 0.1395
Note that graphics formulae can be manipulated in exactly the same way as model formulae.
Figure 18: Scatterplot matrix for the Rubber data frame from the MASS package.
26
The original source is O.L. Davies (1947) Statistical Methods in Research and Production. Oliver and Boyd, Table 6.1 p. 119.
39
The code is
library(MASS) pairs(Rubber) # if needed (the dataset Rubber is in the MASS package)
There is a negative correlation between loss and hardness. We proceed to regress loss on hard and tens.
Rubber.lm <- lm(loss~hard+tens, data=Rubber) > options(digits=3) > summary(Rubber.lm) Call: lm(formula = loss ~ hard + tens, data = Rubber) Residuals: Min 1Q Median 3.82 3Q 19.75 Max 65.98 -79.38 -14.61 Coefficients: Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) hard tens 885.161 -6.571 -1.374 61.752 0.583 0.194 14.33 -11.27 -7.07 3.8e-14 1.0e-11 1.3e-07
Residual standard error: 36.5 on 27 degrees of freedom Multiple R-Squared: 0.84, F-statistic: Adjusted R-squared: 0.828 p-value: 1.77e-011 71 on 2 and 27 degrees of freedom,
In addition to the use of plot.lm(), note the use of termplot(). Figure 19) used the following code:
par(mfrow=c(1,2)) termplot(Rubber.lm, partial=TRUE, smooth=panel.smooth) par(mfrow=c(1,1))
Figure 19: Plot, obtained with termplot(), showing the contribution of each of the two terms in the model, at the mean of the contributions for the other term. A smooth curve has, in each panel, been fitted through the partial residuals. There is a clear suggestion that, at the upper end of the range, the response is not linear with tensile strength.
> logbooks.lm2<-lm(weight~thick+height,data=logbooks) > summary(logbooks.lm2)$coef Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) thick height -1.263 0.313 2.114 3.552 0.472 0.678 -0.356 0.662 3.117 0.7303 0.5243 0.0124
> logbooks.lm3<-lm(weight~thick+height+width,data=logbooks) > summary(logbooks.lm3)$coef Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) thick height width -0.719 0.465 0.154 1.877 3.216 0.434 1.273 1.070 -0.224 1.070 0.121 1.755 0.829 0.316 0.907 0.117
So is weight proportional to thick * height * width? The correlations between thick, height and width are so strong that if one tries to use more than one of them as a explanatory variables, the coefficients are ill-determined. They contain very similar information, as is evident from the scatterplot matrix. The regressions on height and width give plausible results, while the coefficient of the regression on thick is entirely an artefact of the way that the books were selected. The design of the data collection really is important for the interpretation of coefficients from a regression equation. Even though regression equations from observational data may work quite well for predictive purposes, the individual coefficients may be misleading. This is more than an academic issue, as the analyses in Lalonde (1986) demonstrate. They had data from experimental treatment and control groups, and also from two comparable non-experimental controls. The regression estimate of the treatment effect, when comparison was with one of the non-experimental controls, was statistically significant but with the wrong sign! The regression should be fitted only to that part of the data where values of the covariates overlap substantially.
41
Dehejia and Wahba demonstrate the use of scores (propensities) to identify subsets that are defensibly comparable. The propensity is then the only covariate in the equation that estimates the treatment effect. It is impossible to be sure that any method is giving the right answer.
Figure 20: Number of grain per head versus seeding rate, for the barley seeding rate data, with fitted quadratic curve. We will need an X-matrix with a column of ones, a column of values of rate, and a column of values of rate2. For this, both rate and I(rate^2) must be included in the model formula.
> seedrates.lm2 <- lm(grain ~ rate+I(rate^2), data=seedrates) > summary(seedrates.lm2) Call: lm(formula = grain ~ rate + I(rate^2), data = seedrates) Residuals: 1 2 3 4 5 0.04571 -0.12286 Coefficients: Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) 24.060000 rate I(rate^2) -0.066686 0.000171 0.455694 0.009911 0.000049 52.80 -6.73 3.50 0.00036 0.02138 0.07294 0.09429 -0.00286 -0.01429
27
Data are from McLeod, C. C. (1982) Effect of rates of seeding on barley grown for grain. New Zealand Journal of Agriculture 10: 133-136. Summary details are in Maindonald, J. H. (1992).
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Residual standard error: 0.115 on 2 degrees of freedom Multiple R-Squared: 0.996, F-statistic: > hat <- predict(seedrates.lm2) > lines(spline(seedrates$rate, hat)) > # Placing the spline fit through the fitted points allows a smooth curve. > # For this to work the values of seedrates$rate must be ordered. Adjusted R-squared: 0.992 p-value: 0.0039 256 on 2 and 2 degrees of freedom,
attr(,"assign")
This was a (small) extension of linear models, to handle a specific form of non-linear relationship. Any transformation can be used to form columns of the model matrix. Thus, an x3 column might be added. Once the model matrix has been formed, we are limited to taking linear combinations of columns.
> anova(seedrates.lm2,seedrates.lm1) Analysis of Variance Table Model 1: grain ~ rate + I(rate^2) Model 2: grain ~ rate Res.Df Res.Sum Sq Df Sum Sq F value Pr(>F) 1 2 0.026286 2 3 0.187000 -1 -0.160714 12.228 0.07294
The F-value is large, but on this evidence there are too few degrees of freedom to make a totally convincing case for preferring a quadratic to a line. However the paper from which these data come gives an independent estimate of the error mean square (0.17 on 35 d.f.) based on 8 replicate results that were averaged to give each value for number of grains per head. If we compare the change in the sum of squares (0.1607, on 1 df) with a mean square of 0.172 (35 df), the F-value is now 5.4 on 1 and 35 degrees of freedom, and we have p=0.024 . The increase in the number of degrees of freedom more than compensates for the reduction in the F-statistic.
> # However we have an independent estimate of the error mean > # square. The estimate is 0.17^2, on 35 df. > 1-pf(0.16/0.17^2, 1, 35) [1] 0.0244
Finally note that R2 was 0.972 for the straight line model. This may seem good, but given the accuracy of these data it was not good enough! The statistic is an inadequate guide to whether a model is adequate. Even for any one context, R2 will in general increase as the range of the values of the dependent variable increases. (R2 is larger when there is more variation to be explained.) A predictive model is adequate when the standard errors of predicted values are acceptably small, not when R2 achieves some magic threshold.
The extrapolation has deliberately been taken beyond the range of the data, in order to show how the confidence bounds spread out. Confidence bounds for a fitted line spread out more slowly, but are even less believable!
28
Data are from Hand, D. J.; Daly, F.; Lunn, A. D.; Ostrowski, E., eds. (1994). A Handbook of Small Data Sets. Chapman and Hall.
44
We begin by entering the data from the command line:
insulation <- factor(c(rep("without", 8), rep("with", 7))) # 8 without, then 7 with # `with precedes `without in alphanumeric order, & is the baseline kWh <- c(10225, 10689, 14683, 6584, 8541, 12086, 12467, 12669, 9708, 6700, 4307, 10315, 8017, 8162, 8022)
To formulate this as a regression model, we take kWh as the dependent variable, and the factor insulation as the explanatory variable.
> insulation <- factor(c(rep("without", 8), rep("with", 7))) > # 8 without, then 7 with > kWh <- c(10225, 10689, 14683, 6584, 8541, 12086, 12467, + 12669, 9708, 6700, 4307, 10315, 8017, 8162, 8022) > insulation.lm <- lm(kWh ~ insulation) > summary(insulation.lm, corr=F) Call: lm(formula = kWh ~ insulation) Residuals: Min -4409 1Q Median -979 132 3Q 1575 Max 3690
Coefficients: Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) insulation 7890 3103 874 1196 9.03 2.59 5.8e-07 0.022
Residual standard error: 2310 on 13 degrees of freedom Multiple R-Squared: 0.341, Adjusted R-squared: 0.29 p-value: 0.0223 F-statistic: 6.73 on 1 and 13 degrees of freedom,
The p-value is 0.022, which may be taken to indicate (p < 0.05) that we can distinguish between the two types of houses. But what does the intercept of 7890 mean, and what does the value for insulation of 3103 mean? To interpret this, we need to know that the factor levels are, by default, taken in alphabetical order, and that the initial level is taken as the baseline. So with comes before without, and with is the baseline. Hence: Average for Insulated Houses = 7980 To get the estimate for uninsulated houses take 7980 + 3103 = 10993. The standard error of the difference is 1196.
45
Type
model.matrix(kWh~insulation)
Another possibility is to use what are called the sum contrasts. With the sum contrasts the baseline is the mean over all factor levels. The effect for the first level is omitted; the user has to calculate it as minus the sum of the remaining effects. Here is the output from use of the `sum contrasts29:
> options(contrasts = c("contr.sum", "contr.poly"), digits = 2) # Try the `sum contrasts > insulation <- factor(insulation, levels=c("without", "with")) # Make `without' the baseline > insulation.lm <- lm(kWh ~ insulation) > summary(insulation.lm, corr=F) Call: lm(formula = kWh ~ insulation) Residuals: Min -4409 1Q Median -979 132 3Q 1575 Max 3690
Coefficients: Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) insulation 9442 1551 598 598 15.78 2.59 7.4e-10 0.022
Residual standard error: 2310 on 13 degrees of freedom Multiple R-Squared: 0.341, Adjusted R-squared: 0.29 p-value: 0.0223 F-statistic: 6.73 on 1 and 13 degrees of freedom,
Here is the interpretation: average of (mean for without, mean for with) = 9442 To get the estimate for uninsulated houses (the first level), take 9442 + 1551 = 10993 The `effects sum to one. So the effect for the second level (`with) is -1551. Thus to get the estimate for insulated houses (the first level), take 9442 - 1551 = 7980. The sum contrasts are sometimes called analysis of variance contrasts.
It is possible to set the choice of contrasts for each factor separately, with a statement such as: insulation <- C(insulation, contr=treatment)
Also available are the helmert contrasts. These are not at all intuitive and rarely helpful, even though S-PLUS uses them as the default. Novices should avoid them30.
29
The second string element, i.e. "contr.poly", is the default setting for factors with ordered levels. [Use the function ordered() to create ordered factors.]
30
In general, use either the treatment contrasts or the sum contrasts. With the sum contrasts the baseline is the overall mean.
46
Residual standard error: 0.111 on 14 degrees of freedom Multiple R-Squared: 0.838, Adjusted R-squared: 0.827 p-value: 6.51e-007 F-statistic: 72.6 on 1 and 14 degrees of freedom,
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Enter summary(cet.lm2) to get an output summary, and plot(cet.lm2) to plot diagnostic information for this model. For model C, the statement is:
> cet.lm3 <- lm(logheart ~ factor(species) + logweight + factor(species):logweight, data=dolphins)
27 10.4921
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Residuals: Min 1Q Median 3Q 0.2627 Max 1.3690 -1.0710 -0.4180 -0.0060 Coefficients: Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) grouptrt1 grouptrt2 5.0320 -0.3710 0.4940 0.1971 0.2788 0.2788 25.527 -1.331 1.772 <2e-16 0.1944 0.0877
Residual standard error: 0.6234 on 27 degrees of freedom Multiple R-Squared: 0.2641, Adjusted R-squared: 0.2096 p-value: 0.01591 F-statistic: 4.846 on 2 and 27 degrees of freedom, > help(cabbages) > names(cabbages) [1] "Cult" "Date" "HeadWt" "VitC" > coplot(HeadWt~VitC|Cult+Date,data=cabbages)
Examination of the plot suggests that cultivars differ greatly in the variability in head weight. Variation in the vitamin C levels seems relatively consistent between cultivars.
> VitC.aov<-aov(VitC~Cult+Date,data=cabbages) > summary(VitC.aov) Df Cult Date Residuals 2 Sum Sq Mean Sq F value 909.30 454.65 47.06 Pr(>F) 1 2496.15 2496.15 53.0411 1.179e-09 9.6609 0.0002486 56 2635.40
3 1394.51
31
Data relate to the paper: Snelgar, W.P., Manson. P.J., Martin, P.J. 1992. Influence of time of shading on flowering and yield of kiwifruit vines. Journal of Horticultural Science 67: 481-487. Further details, including a diagram showing the layout of plots and vines and details of shelter, are in Maindonald (1992). The two papers have different shorthands (e.g. Sept-Nov versus Aug-Dec) for describing the time periods for which the shading was applied.
49
Error: Within Df Sum Sq Mean Sq F value Pr(>F) Residuals 36 438.58 > coef(kiwishade.aov) (Intercept) : (Intercept) 96.5327 block:shade : blocknorth 0.993125 Within : numeric(0) blockwest shadeAug2Dec shadeDec2Feb shadeFeb2May -3.430000 3.030833 -10.281667 -7.428333 12.18
5.9 Exercises
1. Here are two sets of data that were obtained the same apparatus, including the same rubber band, as the data frame elasticband. For the data set elastic1, the values are: stretch (mm): 46, 54, 48, 50, 44, 42, 52 distance (cm): 183, 217, 189, 208, 178, 150, 249. For the data set elastic2, the values are: stretch (mm): 25, 45, 35, 40, 55, 50 30, 50, 60 distance (cm): 71, 196, 127, 187, 249, 217, 114, 228, 291. Using a different symbol and/or a different colour, plot the data from the two data frames elastic1 and elastic2 on the same graph. Do the two sets of results appear consistent. For each of the data sets elastic1 and elastic2, determine the regression of stretch on distance. In each case determine (i) fitted values and standard errors of fitted values and (ii) the R2 statistic. Compare the two sets of results. What is the key difference between the two sets of data? Using the data frame beams (in the data sets accompanying these notes), carry out a regression of strength on SpecificGravity and Moisture. Carefully examine the regression diagnostic plot, obtained by supplying the name of the lm object as the first parameter to plot(). What does this indicate? Using the data frame cars (in the datasets package), plot distance (i.e. stopping distance) versus speed. Fit a line to this relationship, and plot the line. Then try fitting and plotting a quadratic curve. Does the quadratic curve give a useful improvement to the fit? If you have studied the dynamics of particles, can you find a theory that would tell you how stopping distance might change with speed?5. Using the data frame hills (in package MASS), regress time on distance and climb. What can you learn from the diagnostic plots that you get when you plot the lm object? Try also regressing log(time) on log(distance) and log(climb). Which of these regression equations would you prefer? Use the method of section 5.7 to determine, formally, whether one needs different regression lines for the two data frames elastic1 and elastic2. In section 5.7 check the form of the model matrix (i) for fitting two parallel lines and (ii) for fitting two arbitrary lines when one uses the sum contrasts. Repeat the exercise for the helmert contrasts. 6. Type
hosp<-rep(c(RNC,Hunter,Mater),2) hosp fhosp<-factor(hosp) levels(fhosp)
Now repeat the steps involved in forming the factor fhosp, this time keeping the factor levels in the order RNC, Hunter, Mater. Use contrasts(fhosp) to form and print out the matrix of contrasts. Do this using helmert contrasts, treatment contrasts, and sum contrasts. Using an outcome variable
y <- c(2,5,8,10,3,9)
50
fit the model lm(y~fhosp), repeating the fit for each of the three different choices of contrasts. Comment on what you get. For which choice(s) of contrasts do the parameter estimates change when you re-order the factor levels? In the data set cement (MASS package), examine the dependence of y (amount of heat produced) on x1, x2, x3 and x4 (which are proportions of four constituents). Begin by examining the scatterplot matrix. As the explanatory variables are proportions, do they require transformation, perhaps by taking log(x/(100-x))? What alternative strategies one might use to find an effective prediction equation? In the data set pressure (datasets package), examine the dependence of pressure on temperature. [Transformation of temperature makes sense only if one first converts to degrees Kelvin. Consider transformation of pressure. A logarithmic transformation is too extreme; the direction of the curvature changes. What family of transformations might one try? Modify the code in section 5.5.3 to fit: (a) a line, with accompanying 95% confidence bounds, and (b) a cubic curve, with accompanying 95% pointwise confidence bounds. Which of the three possibilities (line, quadratic, curve) is most plausible? Can any of them be trusted? *Repeat the analysis of the kiwishade data (section 5.8.2), but replacing Error(block:shade) with block:shade. Comment on the output that you get from summary(). To what extent is it potentially misleading? Also do the analysis where the block:shade term is omitted altogether. Comment on that analysis.
5.10 References
Atkinson, A. C. 1986. Comment: Aspects of diagnostic regression analysis. Statistical Science 1, 397402.
Atkinson, A. C. 1988. Transformations Unmasked. Technometrics 30: 311-318. Cook, R. D. and Weisberg, S. 1999. Applied Regression including Computing and Graphics. Wiley. Dalgaard, P 2002. Introductory Statistics with R. Springer, New York. Dehejia, R.H. and Wahba, S. 1999. Causal effects in non-experimental studies: re-evaluating the evaluation of training programs. Journal of the American Statistical Association 94: 1053-1062. Fox, J 2002. An R and S-PLUS Companion to Applied Regression. Sage Books. Harrell, F. E., Lee, K. L., and Mark, D. B. 1996. Tutorial in Biostatistics. Multivariable Prognostic Models: Issues in Developing Models, Evaluating Assumptions and Adequacy, and Measuring and Reducing Errors. Statistics in Medicine 15: 361-387. Lalonde, R. 1986. Evaluating the economic evaluations of training programs. American Economic Review 76: 604-620.
Maindonald J H 1992. Statistical design, analysis and presentation issues. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 35: 121-141. Maindonald J H and Braun W J 2007. Data Analysis and Graphics Using R An Example-Based Approach, 2nd edn. Cambridge University Press. Venables, W. N. and Ripley, B. D., 4th edn 2002. Modern Applied Statistics with S. Springer, New York. Weisberg, S., 2nd edn, 1985. Applied Linear Regression. Wiley. Williams, G. P. 1983. Improper use of regression equations in the earth sciences. Geology 11: 195-1976. Multivariate and Tree-Based Methods
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6. Multivariate and Tree-based Methods 6.1 Multivariate EDA, and Principal Components Analysis
Principal components analysis is often a useful exploratory tool for multivariate data. The idea is to replace the initial set of variables by a small number of principal components that together may explain most of the variation in the data. The first principal component is the component (linear combination of the initial variables) that explains the greatest part of the variation. The second principal component is the component that, among linear combinations of the variables that are uncorrelated with the first principal component, explains the greatest part of the remaining variation, and so on. The measure of variation used is the sum of the variances of variables, perhaps after scaling so that they each have variance one. An analysis that works with the unscaled variables, and hence with the variance-covariance matrix, gives a greater weight to variables that have a large variance. The common alternative scaling variables so that they each have variance equal to one is equivalent to working with the correlation matrix. With biological measurement data, it is usually desirable to begin by taking logarithms. The standard deviations then measure the logarithm of relative change. Because all variables measure much the same quantity (i.e. relative variability), and because the standard deviations are typically fairly comparable, scaling to give equal variances is unnecessary. The data set possum has nine morphometric measurements on each of 102 mountain brushtail possums, trapped at seven sites from southern Victoria to central Queensland32. It is good practice to begin by examining relevant scatterplot matrices. This may draw attention to gross errors in the data. A plot in which the sites and/or the sexes are identified will draw attention to any very strong structure in the data. For example one site may be quite different from the others, for some or all of the variables. Taking logarithms of these data does not make much difference to the appearance of the plots. This is because the ratio of largest to smallest value is relatively small, never more than 1.6, for all variables. Here are some of the scatterplot matrix possibilities:
pairs(possum[,6:14], col=palette()[as.integer(possum$sex)]) pairs(possum[,6:14], col=palette()[as.integer(possum$site)]) here<-!is.na(possum$footlgth) print(sum(!here)) # We need to exclude missing values # Check how many values are missing
We now look (Figure 21) at particular views of the data that we get from a principal components analysis:
possum.prc <- princomp(log(possum[here,6:14])) # by populations and sex, identified by site xyplot(possum.prc$scores[,2] ~ possum.prc$scores[,1]|possum$Pop[here]+possum$sex[here], groups=possum$site, auto.key=list(columns=3)) # Principal components # Print scores on second pc versus scores on first pc,
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Data relate to the paper: Lindenmayer, D. B., Viggers, K. L., Cunningham, R. B., and Donnelly, C. F. 1995. Morphological variation among columns of the mountain brushtail possum, Trichosurus caninus Ogilby (Phalangeridae: Marsupiala). Australian Journal of Zoology 43: 449-458.
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Figure 21: Second principal component versus first principal component, by population and by sex, for the possum data.
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+ taillgth+footlgth+earconch+eye+chest+belly,data=possum, subset=here) > options(digits=4) > possum.lda$svd [1] 15.7578 > > plot(possum.lda, dimen=3) > # Scatterplot matrix for scores on 1st 3 canonical variates, as in Figure22 3.9372 # Examine the singular values 3.1860 1.5078 1.1420 0.7772
Figure 22: Scatterplot matrix of first three canonical variates. The singular values are the ratio of between to within group sums of squares, for the canonical variates in turn. Clearly canonical variates after the third will have little if any discriminatory power. One can use predict.lda() to get (among other information) scores on the first few canonical variates. Note that there may be interpretative advantages in taking logarithms of biological measurement data. The standard against which patterns of measurement are commonly compared is that of allometric growth, which implies a linear relationship between the logarithms of the measurements. Differences between different sites are then indicative of different patterns of allometric growth. The reader may wish to repeat the above analysis, but working with the logarithms of measurements.
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summary(glass.tree)
To use these models effectively, you also need to know about approaches to pruning trees, and about crossvalidation. Methods for reduction of tree complexity that are based on significance tests at each individual node (i.e. branching point) typically choose trees that over-predict. The Atkinson and Therneau rpart (recursive partitioning) package is closer to CART than is the S-PLUS tree library. It integrates cross-validation with the algorithm for forming trees.
6.5 Exercises
1. Using the data set painters (MASS package), apply principal components analysis to the scores for Composition, Drawing, Colour, and Expression. Examine the loadings on the first three principal components. Plot a scatterplot matrix of the first three principal components, using different colours or symbols to identify the different schools. 2. The data set Cars93 is in the MASS package. Using the columns of continuous or ordinal data, determine scores on the first and second principal components. Investigate the comparison between (i) USA and non-USA cars, and (ii) the six different types (Type) of car. Now create a new data set in which binary factors become columns of 0/1 data, and include these in the principal components analysis. 3. Repeat the calculations of exercises 1 and 2, but this time using the function lda() from the MASS package to derive canonical discriminant scores, as in section 6.3. 4. The MASS package has the Aids2 data set, containing de-identified data on the survival status of patients diagnosed with AIDS before July 1 1991. Use tree-based classification (rpart()) to identify major influences on survival. 5. Investigate discrimination between plagiotropic and orthotropic species in the data set leafshape34.
6.6 References
Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. 1992. Statistical Models in S. Wadsworth and Brooks Cole Advanced Books and Software, Pacific Grove CA. Friedman, J., Hastie, T. and Tibshirani, R. (1998). Additive logistic regression: A statistical view of boosting. Available from the internet. Maindonald J H and Braun W J 2008. Data Analysis and Graphics Using R An Example-Based Approach, 2nd edn. Cambridge University Press. Ripley, B. D. 1996. Pattern Recognition and Neural Networks. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge UK. Therneau, T. M. and Atkinson, E. J. 1997. An Introduction to Recursive Partitioning Using the RPART Routines. This is one of two documents included in: http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/pub/SWin/rpartdoc.zip Venables, W. N. and Ripley, B. D., 2nd edn 1997. Modern Applied Statistics with S-Plus. Springer, New York.
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Data relate to the paper: King. D.A. and Maindonald, J.H. 1999. Tree architecture in relation to leaf dimensions and tree stature in temperate and tropical rain forests. Journal of Ecology 87: 1012-1024.
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If instead one wants four 2s, then four 3s, then four 5s, enter rep(c(2,3,5), c(4,4,4)).
> rep(c(2,3,5),c(4,4,4)) [1] 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 5 5 5 5 # An alternative is rep(c(2,3,5), each=4)
Note further that, in place of c(4,4,4) we could write rep(4,3). So a further possibility is that in place of rep(c(2,3,5), c(4,4,4)) we could enter rep(c(2,3,5), rep(4,3)). In addition to the above, note that the function rep() has an argument length.out, meaning keep on repeating the sequence until the length is length.out.
generates the error message NAs are not allowed in subscripted assignments".
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Users are advised to use !is.na(x) to limit the selection, on one or both sides as necessary, to those elements of x that are not NAs. We will have more to say on missing values in the section on data frames that now follows.
The first column holds the row labels, which in this case are the numbers of the rows that have been extracted. In place of c("variety","yield") we could have written, more simply, c(2,4).
and similarly for any other package. In most packages, data from an attached package are automatically available; use of e.g., data(airquality) to load the data set airquality (datasets package) is unnecessary The out-of-the-box Windows and other binary distributions include many commonly required packages. Other packages must be explicitly installed. For remaining sections of these notes, the MASS package, which comes with the default distribution, will be used from time to time. The base package, and several other packages, are automatically attached at the beginning of the session. To attach any other installed package, use the library() command.
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read.table()
The function read.table() expects missing values to be coded as NA, unless you set na.strings to recognise other characters as missing value indicators. If you have a text file that has been output from SAS, you will probably want to set na.strings=c("."). There may be multiple missing value indicators, e.g. na.strings=c(NA,".",*,""). The "" will ensure that empty cells are entered as NAs.
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Storage of columns of character strings as factors is efficient when a small number of distinct strings that are of modest length are each repeated a large number of times.
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Specifying as.is = T prevents columns of (intended or unintended) character strings from being converted into factors.
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One way to get mixed text and numeric data across from Excel is to save the worksheet in a .csv text file with comma as the separator. If for example file name is myfile.csv and is on drive a:, use read.table("a:/myfile.csv", sep=",") to read the data into R. This copes with any spaces which may appear in text strings. [But watch that none of the cell entries include commas.]
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Factors are column objects that have mode numeric and class factor. They have an attribute levels that holds the level names.
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[There are 19 cities in all.] Printing the contents of the column with the name country gives the names, not the integer values. As in most operations with factors, R does the translation invisibly. There are though annoying exceptions that can make the use of factors tricky. To be sure of getting the country names, specify
as.character(islandcities$country)
By default, R sorts the level names in alphabetical order. If we form a table that has the number of times that each country appears, this is the order that is used:
> table(islandcities$country) Australia Cuba Indonesia Japan Philippines Taiwan United Kingdom 3 1 4 6 2 1 2
This order of the level names is purely a convenience. We might prefer countries to appear in order of latitude, from North to South. We can change the order of the level names to reflect this desired order:
> lev <- levels(islandcities$country) > lev[c(7,4,6,2,5,3,1)] [1] "United Kingdom" "Japan" [5] "Philippines" > table(country) United Kingdom Japan Taiwan Cuba Philippines Indonesia Australia 2 6 1 1 2 4 3 "Indonesia" "Taiwan" "Australia" "Cuba"
In ordered factors, i.e. factors with ordered levels, there are inequalities that relate factor levels. Factors have the potential to cause a few surprises, so be careful! Here are two points to note: When a vector of character strings becomes a column of a data frame, R by default turns it into a factor. Enclose the vector of character strings in the wrapper function I() if it is to remain character. There are some contexts in which factors become numeric vectors. To be sure of getting the vector of text strings, specify e.g. as.character(country). To extract the numeric levels 1, 2, 3, , specify as.numeric(country).
> ordf.stress<"medium" TRUE FALSE FALSE TRUE > ordf.stress>="medium" [1] FALSE TRUE FALSE
Later we will meet the notion of inheritance. Ordered factors inherit the attributes of factors, and have a further ordering attribute. When you ask for the class of an object, you get details both of the class of the object, and of any classes from which it inherits. Thus:
> class(ordf.stress) [1] "ordered" "factor"
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7.7 Lists
Lists make it possible to collect an arbitrary set of R objects together under a single name. You might for example collect together vectors of several different modes and lengths, scalars, matrices or more general arrays, functions, etc. Lists can be, and often are, a rag-tag of different objects. We will use for illustration the list object that R creates as output from an lm calculation. For example, consider the linear model (lm) object elastic.lm (c. f. sections 1.1.4 and 2.1.4) created thus:
elastic.lm <- lm(distance~stretch, data=elasticband)
It is readily verified that elastic.lm consists of a variety of different kinds of objects, stored as a list. You can get the names of these objects by typing in
> names(elastic.lm) [1] "coefficients" [9] "xlevels" "residuals" "call" "effects" "qr" "terms" "rank" "df.residual" "model" [5] "fitted.values" "assign"
We can alternatively ask for the sublist whose only element is the vector elastic.lm$coefficients. For this, specify elastic.lm[coefficients] or elastic.lm[1]. There is a subtle difference in the result that is printed out. The information is preceded by $coefficients, meaning list element with name coefficients.
> elastic.lm[1] $coefficients (Intercept) -63.571429 stretch 4.553571
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If xx is any matrix, the assignment
x <- as.vector(xx)
places columns of xx, in order, into the vector x. In the example above, we get back the elements 1, 2, . . . , 6. Matrices have the attribute dimension. Thus
> dim(xx) [1] 2 3
In fact a matrix is a vector (numeric or character) whose dimension attribute has length 2. Now set
> x34 <- matrix(1:12,ncol=4) > x34 [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4] [1,] [2,] [3,] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
The dimnames() function assigns and/or extracts matrix row and column names. The dimnames() function gives a list, in which the first list element is the vector of row names, and the second list element is the vector of column names. This generalises in the obvious way for use with arrays, which we now discuss.
7.8.1 Arrays
The generalisation from a matrix (2 dimensions) to allow > 2 dimensions gives an array. A matrix is a 2dimensional array. Consider a numeric vector of length 24. So that we can easily keep track of the elements, we will make them 1, 2, .., 24. Thus
x <- 1:24
Then
dim(x) <- c(2,12)
Now try
> dim(x) <-c(3,4,2) > x , , 1 [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4] [1,] [2,] [3,] , , 2 [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4] [1,] [2,] 13 14 16 17 19 20 22 23 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
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[3,] 15 18 21 24
7.9 Exercises
Generate the numbers 101, 102, , 112, and store the result in the vector x. Generate four repeats of the sequence of numbers (4, 6, 3). Generate the sequence consisting of eight 4s, then seven 6s, and finally nine 3s. Store the numbers obtained , in order, in the columns of a 6 by 4 matrix. Create a vector consisting of one 1, then two 2s, three 3s, etc., and ending with nine 9s. For each of the following calculations, what you would expect? Check to see if you were right! a) b)
answer <- c(2, 7, 1, 5, 12, 3, 4) for (j in 2:length(answer)){ answer[j] <- max(answer[j],answer[j-1])} answer <- c(2, 7, 1, 5, 12, 3, 4) for (j in 2:length(answer)){ answer[j] <- sum(answer[j],answer[j-1])}
In the built-in data frame airquality (datasets package): (a) Determine, for each of the columns of the data frame airquality (datasets package), the median, mean, upper and lower quartiles, and range; (b) Extract the row or rows for which Ozone has its maximum value; (c) extract the vector of values of Wind for values of Ozone that are above the upper quartile. Refer to the Eurasian snow data that is given in Exercise 1.6 . Find the mean of the snow cover (a) for the oddnumbered years and (b) for the even-numbered years. Determine which columns of the data frame Cars93 (MASS package) are factors. For each of these factor columns, print out the levels vector. Which of these are ordered factors? Use summary() to get information about data in the data frames attitude (both in the datasets package), and cpus (MASS package). Write brief notes, for each of these data sets, on what this reveals. From the data frame mtcars (MASS package) extract a data frame mtcars6 that holds only the information for cars with 6 cylinders. From the data frame Cars93 (MASS package), extract a data frame which holds only information for small and sporty cars.
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Numeric vectors will be sorted in numerical order. Character vectors will be sorted in alphanumeric order. The operator %in% can be highly useful in picking out subsets of data. For example:
> x <- rep(1:5,rep(3,5)) > x [1] 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 5 5 5 > two4 <- x %in% c(2,4) > two4 [1] FALSE FALSE FALSE [11] TRUE TRUE TRUE TRUE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE TRUE FALSE FALSE FALSE
> # Now pick out the 2s and the 4s > x[two4] [1] 2 2 2 4 4 4
To find the position at which the first space appears in the information on make of car, we might do the following:
> car.brandnames <- sapply(strsplit(as.character(Cars93$Make), " ", fixed=TRUE), + function(x)x[1])
> car.brandnames[1:5] [1] "Acura" "Acura" "Audi" "Audi" "BMW"
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8.4.1 apply()
The function apply() can be used on data frames as well as matrices. Here is an example:
> apply(airquality,2,mean) Ozone Solar.R NA NA Wind 9.96 Wind 9.96 # All elements must be numeric! Temp 77.88 Temp 77.88 Month 6.99 Month 6.99 Day 15.80 Day 15.80
The use of apply(airquality,1,mean) will give means for each row. These are not, for these data, useful information!
8.4.2 sapply()
The function sapply() can be useful for getting information about the columns of a data frame. Here we use it to count that number of missing values in each column of the built-in data frame airquality.
> sapply(airquality, function(x)sum(is.na(x))) Ozone Solar.R 37 7 Wind 0 Temp 0 Month 0 Day 0
Here are several further examples that use the data frame moths that accompanies these notes:
> sapply(moths,is.factor) meters FALSE A FALSE P habitat FALSE TRUE # Determine which columns are factors
> # How many levels does each factor have? > sapply(moths, function(x)if(!is.factor(x))return(0) else length(levels(x))) meters 0 A 0 P habitat 0 8
$ HeadWt: num
> attach(cabbages) > aggregate(HeadWt, by=list(Cult=Cult, Date=Date), FUN=mean) Cult Date 1 2 3 4 c39 c52 c39 c52 x d16 3.18 d16 2.26 d20 2.80 d20 3.11
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5 6 c39 c52 d21 2.74 d21 1.47
The syntax for tapply() is similar, except that the name of the second argument is INDEX rather than by. The output is an array with as many dimensions as there are factors. Where there are no data values for a particular combination of factor levels, NA is returned.
We proceed thus to add a column that has the abbreviations to the data frame. Here however our demands are simple, and we can proceed thus:
new.Cars93 <- merge(x=Cars93,y=Cars93.summary[,4,drop=F], by.x="Type",by.y="row.names")
This creates a data frame that has the abbreviations in the additional column with name abbrev. If there had been rows with missing values of Type, these would have been omitted from the new data frame. This can be avoided by making sure that Type has NA as one of its levels, in both data frames.
8.7 Dates
Since version 1.9.0, the date package has been superseded by functions for working with dates that are in R base. See help(Dates), help(as.Date) and help(format.Date) for detailed information. Use as.Date() to convert text strings into dates. The default is that the year comes first, then the month, and then the day of the month, thus:
> # Electricity Billing Dates > dd <- as.Date(c("2003/08/24","2003/11/23","2004/02/22","2004/05/23")) > diff(dd) Time differences of 91, 91, 91 days
Use format() to set or change the way that a date is formatted. The following are a selection of the symbols used:
%d: day, as number %a: abbreviated weekday name (%A: unabbreviated) %m: month (00-12) %b: month abbreviated name (%B: unabbreviated) %y: final two digits of year (%Y: all four digits)
The default format is "%Y-%m-%d". The function as.Date() will take a vector of character strings that has an appropriate format, and convert it into a dates object. By default, dates are stored using January 1 1970 as origin. This becomes apparent when as.integer() is used to convert a date into an integer value. Here are examples:
> as.Date("1/1/1960", format="%d/%m/%Y")
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[1] "1960-01-01" > as.Date("1:12:1960",format="%d:%m:%Y") [1] "1960-12-01" > as.Date("1960-12-1")-as.Date("1960-1-1") Time difference of 335 days > as.Date("31/12/1960","%d/%m/%Y") [1] "1960-12-31" > as.integer(as.Date("1/1/1970","%d/%m/%Y") [1] 0 > as.integer(as.Date("1/1/2000","%d/%m/%Y")) [1] 10957
The function format() allows control of the formatting of dates. See help(format.Date).
> dec1 <- as.Date("2004-12-1") > format(dec1, format="%b %d %Y") [1] "Dec 01 2004" > format(dec1, format="%a %b %d %Y") [1] "Wed Dec 01 2004"
The function returns the value (fahrenheit-32)*5/9. More generally, a function returns the value of the last statement of the function. Unless the result from the function is assigned to a name, the result is printed. Here is a function that prints out the mean and standard deviation of a set of numbers:
> mean.and.sd <- function(x=1:10){ + av <- mean(x) + sd <- sqrt(var(x)) + c(mean=av, SD=sd) + } > > # Now invoke the function > mean.and.sd() mean SD 5.500000 3.027650 > mean.and.sd(hills$climb) mean SD 1815.314 1619.151
Earlier, we encountered the function sapply() that can be used to repeat a calculation on all columns of a data frame. [More generally, the first argument of sapply() may be a list.] To apply faclev() to all columns of the data frame moths we can specify
> sapply(moths, faclev)
We can alternatively give the definition of faclev directly as the second argument of sapply, thus
> sapply(moths, function(x)if(!is.factor(x))return(0) else length(levels(x)))
Finally, we may want to do similar calculations on a number of different data frames. So we create a function check.df() that encapsulates the calculations. Here is the definition of check.df().
check.df <- function(df=moths) sapply(df, function(x)if(!is.factor(x))return(0) else length(levels(x)))
to get the names of objects that have been added since the start of the session.
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Break functions up into a small number of sub-functions or primitives. Re-use existing functions wherever possible. Write any new primitives so that they can be re-used. This helps ensure that functions contain welltested and well-understood components. Watch the r-help electronic mail list (section 13.3) for useful functions for routine tasks. Wherever possible, give parameters sensible defaults. Often a good strategy is to use as defaults parameters that will serve for a demonstration run of the function. NULL is a useful default where the parameter mostly is not required, but where the parameter if it appears may be any one of several types of data structure. The test if(!is.null()) then determines whether one needs to investigate that parameter further. Structure computations so that it is easy to retrace them. For this reason substantial chunks of code should be incorporated into functions sooner rather than later. Structure code to avoid multiple entry of information.
8.8.6 Graphs
Use graphs freely to shed light both on computations and on data. One of Rs big pluses is its tight integration of computation and graphics.
The multiplication by 1 causes (guesses<.2), which is calculated as TRUE or FALSE, to be coerced to 1 (TRUE) or 0 (FALSE). The vector correct.answers thus contains the results of the student's guesses. A 1 is recorded each time the student correctly guesses the answer, while a 0 is recorded each time the student is wrong.
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One can thus write an R function that simulates a student guessing at a True-False test consisting of some arbitrary number of questions. We leave this as an exercise.
8.9 Exercises
1. Use the round function together with runif() to generate 100 random integers between 0 and 99. Now look up the help for sample(), and use it for the same purpose. 2. Write a function that will take as its arguments a list of response variables, a list of factors, a data frame, and a function such as mean or median. It will return a data frame in which each value for each combination of factor levels is summarised in a single statistic, for example the mean or the median. 3. Determine the number of days, according to R, between the following dates: January 1 in the year 1700, and January 1 in the year 1800 January 1 in the year 1998, and January 1 in the year 2000 4. The supplied data frame milk has columns four and one. Seventeen people rated the sweetness of each of two samples of a milk product on a continuous scale from 1 to 7, one sample with four units of additive and the other with one unit of additive. Here is a function that plots, for each patient, the four result against the one result, but insisting on the same range for the x and y axes.
plot.one <- function(){ xyrange <- range(milk) par(pin=c(6.75, 6.75)) abline(0,1) } # Calculates the range of all values in the data frame # Set plotting area = 6.75 in. by 6.75 in. # Line where four = one
Rewrite this function so that, given the name of a data frame and of any two of its columns, it will plot the second named column against the first named column, showing also the line y=x. 5. Write a function that prints, with their row and column labels, only those elements of a correlation matrix for which abs(correlation) >= 0.9. 6. Write your own wrapper function for one-way analysis of variance that provides a side by side boxplot of the distribution of values by groups. If no response variable is specified, the function will generate random normal data (no difference between groups) and provide the analysis of variance and boxplot information for that. 7. Write a function that computes a moving average of order 2 of the values in a given vector. Apply the function to the data (in the data set huron that accompanies these notes) for the levels of Lake Huron. Repeat for a moving average of order 3. 9. Find a way of computing the moving averages in exercise 3 that does not involve the use of a for loop. 10. Create a function to compute the average, variance and standard deviation of 1000 randomly generated uniform random numbers, on [0,1]. (Compare your results with the theoretical results: the expected value of a uniform random variable on [0,1] is 0.5, and the variance of such a random variable is 0.0833.) 11. Write a function that generates 100 independent observations on a uniformly distributed random variable on the interval [3.7, 5.8]. Find the mean, variance and standard deviation of such a uniform random variable. Now modify the function so that you can specify an arbitrary interval. 12. Look up the help for the sample() function. Use it to generate 50 random integers between 0 and 99, sampled without replacement. (This means that we do not allow any number to be sampled a second time.) Now, generate 50 random integers between 0 and 9, with replacement.
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13. Write an R function that simulates a student guessing at a True-False test consisting of 40 questions. Find the mean and variance of the student's answers. Compare with the theoretical values of .5 and .25. 14. Write an R function that simulates a student guessing at a multiple choice test consisting of 40 questions, where there is chance of 1 in 5 of getting the right answer to each question. Find the mean and variance of the student's answers. Compare with the theoretical values of .2 and .16. 15. Write an R function that simulates the number of working light bulbs out of 500, where each bulb has a probability .99 of working. Using simulation, estimate the expected value and variance of the random variable X, which is 1 if the light bulb works and 0 if the light bulb does not work. What are the theoretical values? 16. Write a function that does an arbitrary number n of repeated simulations of the number of accidents in a year, plotting the result in a suitable way. Assume that the number of accidents in a year follows a Poisson distribution. Run the function assuming an average rate of 2.8 accidents per year. 17. Write a function that simulates the repeated calculation of the coefficient of variation (= the ratio of the mean to the standard deviation), for independent random samples from a normal distribution. 18. Write a function that, for any sample, calculates the median of the absolute values of the deviations from the sample median. *19. Generate random samples from normal, exponential, t (2 d. f.), and t (1 d. f.), thus: a) xn<-rnorm(100) c) xt2<-rt(100, df=2) b) xe<-rexp(100) d) xt2<-rt(100, df=1)
Apply the function from exercise 17 to each sample. Compare with the standard deviation in each case. *20. The vector x consists of the frequencies
5, 3, 1, 4, 6
The first element is the number of occurrences of level 1, the second is the number of occurrences of level 2, and so on. Write a function that takes any such vector x as its input, and outputs the vector of factor levels, here
1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 . . .
[Youll need the information that is provided by cumsum(x). Form a vector in which 1s appear whenever the factor level is incremented, and is otherwise zero. . . .] *21. Write a function that calculates the minimum of a quadratic, and the value of the function at the minimum. *22. A between times correlation matrix, has been calculated from data on heights of trees at times 1, 2, 3, 4, . . . Write a function that calculates the average of the correlations for any given lag. *23. Given data on trees at times 1, 2, 3, 4, . . ., write a function that calculates the matrix of average relative growth rates over the several intervals.
1 dw d log w = . Hence it is reasonable to calculate the average w dt dt log w 2 " log w1 over the interval from t1 to t2 as .] t 2 " t1
[The relative growth rate may be defined as
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...+
pxp +
Use lm() to fit multiple regression models. The various other models we describe are, in essence, generalizations of this model. Generalized Linear Model (e.g. logit model) y = g(a + b1x1) + Here g(.) is selected from one of a small number of options. For logit models,
Here
y = g(a + b1 x1 ) + " =
Here g(.) undoes the logit transformation. We can add more explanatory variables: a + b1x1 + . . . + bpxp.
! !
z1 = "1 (x1 ),z2 = " 2 (x 2 ),...,z p = " p (x p ) may be smoothing functions, while others may be the usual linear model terms. The constant term gets absorbed into one or more of the " s. !
Some of Generalized Additive Model
!
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There are various generalizations. Models which have this form may be nested within other models which have this basic form. Thus there may be `predictions and `errors at different levels within the total model.
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Some of z1 = "1 (x1 ),z 2 = " 2 (x 2 ),...,z p usual linear model terms. We can transform to get the model y
! Notice that even if p = 1, we may still want to retain both "1(.) and g(.), i.e. y = g("1 (x1 )) + # . !
The reason is that g(.) is a specific function, such as the inverse of the logit function. The function g(.) does as much as it can of the task of transformation, with "1 (.) doing anything more that seems necessary. The fitting of spline (bs() or ns()) terms in a linear model or a generalized linear model can be a good ! ! alternative to the use of a full generalized additive model.
! !
Figure 23: The logit or log(odds) transformation. Shown here is a plot of log(odds) versus proportion. Notice how the range is stretched out at both ends.
The logit or log(odds) function turns expected proportions into values that may range from - to + . It is not satisfactory to use a linear model to predict proportions. The values from the linear model may well lie outside the range from 0 to 1. It is however in order to use a linear model to predict logit(proportion). The logit function is an example of a link function. There are various other link functions that we can use with proportions. One of the commonest is the complementary log-log function.
_____________________________________________ Table 1: Patients moving (0) and not moving (1), for each of six different alveolar concentrations. Figure 24 then displays a plot of these proportions.
Figure 24: Plot, versus concentration, of proportion of patients not moving. The horizontal line estimates the expected proportion of nomoves if the concentration had no effect.
We fit two models, the logit model and the complementary log-log model. We can fit the models either directly to the 0/1 data, or to the proportions in Table 1. To understand the output, you need to know about deviances. A deviance has a role very similar to a sum of squares in regression. Thus we have: Regression degrees of freedom sum of squares mean sum of squares (divide by d.f.) We prefer models with a small mean residual sum of squares. Logistic regression degrees of freedom deviance mean deviance (divide by d.f.) We prefer models with a small mean deviance.
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I am grateful to John Erickson (Anesthesia and Critical Care, University of Chicago) and to Alan Welsh (Centre for Mathematics & its Applications, Australian National University) for allowing me use of these data.
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If individuals respond independently, with the same probability, then we have Bernoulli trials. Justification for assuming the same probability will arise from the way in which individuals are sampled. While individuals will certainly be different in their response the notion is that, each time a new individual is taken, they are drawn at random from some larger population. Here is the R code:
> anaes.logit <- glm(nomove ~ conc, family = binomial(link = logit), + data = anesthetic)
(Dispersion Parameter for Binomial family taken to be 1 ) Null Deviance: 41.5 on 29 degrees of freedom Residual Deviance: 27.8 on 28 degrees of freedom Number of Fisher Scoring Iterations: 5 Correlation of Coefficients: (Intercept) conc -0.981
Figure 25: Plot, versus concentration, of log(odds) [= logit(proportion)] of patients not moving. The line is the estimate of the proportion of moves, based on the fitted logit model. With such a small sample size it is impossible to do much that is useful to check the adequacy of the model. Try also plot(anaes.logit).
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The family parameter specifies the distribution for the dependent variable. There is an optional argument that allows us to specify the link function. Below we give further examples.
Taking out the mean is a computational convenience. Also it provides a more helpful form of output. Here are details of the calculations:
dewpoint.lm <- lm(dewpoint ~ bs(mintemp) + bs(maxtemp), data = dewpoint) options(digits=3) summary(dewpoint.lm)
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I am grateful to Dr Edward Linacre, Visiting Fellow, Geography Department, Australian National University, for making these data available.
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to get a list of the summary methods that are available. You may want to mix and match, e.g. summary.lm() on an aov or glm object. The output may not be what you might expect. So be careful!
9.9 Exercises
1. Fit a Poisson regression model to the data in the data frame moths that Accompanies these notes. Allow different intercepts for different habitats. Use log(meters) as a covariate.
9.10 References
Dobson, A. J. 1983. An Introduction to Statistical Modelling. Chapman and Hall, London. Hastie, T. J. and Tibshirani, R. J. 1990. Generalized Additive Models. Chapman and Hall, London. Maindonald J H and Braun W J 2003. Data Analysis and Graphics Using R An Example-Based Approach. Cambridge University Press. McCullagh, P. and Nelder, J. A., 2nd edn., 1989. Generalized Linear Models. Chapman and Hall.
Venables, W. N. and Ripley, B. D., 2nd edn 1997. Modern Applied Statistics with S-Plus. Springer, New York.
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*10. Multi-level Models, Repeated Measures and Time Series 10.1 Multi-Level Models, Including Repeated Measures Models
Models have both a fixed effects structure and an error structure. For example, in an inter-laboratory comparison there may be variation between laboratories, between observers within laboratories, and between multiple determinations made by the same observer on different samples. If we treat laboratories and observers as random, the only fixed effect is the mean. The functions lme() and nlme(), from the Pinheiro and Bates nlme package, handle models in which a repeated measures error structure is superimposed on a linear (lme) or non-linear (nlme) model. Version 3 of lme is broadly comparable to Proc Mixed in the widely used SAS statistical package. The function lme has associated with it highly useful abilities for diagnostic checking and for various insightful plots. There is a strong link between a wide class of repeated measures models and time series models. In the time series context there is usually just one realisation of the series, which may however be observed at a large number of time points. In the repeated measures context there may be a large number of realisations of a series that is typically quite short.
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Min Q1 Med -2.4153887 -0.5981415 -0.0689948 Number of Observations: 48 Number of Groups: block plot %in% block 3 12
> anova(kiwishade.lme) numDF denDF (Intercept) shade 1 3 6 F-value p-value <.0001 0.0012 22.211 36 5190.552
Q3 0.7804597
Max 1.5890938
This was a balanced design, which is why section 5.8.2 could use aov(). We can get an output summary that is helpful for showing how the error mean squares match up with standard deviation information given above thus:
> intervals(kiwishade.lme) Approximate 95% confidence intervals Fixed effects: lower (Intercept) shadeAug2Dec -1.53909 est. 3.030833 -7.428333 upper 7.600757 -5.711743 -2.858410 96.62977 100.202500 103.775232
shadeDec2Feb -14.85159 -10.281667 shadeFeb2May -11.99826 Random Effects: Level: block lower Level: plot lower est. est.
upper
sd((Intercept)) 0.3702555 1.478639 5.905037 Within-group standard error: lower est. upper 2.770678 3.490378 4.397024
We are interested in the three sd estimates. By squaring the standard deviations and converting them to variances we get the information in the following table: Variance component block plot residual (within group) 2.019 = 4.076 1.479 = 2.186 3.4902=12.180
2 2
Notes Three blocks 4 plots per block 4 vines (subplots) per plot
The above gives the information for an analysis of variance table. We have: Variance component block plot residual (within gp) 4.076 2.186 12.180 Mean square for anova table 12.180 + 4 = 86.14 12.180 + 4 = 20.92 12.18 2.186 2.186 + 16 4.076 d.f. 2 (3-1) 6 (3-1) (2-1) 3 4 (4-1)
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Now fsee where these same pieces of information appeared in the analysis of variance table of section 5.8.2:
> kiwishade.aov<-aov(yield~block+shade+Error(block:shade),data=kiwishade) > summary(kiwishade.aov) Error: block:shade Df block shade Residuals 2 6 Sum Sq Mean Sq F value 172.35 125.57 86.17 20.93 Pr(>F) 4.1176 0.074879
3 1394.51
A reasonable guess is that first order interactions may be all we need, i.e.
it2.lme<-lme(log(it)~(tint+target+agegp+sex)^2, random=~1|id, data=tinting,method="ML")
Finally, there is the very simple model, allowing only for main effects:
it1.lme<-lme(log(it)~(tint+target+agegp+sex), random=~1|id, data=tinting,method="ML")
Note that we have fitted all these models by maximum likelihood. This is so that we can do the equivalent of an analysis of variance comparison. Here is what we get:
> anova(itstar.lme,it2.lme,it1.lme) Model df itstar.lme it2.lme it1.lme 1 26 3 8 AIC BIC logLik Test L.Ratio p-value 6.11093 0.7288 0.0065 8.146187 91.45036 21.926906 1.138171 26.77022 7.430915 2 vs 3 22.88105
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Data relate to the paper: Burns, N. R., Nettlebeck, T., White, M. and Willson, J. 1999. Effects of car window tinting on visual performance: a comparison of elderly and young drivers. Ergonomics 42: 428-443.
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The model that limits attention to first order interactions is adequate. We will need to examine the first order interactions individually. For this we re-fit the model used for it2.lme, but now with method="REML".
it2.reml<-update(it2.lme,method="REML")
tint.L.targethicon -0.09193 tint.Q.targethicon -0.00722 tint.L.agegp tint.Q.agegp tint.L.sex tint.Q.sex targethicon.agegp targethicon.sex agegp.sex -0.13075 -0.06972 0.09794 -0.00542 0.13887 -0.07785 0.33164
0.0461 145 0.0482 145 0.0492 145 0.0520 145 0.0492 145 0.0520 145 0.0584 145 0.0584 145 0.3261 22
Random effects: Formula: ~Run | Expt Structure: General positive-definite StdDev Corr (Intercept) 46.49 (Intr)
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Run Residual 3.62 -1 121.29
Correlation Structure: AR(1) Formula: ~1 | Expt Parameter estimate(s): Phi 0.527 Variance function: Structure: Different standard deviations per stratum Formula: ~1 | Expt Parameter estimates: 1 2 3 4 5 1.000 0.340 0.646 0.543 0.501 Fixed effects: Speed ~ Run Value Std.Error DF t-value p-value (Intercept) Run Correlation: (Intr) Run -0.934 Standardized Within-Group Residuals: Min Q1 Med 0.109 Q3 0.740 Max 1.810 -2.912 -0.606 868 -2 30.51 94 2.42 94 28.46 -0.88 <.0001 0.381
10.3 Exercises
1. Use the function acf() to plot the autocorrelation function of lake levels in successive years in the data set huron. Do the plots both with type=correlation and with type=partial.
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10.4 References
Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. 1992. Statistical Models in S. Wadsworth and Brooks Cole Advanced Books and Software, Pacific Grove CA. Diggle, Liang & Zeger 1996. Analysis of Longitudinal Data. Clarendon Press, Oxford.
Everitt, B. S. and Dunn, G. 1992. Applied Multivariate Data Analysis. Arnold, London.
Hand, D. J. & Crowder, M. J. 1996. Practical longitudinal data analysis. Chapman and Hall, London.
Little, R. C., Milliken, G. A., Stroup, W. W. and Wolfinger, R. D. (1996). SAS Systems for Mixed Models. SAS Institute Inc., Cary, New Carolina.
Maindonald J H and Braun W J 2003. Data Analysis and Graphics Using R An Example-Based Approach. Cambridge University Press.
Pinheiro, J. C. and Bates, D. M. 2000. Mixed effects models in S and S-PLUS. Springer, New York. Venables, W. N. and Ripley, B. D., 2nd edn 1997. Modern Applied Statistics with S-Plus. Springer, New York.
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Here fac has the class ordered, which inherits from the parent class factor. The function print.ordered(), which is the function that is called when you invoke print() with an ordered factor, could be rewritten to use the fact that ordered inherits from factor, thus:
> print.ordered function (x, quote = FALSE) { if (length(x) <= 0) cat("ordered(0)\n") else NextMethod(print) cat("Levels: ", paste(levels(x), collapse = " < "), "\n") invisible(x) }
The system version of print.ordered() does not use print.factor(). The function print.glm() does not call print.lm(), even though glm objects inherit from lm objects. The mechanism is avaialble for use if required.
If the argument is a function, we may want to get at the arguments to the function. Here is how one can do it
deparse.args <function (a) { s <- substitute (a) if(mode(s) == "call"){
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# the first element of a 'call' is the function called # so we don't deparse that, just the arguments. print(paste(The function is: lapply (s[-1], function (x) paste (deparse(x), collapse = "\n")) } else stop ("argument is not a function call") } , s[1],(), collapse=))
For example:
> deparse.args(list(x+y, foo(bar))) [1] "The function is: [[1]] [1] "x + y" [[2]] [1] "foo(bar)" list ()"
stores this unevaluated expression in my.exp . The actual contents of my.exp are a little different from what is printed out. R gives you as much information as it thinks helpful. Note that expression(mean(x+y)) is different from expression(mean(x+y)), as is obvious when the expression is evaluated. A text string is a text string is a text string, unless one explicitly changes it into an expression or part of an expression. Lets see how this works in practice
> x <- 101:110 > y <- 21:30 > my.exp <- expression(mean(x+y)) > my.txt <- expression("mean(x+y)") > eval(my.exp) [1] 131 > eval(my.txt) [1] "mean(x+y)"
What if we already have mean(x+y) stored in a text string, and want to turn it into an expression? The answer is to use the function parse(), but indicate that the parameter is text rather than a file name. Thus
> parse(text="mean(x+y)") expression(mean(x + y))
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Here is a function that creates a new data frame from an arbitrary set of columns of an existing data frame. Once in the function, we attach the data frame so that we can leave off the name of the data frame, and use only the column names
make.new.df <- function(old.df = austpop, colnames = c("NSW", "ACT")) { attach(old.df) on.exit(detach(old.df)) argtxt <- paste(colnames, collapse = ",") exprtxt <- paste("data.frame(", argtxt, ")", sep = "") expr <- parse(text = exprtxt) df <- eval(expr) names(df) <- colnames df }
The function do.call() makes it possible to supply the function name and the argument list in separate text strings. When do.call is used it is only necessary to use parse() in generating the argument list. For example
make.new.df <function(old.df = austpop, colnames = c("NSW", "ACT")) { attach(old.df) on.exit(detach(old.df)) argtxt <- paste(colnames, collapse = ",") listexpr <- parse(text=paste("list(", argtxt, ")", sep = "")) df <- do.call(data.frame, eval(listexpr)) names(df) <- colnames df }
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assign("x", list(...)[[1]]) assign(xname, x) } y <- eval(expr) yexpr <- parse(text=left)[[1]] xexpr <- parse(text=xname)[[1]] plot(x, y, ylab = yexpr, xlab = xexpr, type="n") lines(spline(x,y)) mainexpr <- parse(text=paste(left, "==", right)) title(main = mainexpr) }
Try
plotcurve() plotcurve("ang=asin(sqrt(p))", p=(1:49)/50)
mygrep(for)
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Look in the directory contrib for packages. New packages are being added all the time. So it pays to check the CRAN site from time to time. Also, watch for announcements on the electronic mailing lists r-help and r-announce.
Maindonald J H and Braun W J 2008. Data Analysis and Graphics Using R An Example-Based Approach, 2nd edn. Cambridge University Press. [This is an intermediate level text.] Venables, W. N. and Ripley, B. D., 4th edn 2002. Modern Applied Statistics with S. Springer, NY.
[This has become a text book for the use of S-PLUS and R for applied statistical analysis. It assumes a fair level of statistical sophistication. Explanation is careful, but often terse. Together with the Complements it gives brief introductions to extensive packages of functions that have been written or adapted by Ripley, Venables, and a number of other statisticians. For other books and literature, see
http://www.r-project.org/doc/bib/R-books.html
http://www.r-project.org/doc/bib/R-other.html
All of these datasets, except beams, florida, huron and islandcities, are in the DAAG package. The units of time for hills are however hours (not minutes) in DAAG. Data Sets from Package datasets
airquality attitude cars Islands LakeHuron
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painters pressure ships
Section 2.7
1. The value of answer is (a) 12, (b) 22, (c) 600. 2. prod(c(10,3:5)) 3(i) bigsum <- 0; 3(ii) sum(1:100) 4(i) bigprod <- 1; 4(ii) prod(1:50) 5. radius <- 3:20;
volume <- 4*pi*radius^3/3 sphere.data <- data.frame(radius=radius, volume=volume) for (i in 1:50) {bigprod <- bigprod*i }; bigprod for (i in 1:100) {bigsum <- bigsum+i }; bigsum
6. sapply(tinting, is.factor)
sapply(tinting[, 4:6], levels) sapply(tinting[, 4:6], is.ordered)
Section 3.9
2. par(mfrow = c(1,2))
plot(Animals$body, Animals$brain, pch=1, xlab="Body weight (kg)",ylab="Brain weight (g)") plot(log(Animals$body),log(Animals$brain),pch=1, xlab="Body weight (kg)", ylab="Brain weight (g)", axes=F) brainaxis <- 10^seq(-1,4) bodyaxis <-10^seq(-2,4) axis(1, at=log(bodyaxis), lab=bodyaxis) axis(2, at=log(brainaxis), lab=brainaxis) box() identify(log(Animals$body), log(Animals$brain), labels=row.names(Animals))
Section 7.9
1. x <- seq(101,112) or x <- 101:112 2. rep(c(4,6,3),4) 3. c(rep(4,8),rep(6,7),rep(3,9)) or rep(c(4,6,3),c(8,7,9))
mat64 <- matrix(c(rep(4,8),rep(6,7),rep(3,9)), nrow=6, ncol=4)
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4. rep(seq(1,9),seq(1,9)) or rep(1:9, 1:9) 6. (a) Use summary(airquality) to get this information. (b) airquality[airquality$Ozone == max(airquality$Ozone),] (c) airquality$Wind[airquality$Ozone > quantile(airquality$Ozone, .75)] 7. mean(snow$snow.cover[seq(2,10,2)])
mean(snow$snow.cover[seq(1,9,2)])
9. summary(attitude); summary(cpus) Comment on ranges of values, whether distributions seem skew, etc. 10. mtcars6<-mtcars[mtcars$cyl==6,] 11. Cars93[Cars93$Type==Small|Cars93$Type==Sporty,]