NatsumiYotsumoto
2010-Sep-08 14:34 UTC
[R] Checking if the distribution follow a power law
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On Sep 8, 2010, at 10:34 AM, NatsumiYotsumoto wrote:> Dear all. > > > I'm using igraph package, and do a research about network analysis. > > With power.law.fit from igraph package, it seems that we can fit a > power law > distribution to some data. > > > But, I want to know how to judge whether the network distribution > follows a > power law or not.In order to determine whether something is from distribution A or "not- A", one needs to have a sensible way of characterizing or considering what would be in the range of distributions in the "not-A". Unfortunately for your question, the range of possible distributions is infinite. That means it would always be possible to have a "better fitting distribution than what ever is distribution A. If you have alternatives to the power-law that you want to "put to the test", then now is the time to offer them. My guess is that you do not, so I will offer alternatives: Alt A: a) read the citations in the email you cited, especially Newman then ... b) set up a histogram of your data using hist with logarithmic or geometric progression of the breaks argument. c) as a check on you exponent estimate, calculate alpha and se(alpha) as on pg 4-5 of that citation. Alt B: require(sos) ???"fitting pareto" ???"fitting power network" # and proceed from there -- David.> Does anyone know the way to do this? > > Thanks for any help. > > Daigo > > p.s. > > Also, I tried several ways such as > > http://www.mail-archive.com/r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch/msg62520.html > > and I got results like this: > > Profiling... > > 2.5 % 97.5 % > > 2.393297 2.412650 > > What do these suggest? > > please tell me about this if someone knows.-- David Winsemius, MD West Hartford, CT