similar to: na.pass option in ccf function

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 2000 matches similar to: "na.pass option in ccf function"

2006 Apr 13
1
How does ccf() really work?
I can't understand the results from cross-correlation function ccf() even though it should be simple. Here's my short example: ********* a<-rnorm(5);b<-rnorm(5) a;b [1] 1.4429135 0.8470067 1.2263730 -1.8159190 -0.6997260 [1] -0.4227674 0.8602645 -0.6810602 -1.4858726 -0.7008563 cc<-ccf(a,b,lag.max=4,type="correlation") cc Autocorrelations of series 'X',
2013 Jan 29
1
ccf (cross correlation function) problems
Hello everybody, I am sorry if my questions are too simple or not easily understandable. I’m not a native English speaker and this is my first analysis using this function. I have a problem with a cross correlation function and I would like to understand how I have to perform it in R. I have yearly data of an independent variable (x) from 1982 to 2010, and I also have yearly data of a variable
2006 Nov 27
2
NaN with ccf() for vector with all same element
hello, i have been using ccf() to look at the correlation between lightning and electrogamnetic data. for the most part it has worked exactly as expected. however, i have come across something that puzzles me a bit: > x <- c(1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0) > y <- c(0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0) > ccf(x, x, plot = FALSE) Autocorrelations of series 'X', by lag -4 -3 -2 -1 0
2006 Oct 02
1
CCF and ACF
Dear all, given two numeric vectors x and y, the ACF(x) at lag k is cor(x(t),x(t+k)) while the CCF(x,y) at lag k is cor(x(t),y(t-k)). See below for a simple example. > set.seed(1) > x <- rnorm(10) > y <- rnorm(10) > x [1] -0.6264538 0.1836433 -0.8356286 1.5952808 0.3295078 -0.8204684 0.4874291 0.7383247 0.5757814 -0.3053884 > y [1] 1.51178117 0.38984324
2007 Mar 29
1
ccf time units
Hi, I am using ccf but I could not figure out how to calculate the actual lag in number of periods from the returned results. The documentation for ccf says:"The lag is returned and plotted in units of time". What does "units of time" mean? For example: > x=ldeaths > x1=lag(ldeaths,1) > results=ccf(x,x1) > results Autocorrelations of series 'X', by lag
2010 Jul 14
1
ccf function
Hello, I am a very new R user and not a statistician so please excuse any over explanation, I'm just trying to be as clear as possible. I have performed a cross correlation of two time series (my columns) in a single data setusing: ccf(ts(A[rows,columnX]),(A[rows,columnY]), lag=NULL, type="correlation",plot=F) I?am able to get the results (for example): Autocorrelations of
2006 Nov 28
1
ccf documentation bug or suggeston (PR#9394)
On 11/28/2006 11:50 AM, A.I. McLeod wrote: > Hi Duncan, Hi Ian. > > ccf(x,y) does not explain whether c(k)=cov(x(t),x(t+k)) or d(k)=cov(x(t),x(t-k)) is calculated. The following example demonstrates > that the c(k) definition is used: > ccf(c(-1,1,rep(0,8)),c(1,rep(0,9))) > However S-Plus acf uses the d(k) definition in their acf function. I don't think our code looks
2011 Jun 30
0
CCF of two time series pre-whitened using ARIMA
Hi all, I have two time series that I would like to correlate but as they are autocorrelated, I am "pre-whitening" them first by fitting ARIMA models, then correlating their residuals....as described in https://onlinecourses.science.psu.edu/stat510/?q=node/75 However, http://www.stat.pitt.edu/stoffer/tsa2/Rissues.htm discusses some issues with ARIMA in R. In particular, for issue 2, if
2008 Apr 23
1
ccf and covariance
Hi. It's my understanding that a cross-correlation function of vectors x and y at lag zero is equivalent to their correlation (or covariance, depending on how the ccf is defined). If this is true, could somebody please explain why I get an inconsistent result between cov() and ccf(type = "covariance"), but a consistent result between cor() and ccf(type = "correlation")? Or
2010 Apr 13
0
ccf problem (cross-correlation)
Hi all, I have a problem concerning my understanding of the cross-correlation (ccf) function in R. assume a time serie as: > t<-seq(0,6.28,by=0.01); > my_serie<-ts(sin(t),start=0,end=6.28,deltat=0.01) then I generate an other one shifted by 12 time points: > my_shifted_serie<-ts(sin(t),start=0+0.12,end=6.28+0.12,deltat=0.01) if I do the cross-correlation I get that the two
2010 Apr 26
1
Why am I getting different results from cor VS ccf ?
Hi all, I am getting different results from ccf and cor, Here is a simple example: set.seed(100) N <- 100 x1 <- sample(N) x2 <- x1 + rnorm(N,0,5) ccf(x1,x2)$acf[ccf(x1,x2)$lag == -1] cor(x1[-N], x2[-1]) Results: > ccf(x1,x2)$acf[ccf(x1,x2)$lag == -1] [1] -0.128027 > cor(x1[-N], x2[-1]) [1] -0.1301427 Thanks, Tal ----------------Contact
2006 Mar 02
1
CCF and Lag questions
I am new to R and new to time series modeling. I have a set of variables (var1, var2, var3, var4, var5) for which I have historical yearly data. I am trying to use this data to produce a prediction of var1, 3 years into the future. I have a few basic questions: 1) I am able to read in my data, and convert it to a time series format using 'ts.' data_ts <- ts(data, start = 1988, end =
2012 May 11
1
Possible artifacts in cross-correlation function ("ccf")?
Dear R-users, I have been using R and its core-packages with great satisfaction now for many years, and have recently started using the "ccf" function (part of the "stats" package version 2.16.0), about which I have a question. The "ccf"-algorithm for calculating the cross-correlation between two time series always calculates the mean and standard deviation per time
2008 Feb 19
4
[LLVMdev] 2008-01-25-ByValReadNone.c Failure
Hi all, I'm seeing this failure on my PPC G4 box running TOT with llvm-gcc 4.2. Is anyone else seeing this? I'm sure it's related to the byval stuff that's recently gone into LLVM. I'm attaching the output of this command: $ llvm-gcc -emit-llvm -O3 -S -o - -emit-llvm /Users/wendling/llvm/ llvm.src/test/CFrontend/2008-01-25-ByValReadNone.c As you can see in it, there
2009 Apr 20
2
Cross-Correlation function (CCF) issues
Dear all, I have two series of returns and I want to find the cross-correlations between these two series. I know of the ccf, but it does not work as I'd like if i type ccf(x,y,lag.max=20,type="correlation",plot=FALSE) i got the error message Error in na.fail.default(ts.intersect(as.ts(x), as.ts(y))) : missing values in object So i found that somebody suggested to type
2011 Jan 19
2
CCF and missing values.
Hi, I have missing values in my time series. "na.action = na.pass" works for acf and pacf. Why do I get the following error for the ccf? > ts(matrix(c(dev$u[1:10],dev$q[1:10]),ncol=2),start=1,freq=1) Time Series: Start = 1 End = 10 Frequency = 1 Series 1 Series 2 1 68.00000 138.4615 2 70.00000 355.5556 3 68.76000 304.3200 4 68.00000 231.4286 5 69.74194 357.4963 6
2006 Sep 15
1
"ccf versus acf"
I am trying to run a cross-correlation using the "ccf()" function. When I select plot = TRUE in the ccf() I get a graph which has ACF on the y-axis, which would suggest that these y-values are the auto-correlation values. How should I adjust the code to produce a plot that provides the cross-correlation values? Here is my code: w002dat <-
2008 May 08
1
significance threshold in CCF
Hi everyone, When the CCF between two series of observations is plotted in R, a line indicating (presumably) the significance threshold appears across the plot. Does anyone know how this threshold is determined (it is different for each set of series) and how its value can be extracted from R? I've tried saving the CCF into an object and unclassing the object, but there's nothing there to
2014 Nov 04
1
[R] Calculation of cross-correlation in ccf
Dear All, I am studying some process measurement time series in R and trying to identify time delays using cross-correlation function ccf. The results have however been bit confusing. I found a couple of years old message about this issue but unfortunately wasn't able to find it again for a reference. For example, an obvious time shift is observed between the measurements y1 and y2 when the
2009 Jan 20
2
Confidence intervals in ccf()
Hi, I have been running the ccf() function to find cross-correlations of time series across various lags. When I give the option of plot=TRUE, I get a plot that gives me 95% confidence interval cut-offs (based on sample covariances) for my cross-correlations at each lag. This gives me a sense of whether my cross-correlations are statistically significant or not. However, I am unable to get R to