similar to: create and save a simulated dataset

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 300 matches similar to: "create and save a simulated dataset"

2013 Feb 15
1
FRONTIER
Hello everybody, Anyone familiar with the package frontier? I have some general questions on how to approach the model design. Thanks in advance Giovanna Giovanna Ottaviani Aalmo Stipendiat/Ph.D. Student ------------------------------------------- Norsk institutt for skog og landskap Pb 115, NO-1431 Ås T (+47) 64 94 9094 M(+47) 980 30 422 F(+47) 64 94 90 80
2012 Nov 22
0
Mixed models and learning curves
My name is Giovanna and I am a PhD student in Norway. I am a beginner with statistics and R, hence my ignorance. Apologies from now..... I have been collecting data on time performances of 5 subjects using a 1:3 scale tower yarder. The task was consisting in yarding 5 small logs placed on permanently marked course. Four subjects had different previous experiences (None, Some) and the fifth was a
2008 Jul 08
6
Question: Beginner stuck in a R cycle
Dear All, I have a database of 200 observations named myD. In the dataframe there are a column named code (with codes varying from 1 to 77), a column named "prevalence" with some quantitative measurements are given and an column named Pr_mean, with no values. I would like to set a cycle to compute the average of prevalence values for each different code and store the averages under the
2002 Oct 31
7
Symbols for male/female
Dear all, I would like to use the biological symbols for male and female as plotting symbols in a scatterplot (ideally filled and non-filled). R does not seem to have these symbols using pch= in plot() nor are they implemented via expression() or at least I did not find them. I found that the symbols are e.g. available in the wasysym and the marvosym package in LaTeX. I have coded two very rough
2002 Oct 31
7
Symbols for male/female
Dear all, I would like to use the biological symbols for male and female as plotting symbols in a scatterplot (ideally filled and non-filled). R does not seem to have these symbols using pch= in plot() nor are they implemented via expression() or at least I did not find them. I found that the symbols are e.g. available in the wasysym and the marvosym package in LaTeX. I have coded two very rough
2016 Apr 02
3
apply mean function to a subset of data
Dear all; This must have a rather simple answer but haven't been able to figure it out: I have a data frame with say 2 groups (group 1 & 2). I want to select from group 1 say "n" rows and calculate the mean; then select "m" rows from group 2 and calculate the mean as well. So far I've been using a for loop for doing it but when it comes to a large data set is
2009 Oct 23
3
opposite estimates from zeroinfl() and hurdle()
Dear all, A question related to the following has been asked on R-help before, but I could not find any answer to it. Input will be much appreciated. I got an unexpected sign of the "slope" parameter associated with a covariate (diam) using zeroinfl(). It led me to compare the estimates given by zeroinfl() and hurdle(): The (significant) negative estimate here is surprising, given
2016 Apr 02
0
apply mean function to a subset of data
Hi Pedro, This may not be much of an improvement, but it was a challenge. selvec<-as.vector(matrix(c(nsel,unlist(by(toy$diam,toy$group,length))-nsel), ncol=2,byrow=TRUE)) TFvec<-rep(c(TRUE,FALSE),length.out=length(selvec)) toynsel<-rep(TFvec,selvec) by(toy[toynsel,]$diam,toy[toynsel,]$group,mean) Jim On 4/3/16, Pedro Mardones <mardones.p at gmail.com> wrote: > Dear all; >
2016 Apr 03
1
apply mean function to a subset of data
Here are several ways to get there, but your original loop is fine once it is corrected: > for (i in 1:2) smean[i] <- mean(toy$diam[toy$group==i][1:nsel[i]]) > smean [1] 0.271489 1.117015 Using sapply() to hide the loop: > smean <- sapply(1:2, function(x) mean((toy$diam[toy$group==x])[1:nsel[x]])) > smean [1] 0.271489 1.117015 Or use head() > smean <- sapply(1:2,
2006 Aug 09
1
nested ANOVA using lme
I have an ANOVA model with 2 factors "Environment" and "Site", "Diameter" is the response variable. Site should be nested within Environment. Site is also a random factor while Environment is fixed. I can do this analysis using the "aov" function by using these commands: >model<-aov(Diam~Env+Error(Env%in%Site),data=environ) >summary(model)
2002 Sep 30
2
Decompose numerical factor into orthog. poly parts
Consider the following analysis of a class experiment done as a Latin Square: > spinner <- gl(4,4,16,label=c("Murray","Angela","Shasha","Stephen")) > order <- gl(4,1,16) > treat <- scan() 1: 1 2 4 3 5: 4 3 1 2 9: 3 4 2 1 13: 2 1 3 4 17: Read 16 items > coin <-
2010 Oct 03
1
scatterplot error message
Hi All. I am a new R user. Trying to do scatterplot. Not sure how to resolve this error message A<-subset (ErablesGatineau, station=="A") > B<-subset (ErablesGatineau, station=="B") > > plot(diam ~ biom) > abline(lm(diam ~ biom), col = "red") > > goodcases <- !(is.na(diam) | is.na(biom)) > lines(lowess(diam[goodcases] ~
2006 Jan 25
1
How to use rfm.test ? (Package MarkedPointProcess)
I would like to compute the MC test (rfm.test) available in the package MarkedPointProcess (for the data BITOEK for example) in order to test the dependence between the marks and their locations. Why the syntax of rfm.test is false here? I have the message : ****************************** ML WARNING! Forbidden values! -- if there are too many warnings try narrower lower and upper bounds for the
2006 Jan 26
1
[R-SIG-Mac] Hist for different levels of a factor
The list of your interest is R-help not R-sig-mac stefano Il giorno 26/gen/06, alle ore 01:20, Sylvain Charlat ha scritto: > Hi, > > Is there any simple way to get histogram for different levels of > factor? > > Say you have the following data set: > > Island Sp.diam > Moorea 1.21 > Moorea 1.27 > Moorea 1.28 > Moorea 1.22 > Moorea 1.28 > Rurutu
2001 Jan 23
5
iptables
Isn''t it possible with iptables to filter on DSCP field? Thanks, Tom Aernoudt
2006 Mar 16
1
ANCOVA with random factor
I would like to know if there is a way of directly calculating the F-ratio of a random effect using the "aov" function. I have 2 factors in my model, "population" which is random and "length" which is the length of female fish within each population. The dependent variable is "diam" which is the average diameter of eggs produced by each female. At
2004 Nov 22
1
RWinEdt, other text editors and R2.01 a problem in pasting commands
Dear All, In the last few days I started using the last version of R as I encountered a problem with R1.9 and the use of RWinEdt, however the problem shows with R2.01 as well. More precisely 1. I install R2.01 after removing old verions of R 2. I Install RWinEdt package versione RWinEdt_1.6-2 and SWinRegistry_0.3-2 and everything seems fine 3. I recall the RWinEdt library (library(RWinEdt)) and
2006 Jan 28
7
cool components in the form
Is there a easy way to add components like: http://www.dynarch.com/projects/calendar/ http://tinymce.moxiecode.com/example_full.php?example=true in ruby forms, by plugins or whatever? Thank you Rodrigo Dom?nguez Iplan Networs www.iplan.com.ar <http://www.iplan.com.ar/> ? rdominguez@iplan.com.ar www.rorra.com.ar <http://www.rorra.com.ar/> ? rorra@rorra.com.ar --------------
2005 Jul 12
3
adding a factor column based on levels of another factor
Hi R users Does anyone out there have a better/quicker way of adding a factor column to a data frame based on levels of another factor? I have a (large) data frame consisting of records for individual plants, each represented by a unique ID number. The species of each plant is indicated in the column "species", which is a factor column with many different levels (species). There are
2010 Oct 04
1
Splitting a DF into rows according to a column
Hi, I'm turning my wheels on this and keep coming around to the same wrong solution - please have a look and give a hand ... The premise is: a DF like so > loremIpsum <- "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque leo ipsum, ultricies scelerisque volutpat non, volutpat et nulla. Curabitur consequat ullamcorper tellus id imperdiet. Duis semper malesuada