Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1000 matches similar to: "?bug? strange factors produced by chron"
2008 Sep 09
1
How do I compute interactions with anova.mlm ?
Hi,
I wish to compute multivariate test statistics for a within-subjects repeated measures design with anova.mlm.
This works great if I only have two factors, but I don't know how to compute interactions with more than two factors.
I suspect, I have to create a new "grouping" factor and then test with this factor to get these interactions (as it is hinted in R News 2007/2),
but
2010 Oct 13
1
interaction contrasts
hello list,
i'd very much appreciate help with setting up the
contrast for a 2-factorial crossed design.
here is a toy example:
library(multcomp)
dat<-data.frame(fac1=gl(4,8,labels=LETTERS[1:4]),
fac2=rep(c("I","II"),16),y=rnorm(32,1,1))
mod<-lm(y~fac1*fac2,data=dat)
## the contrasts i'm interressted in:
c1<-rbind("fac2-effect in
2002 Oct 17
1
manova with Error?
Let's say I have a within-subject experiment with 2 observables, obs1 and ob2 and 2 independent factors, fac1 and fac2.
I can do
summary( aov( obs1~fac1*fac2 + Error(Subject/(fac1*fac2)) ) )
summary( aov( obs2~fac1*fac2 + Error(Subject/(fac1*fac2)) ) )
to test the 2 observables separately.
> summary( fit<-manova( cbind(obs1,obs2)~fac1*fac2 + Error(Subject/(fac1*fac2)) ) )
gives
2007 Oct 30
2
flexible processing
Hello,
unfortunately, I don't know a better subject. I would like to be very flexible
in how to process my data.
Assume the following dataset:
par1 <- seq(0,1,length.out = 100)
par2 <- seq(1,100)
fac1 <- factor(rep(c("group1", "group2"), each = 50))
fac2 <- factor(rep(c("group3", "group4", "group5", "group6"), each =
2009 Oct 06
1
ggplot2: mapping categorical variable to color aesthetic with faceting
Hello Again... I?m making a faceted plot of a response on two categorical
variables using ggplot2 and having troubles with the coloring. Here is a
sample that produces the desired plot:
compareCats <- function(data, res, fac1, fac2, colors) {
require(ggplot2)
p <- ggplot(data, aes(fac1, res)) + facet_grid(. ~ fac2)
jit <- position_jitter(width = 0.1)
p <- p +
2009 May 22
1
regrouping factor levels
Hi all,
I had some trouble in?regrouping factor levels for a variable. After some experiments, I have figured out how I can recode to modify the factor levels. I would now like some help to understand why some methods work and others don't.
Here's my code :
rm(list=ls())
###some trials in recoding factor levels
char<-letters[1:10]
fac<-factor(char)
levels(fac)
print(fac)
##first
2011 Oct 03
1
function recode within sapply
Dear List,
I am using function recode, from package car, within sapply, as follows:
L3 <- LETTERS[1:3]
(d <- data.frame(cbind(x = 1, y = 1:10), fac1 = sample(L3, 10,
replace=TRUE), fac2 = sample(L3, 10, replace=TRUE), fac3 = sample(L3,
10, replace=TRUE)))
str(d)
d[, c("fac1", "fac2")] <- sapply(d[, c("fac1", "fac2")], recode,
"c('A',
2011 Jun 17
1
question about split
Dear R-users
I seem to be stumped on something simple. I want to split a data frame
by factor levels given in one or more columns e.g. given
dat <- data.frame(x = runif(100),
fac1 = rep(c("a", "b", "c", "d"), each = 25),
fac2 = rep(c("A", "B"), 50))
I know I can split it by fac1, fac2 by:
2010 Nov 27
1
d.f. in F test of nested glm models
Dear all,
I am fitting a glm to count data using poison errors with the log link. My
goal is to test for the significance of model terms by calling the anova
function on two nested models following the recommendation in Michael
Crawley's guide to Statistical Computing.
Without going into too much detail, essentially, I have a small
overdispersion problem (errors do not fit the poisson
2009 Oct 02
1
ggplot2: proper use of facet_grid inside a function
Hello Again R Folk:
I have found items about this in the archives, but I?m still not getting
it right. I want to use ggplot2 with facet_grid inside a function with
user specified variables, for instance:
p <- ggplot(data, aes_string(x = fac1, y = res)) + facet_grid(. ~
fac2)
Where data, fac1, fac2 and res are arguments to the function. I have
tried
p <- ggplot(data,
2007 Oct 17
1
passing arguments to functions within functions
Dear R Users,
I am trying to write a wrapper around summarize and xYplot from Hmisc
and am having trouble understanding how to pass arguments from the
function I am writing to the nested functions.
There must be a way, but I have not been able to figure it out.
An example is below.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks, Dan
# some example data
df=expand.grid(rep=1:4,
2010 Apr 21
5
Bugs? when dealing with contrasts
R version 2.10.1 (2009-12-14)
Copyright (C) 2009 The R Foundation for Statistical Computing
ISBN 3-900051-07-0
R is free software and comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY.
You are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions.
Type 'license()' or 'licence()' for distribution details.
Natural language support but running in an English locale
R is a collaborative project with
2002 Dec 13
1
Problem with lattice bwplot
I've come across the following error when using free scales with bwplot (I use
a small example data set just to illustrate the problem):
> d <- data.frame(
x=c(34.4, 12.4, NA, 65.3, NA, 12.0, 45.0, 645.0, 644.0,323.0),
fac1=c('a','a','b','a','b','a','a','c','c','c'),
2002 Jun 04
2
Scaling on a data.frame
Hey,
hopefully there is an easy way to solve my problem.
All that i think off is lengthy and clumsy.
Given a data.frame d with columns VALUE, FAC1, FAC2, FAC3.
Let FAC1 be something like experiment number,
so that there are exactly the same number of rows for each level of FAC1
in the data.frame.
Now i would like to scale all values according to the center of its
experiment.
So i can apply s
2010 Feb 02
1
Build a matrix from another matrix by specifying the indexes
Hello R specialists,
I have a base vector called vBase with 102 elements. I have another vector
vec1 which elements are only part of vBase but is shorter. I transform vec1
so I get a vector with the same size as vBase and with each common element
on the same indexed row. If a value is missing in vec1 then I put a Na like
this:
vec1 vBase
Amsterdam Amsterdam
Na
2008 Jan 15
1
covariate in a glm
Hello mailing list!
I would like to know, how I can introduce a covariate in a glm, I've two factors and a covariate.
Thank you very much!
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
Michelangelo La Spina
Equipo de Protección de cultivos - Control Biológico
Departamento de Biotecnología y Protección de Cultivos
Instituto Murciano de
2001 Aug 30
1
lattice
Hello. I know that lattice is still in beta beta but. . .
Nick Ellis wrote to S-news with an example of 'trellis' with several
lines in each panel.
df<-expand.grid(fac1=letters[1:2],x=seq(0,1,0.1),fac2=LETTERS[1:4])
df$y<-df$x*codes(df$fac1)+codes(df$fac2)*df$x^2+rnorm(nrow(df))/3
xyplot(y ~ x | fac2,
groups=fac1,
data=df,
2004 Mar 18
1
help with aov
Hi all,
Suppose the following data and the simple model
y<-1:12+rnorm(12)
fac1<-c(rep("A",4),rep("B",4),rep("C",4))
fac2<-rep(c("D","C"),6)
dat<-data.frame(y,fac1,fac2)
tmp<-aov(y~fac1+fac2,dat)
the command tmp$coeff gives the fllowing results :
(Intercept) fac1B fac1C fac2D
3.307888 2.898187 7.409010
2024 Jun 16
1
slowness when I use a list comprehension
This can be vectorized. Try
ix <- seq_along(vec2)
S_diff2 <- sapply(seq_len(N1-(N2-1)*ratio_sampling), \(j)
sum((vec1[(ix-1)*ratio_sampling+j] - vec2[ix])**2))
On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 11:27?AM Laurent Rhelp <laurentRHelp at free.fr> wrote:
>
> Dear RHelp-list,
>
> I try to use the package comprehenr to replace a for loop by a list
> comprehension.
>
> I
2012 Aug 24
6
updating elements of a vector sequentially - is there a faster way?
I would like to know whether there is a faster way to do the below
operation (updating vec1).
My objective is to update the elements of a vector (vec1), where a
particular element i is dependent on the previous one. I need to do this on
vectors that are 1 million or longer and need to repeat that process
several hundred times. The for loop works but is slow. If there is a faster
way, please let