Enter the query into the form above. You can look for specific version of a package by using @ symbol like this: gcc@10.
API method:
GET /api/packages?search=hello&page=1&limit=20
where search is your query, page is a page number and limit is a number of items on a single page. Pagination information (such as a number of pages and etc) is returned
in response headers.
If you'd like to join our channel webring send a patch to ~whereiseveryone/toys@lists.sr.ht adding your channel as an entry in channels.scm.
Collects a list of your third party R packages, and scans them with the OSS Index provided by Sonatype', reporting back on any vulnerabilities that are found in the third party packages you use.
Assessment and diagnostics for comparing competing clustering solutions, using predictive models. The main intended use is for comparing clustering/classification solutions of ecological data (e.g. presence/absence, counts, ordinal scores) to 1) find an optimal partitioning solution, 2) identify characteristic species and 3) refine a classification by merging clusters that increase predictive performance. However, in a more general sense, this package can do the above for any set of clustering solutions for i observations of j variables.
Calculate similarity between ontological terms and sets of ontological terms based on term information content and assess statistical significance of similarity in the context of a collection of terms sets - Greene et al. 2017 <doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btw763>.
Creating maps for statistical analysis such as proportional circles, choropleth, typology and flows. Some functions use shiny or leaflet technologies for dynamism and interactivity. The great features are : - Create maps in a web environment where the parameters are modifiable on the fly ('shiny and leaflet technologies). - Create interactive maps through zoom and pop-up ('leaflet technology). - Create frozen maps with the possibility to add labels.
We provide an R interface to OpenML.org which is an online machine learning platform where researchers can access open data, download and upload data sets, share their machine learning tasks and experiments and organize them online to work and collaborate with other researchers. The R interface allows to query for data sets with specific properties, and allows the downloading and uploading of data sets, tasks, flows and runs. See <https://www.openml.org/guide/api> for more information.
Download and import of OpenStreetMap ('OSM') data as sf or sp objects. OSM data are extracted from the Overpass web server (<https://overpass-api.de/>) and processed with very fast C++ routines for return to R'.
Different measures which can be used to quantify similarities between regions. These measures are isonymy, isonymy between, Lasker distance, coefficients of Hedrick and Nei. In addition, it calculates biodiversity indices such as Margalef, Menhinick, Simpson, Shannon, Shannon-Wiener, Sheldon, Heip, Hill Numbers, Geometric Mean and Cressie and Read statistics.
Outcome-dependent sampling (ODS) schemes are cost-effective ways to enhance study efficiency. In ODS designs, one observes the exposure/covariates with a probability that depends on the outcome variable. Popular ODS designs include case-control for binary outcome, case-cohort for time-to-event outcome, and continuous outcome ODS design (Zhou et al. 2002) <doi: 10.1111/j.0006-341X.2002.00413.x>. Because ODS data has biased sampling nature, standard statistical analysis such as linear regression will lead to biases estimates of the population parameters. This package implements four statistical methods related to ODS designs: (1) An empirical likelihood method analyzing the primary continuous outcome with respect to exposure variables in continuous ODS design (Zhou et al., 2002). (2) A partial linear model analyzing the primary outcome in continuous ODS design (Zhou, Qin and Longnecker, 2011) <doi: 10.1111/j.1541-0420.2010.01500.x>. (3) Analyze a secondary outcome in continuous ODS design (Pan et al. 2018) <doi: 10.1002/sim.7672>. (4) An estimated likelihood method analyzing a secondary outcome in case-cohort data (Pan et al. 2017) <doi: 10.1111/biom.12838>.
This package provides a programmatic interface to the OpenM++ microsimulation platform (<https://openmpp.org>). The primary goal of this package is to wrap the OpenM++ Web Service (OMS) to provide OpenM++ users a programmatic interface for the R language.
Search and extract data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
Efficient Monte Carlo Algorithms for the price and the sensitivities of Asian and European Options under Geometric Brownian Motion.
We introduce an R function one_two_sample() which can deal with one and two (normal) samples, Ying-Ying Zhang, Yi Wei (2012) <doi:10.2991/asshm-13.2013.29>. For one normal sample x, the function reports descriptive statistics, plot, interval estimation and test of hypothesis of x. For two normal samples x and y, the function reports descriptive statistics, plot, interval estimation and test of hypothesis of x and y, respectively. It also reports interval estimation and test of hypothesis of mu1-mu2 (the difference of the means of x and y) and sigma1^2 / sigma2^2 (the ratio of the variances of x and y), tests whether x and y are from the same population, finds the correlation coefficient of x and y if x and y have the same length.
This package provides a simple R interface to the OPUS Miner algorithm (implemented in C++) for finding the top-k productive, non-redundant itemsets from transaction data. The OPUS Miner algorithm uses the OPUS search algorithm to efficiently discover the key associations in transaction data, in the form of self-sufficient itemsets, using either leverage or lift. See <http://i.giwebb.com/index.php/research/association-discovery/> for more information in relation to the OPUS Miner algorithm.
Maximum homogeneity clustering algorithm for one-dimensional data described in W. D. Fisher (1958) <doi:10.1080/01621459.1958.10501479> via dynamic programming.
The restricted optimal design method is implemented to optimally allocate a set of items that require calibration to a group of examinees. The optimization process is based on the method described in detail by Ul Hassan and Miller in their works published in (2019) <doi:10.1177/0146621618824854> and (2021) <doi:10.1016/j.csda.2021.107177>. To use the method, preliminary item characteristics must be provided as input. These characteristics can either be expert guesses or based on previous calibration with a small number of examinees. The item characteristics should be described in the form of parameters for an Item Response Theory (IRT) model. These models can include the Rasch model, the 2-parameter logistic model, the 3-parameter logistic model, or a mixture of these models. The output consists of a set of rules for each item that determine which examinees should be assigned to each item. The efficiency or gain achieved through the optimal design is quantified by comparing it to a random allocation. This comparison allows for an assessment of how much improvement or advantage is gained by using the optimal design approach. This work was supported by the Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsrådet) Grant 2019-02706.
This package provides a tool for interactive exploration of the results from omics experiments to facilitate novel discoveries from high-throughput biology. The software includes R functions for the bioinformatician to deposit study metadata and the outputs from statistical analyses (e.g. differential expression, enrichment). These results are then exported to an interactive JavaScript dashboard that can be interrogated on the user's local machine or deployed online to be explored by collaborators. The dashboard includes sortable tables, interactive plots including network visualization, and fine-grained filtering based on statistical significance.
This package performs the O2PLS data integration method for two datasets, yielding joint and data-specific parts for each dataset. The algorithm automatically switches to a memory-efficient approach to fit O2PLS to high dimensional data. It provides a rigorous and a faster alternative cross-validation method to select the number of components, as well as functions to report proportions of explained variation and to construct plots of the results. See the software article by el Bouhaddani et al (2018) <doi:10.1186/s12859-018-2371-3>, and Trygg and Wold (2003) <doi:10.1002/cem.775>. It also performs Sparse Group (Penalized) O2PLS, see Gu et al (2020) <doi:10.1186/s12859-021-03958-3> and cross-validation for the degree of sparsity.
This package provides rectangular elements that can be dragged and resized over plots in shiny apps. This may be useful in applications where users need to mark regions on the plot for further input or processing.
This package provides functions to construct confidence intervals for the Overlap Coefficient (OVL). OVL measures the similarity between two distributions through the overlapping area of their distribution functions. Given its intuitive description and ease of visual representation by the straightforward depiction of the amount of overlap between the two corresponding histograms based on samples of measurements from each one of the two distributions, the development of accurate methods for confidence interval construction can be useful for applied researchers. Implements methods based on the work of Franco-Pereira, A.M., Nakas, C.T., Reiser, B., and Pardo, M.C. (2021) <doi:10.1177/09622802211046386>.
Density, distribution function, quantile function and random generation for the Odd Log-Logistic Generalized Gamma proposed in Prataviera, F. et al (2017) <doi:10.1080/00949655.2016.1238088>.
This package provides a client that grants access to the power of the ohsome API from R. It lets you analyze the rich data source of the OpenStreetMap (OSM) history. You can retrieve the geometry of OSM data at specific points in time, and you can get aggregated statistics on the evolution of OSM elements and specify your own temporal, spatial and/or thematic filters.
An implementation of optimal weight exchange algorithm Yang(2013) <doi:10.1080/01621459.2013.806268> for three models. They are Crossover model with subject dropout, crossover model with proportional first order residual effects and interference model. You can use it to find either A-opt or D-opt approximate designs. Exact designs can be automatically rounded from approximate designs and relative efficiency is provided as well.
Designed for performing impact analysis of opinions in a digital text document (DTD). The package allows a user to assess the extent to which a theme or subject within a document impacts the overall opinion expressed in the document. The package can be applied to a wide range of opinion-based DTD, including commentaries on social media platforms (such as Facebook', Twitter and Youtube'), online products reviews, and so on. The utility of opitools was originally demonstrated in Adepeju and Jimoh (2021) <doi:10.31235/osf.io/c32qh> in the assessment of COVID-19 impacts on neighbourhood policing using Twitter data. Further examples can be found in the vignette of the package.
Identifies an optimal transformation of a surrogate marker such that the proportion of treatment effect explained can be inferred based on the transformation of the surrogate and nonparametrically estimates two model-free quantities of this proportion. Details are described in Wang et al (2020) <doi:10.1093/biomet/asz065>.