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Compositional data consisting of three-parts can be color mapped with a ternary color scale. Such a scale is provided by the tricolore packages with options for discrete and continuous colors, mean-centering and scaling. See Jonas Schöley (2021) "The centered ternary balance scheme. A technique to visualize surfaces of unbalanced three-part compositions" <doi:10.4054/DemRes.2021.44.19>, Jonas Schöley, Frans Willekens (2017) "Visualizing compositional data on the Lexis surface" <doi:10.4054/DemRes.2017.36.21>, and Ilya Kashnitsky, Jonas Schöley (2018) "Regional population structures at a glance" <doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(18)31194-2>.
Implement the Tariff algorithm for coding cause-of-death from verbal autopsies. The Tariff method was originally proposed in James et al (2011) <DOI:10.1186/1478-7954-9-31> and later refined as Tariff 2.0 in Serina, et al. (2015) <DOI:10.1186/s12916-015-0527-9>. Note that this package was not developed by authors affiliated with the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation and thus unintentional discrepancies may exist between the this implementation and the implementation available from IHME.
This package provides classes for storing and manipulating taxonomic data. Most of the classes can be treated like base R vectors (e.g. can be used in tables as columns and can be named). Vectorized classes can store taxon names and authorities, taxon IDs from databases, taxon ranks, and other types of information. More complex classes are provided to store taxonomic trees and user-defined data associated with them.
This package provides a common way of validating a biological assay for is through a procedure, where m levels of an analyte are measured with n replicates at each level, and if all m estimates of the coefficient of variation (CV) are less than some prespecified level, then the assay is declared validated for precision within the range of the m analyte levels. Two limitations of this procedure are: there is no clear statistical statement of precision upon passing, and it is unclear how to modify the procedure for assays with constant standard deviation. We provide tools to convert such a procedure into a set of m hypothesis tests. This reframing motivates the m:n:q procedure, which upon completion delivers a 100q% upper confidence limit on the CV. Additionally, for a post-validation assay output of y, the method gives an ``effective standard deviation interval of log(y) plus or minus r, which is a 68% confidence interval on log(mu), where mu is the expected value of the assay output for that sample. Further, the m:n:q procedure can be straightforwardly applied to constant standard deviation assays. We illustrate these tools by applying them to a growth inhibition assay. This is an implementation of the methods described in Fay, Sachs, and Miura (2018) <doi:10.1002/sim.7528>.
The TEQR package contains software to calculate the operating characteristics for the TEQR and the ACT designs.The TEQR (toxicity equivalence range) design is a toxicity based cumulative cohort design with added safety rules. The ACT (Activity constrained for toxicity) design is also a cumulative cohort design with additional safety rules. The unique feature of this design is that dose is escalated based on lack of activity rather than on lack of toxicity and is de-escalated only if an unacceptable level of toxicity is experienced.
This package provides a collection of commonly used tools for animal movement and other tracking data. Variously distance, angle, bearing, distance-to, bearing-to and speed are provided for geographic data that can be used directly or within tidyverse syntax. Distances and bearings are calculated using modern geodesic methods as provided by Charles F. F. Karney (2013) <doi:10.1007/s00190-012-0578-z> via the geodist and geosphere packages.
This package provides a fast, interactive cross-platform, and easy to share WebGL'-based 3D brain viewer that visualizes FreeSurfer and/or AFNI/SUMA surfaces. The viewer widget can be either standalone or embedded into R-shiny applications. The standalone version only require a web browser with WebGL2 support (for example, Chrome', Firefox', Safari'), and can be inserted into any websites. The R-shiny support allows the 3D viewer to be dynamically generated from reactive user inputs. Please check the publication by Wang, Magnotti, Zhang, and Beauchamp (2023, <doi:10.1523/ENEURO.0328-23.2023>) for electrode localization. This viewer has been fully adopted by RAVE <https://openwetware.org/wiki/RAVE>, an interactive toolbox to analyze iEEG data by Magnotti, Wang, and Beauchamp (2020, <doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117341>). Please check citation("threeBrain") for details.
The TWN-list (Taxa Waterbeheer Nederland) is the Dutch standard for naming taxons in Dutch Watermanagement. This package makes it easier to use the TWN-list for ecological analyses. It consists of two parts. First it makes the TWN-list itself available in R. Second, it has a few functions that make it easy to perform some basic and often recurring tasks for checking and consulting taxonomic data from the TWN-list.
This contains functions that can be used to estimate the time-dependent precision-recall curve (PRC) and the corresponding area under the PRC for right-censored survival data. It also compute time-dependent ROC curve and its corresponding area under the ROC curve (AUC). See Beyene, Chen and Kifle (2024) <doi:10.1002/bimj.202300135>.
Allow to compute and visualise convective parameters commonly used in the operational prediction of severe convective storms. Core algorithm is based on a highly optimized C++ code linked into R via Rcpp'. Highly efficient engine allows to derive thermodynamic and kinematic parameters from large numerical datasets such as reanalyses or operational Numerical Weather Prediction models in a reasonable amount of time. Package has been developed since 2017 by research meteorologists specializing in severe thunderstorms. The most relevant methods used in the package based on the following publications Stipanuk (1973) <https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/AD0769739.pdf>, McCann et al. (1994) <doi:10.1175/1520-0434(1994)009%3C0532:WNIFFM%3E2.0.CO;2>, Bunkers et al. (2000) <doi:10.1175/1520-0434(2000)015%3C0061:PSMUAN%3E2.0.CO;2>, Corfidi et al. (2003) <doi:10.1175/1520-0434(2003)018%3C0997:CPAMPF%3E2.0.CO;2>, Showalter (1953) <doi:10.1175/1520-0477-34.6.250>, Coffer et al. (2019) <doi:10.1175/WAF-D-19-0115.1>, Gropp and Davenport (2019) <doi:10.1175/WAF-D-17-0150.1>, Czernecki et al. (2019) <doi:10.1016/j.atmosres.2019.05.010>, Taszarek et al. (2020) <doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-20-0346.1>, Sherburn and Parker (2014) <doi:10.1175/WAF-D-13-00041.1>, Romanic et al. (2022) <doi:10.1016/j.wace.2022.100474>.
The LSTM (Long Short-Term Memory) model is a Recurrent Neural Network (RNN) based architecture that is widely used for time series forecasting. Min-Max transformation has been used for data preparation. Here, we have used one LSTM layer as a simple LSTM model and a Dense layer is used as the output layer. Then, compile the model using the loss function, optimizer and metrics. This package is based on Keras and TensorFlow modules and the algorithm of Paul and Garai (2021) <doi:10.1007/s00500-021-06087-4>.
With the objective of including data from RSS feeds into your analysis, tidyRSS parses RSS, Atom and JSON feeds and returns a tidy data frame.
This package provides a set of tools designed to perform descriptive data analysis on assets, manage asset portfolios and capital allocation, and download, organize, and maintain data from the "Tehran Stock Exchange" and "NOBITEX" platforms.
This package provides the means to convert multiqc_data.json files, produced by the wonderful MultiQC tool, into tidy data frames for downstream analysis in R. This analysis might involve cohort analysis, quality control visualisation, change-point detection, statistical process control, clustering, or any other type of quality analysis.
Fit a threshold regression model for Interval Censored Data based on the first-hitting-time of a boundary by the sample path of a Wiener diffusion process. The threshold regression methodology is well suited to applications involving survival and time-to-event data.
Simple definition of time intervals for the current, previous, and next week, month, quarter and year.
This package provides functions for implementing the targeted gold standard (GS) testing. You provide the true disease or treatment failure status and the risk score, tell TGST the availability of GS tests and which method to use, and it returns the optimal tripartite rules. Please refer to Liu et al. (2013) <doi:10.1080/01621459.2013.810149> for more details.
R implementation of TFactS to predict which are the transcription factors (TFs), regulated in a biological condition based on lists of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) obtained from transcriptome experiments. This package is based on the TFactS concept by Essaghir et al. (2010) <doi:10.1093/nar/gkq149> and expands it. It allows users to perform TFactS'-like enrichment approach. The package can import and use the original catalogue file from the TFactS as well as users defined catalogues of interest that are not supported by TFactS (e.g., Arabidopsis).
To visualize the gene structure with multiple isoforms better, I developed this package to draw different transcript structures easily.
This package provides a tool to create and style HTML tables with CSS. These can be exported and used in any application that accepts HTML (e.g. shiny', rmarkdown', PowerPoint'). It also provides functions to create CSS files (which also work with shiny).
Calculation of string distance following the tidy data principles. Built on top of the stringdist package.
Implementation of target-controlled infusion algorithms for compartmental pharmacokinetic and pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic models. Jacobs (1990) <doi:10.1109/10.43622>; Marsh et al. (1991) <doi:10.1093/bja/67.1.41>; Shafer and Gregg (1993) <doi:10.1007/BF01070999>; Schnider et al. (1998) <doi:10.1097/00000542-199805000-00006>; Abuhelwa, Foster, and Upton (2015) <doi:10.1016/j.vascn.2015.03.004>; Eleveld et al. (2018) <doi:10.1016/j.bja.2018.01.018>.
Access Google Trends information. This package provides a tidy wrapper to the gtrendsR package. Use four spaces when indenting paragraphs within the Description.
This package provides a collection of functions to plot acid/base titration curves (pH vs. volume of titrant), complexation titration curves (pMetal vs. volume of EDTA), redox titration curves (potential vs.volume of titrant), and precipitation titration curves (either pAnalyte or pTitrant vs. volume of titrant). Options include the titration of mixtures, the ability to overlay two or more titration curves, and the ability to show equivalence points.