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This package provides functions for metrics and plots for model evaluation. Based on vectors of observed and predicted values. Method: Kristin Piikki, Johanna Wetterlind, Mats Soderstrom and Bo Stenberg (2021). <doi:10.1111/SUM.12694>.
This package provides an R interface for volesti C++ package. volesti computes estimations of volume of polytopes given by (i) a set of points, (ii) linear inequalities or (iii) Minkowski sum of segments (a.k.a. zonotopes). There are three algorithms for volume estimation as well as algorithms for sampling, rounding and rotating polytopes. Moreover, volesti provides algorithms for estimating copulas useful in computational finance. Methods implemented in volesti are described in A. Chalkis and V. Fisikopoulos (2022) <doi:10.32614/RJ-2021-077> and references therein.
R implementation of the vol2bird software for generating vertical profiles of birds and other biological signals in weather radar data. See Dokter et al. (2011) <doi:10.1098/rsif.2010.0116> for a paper describing the methodology.
Craft polished tables and plots in Markdown reports. Simply choose whether to treat your data as counts or metrics, and the package will automatically generate well-designed default tables and plots for you. Boiled down to the basics, with labeling features and simple interactive reports. All functions are tidyverse compatible.
Variable Penalty Dynamic Time Warping (VPdtw) for aligning chromatographic signals. With an appropriate penalty this method performs good alignment of chromatographic data without deforming the peaks (Clifford, D., Stone, G., Montoliu, I., Rezzi S., Martin F., Guy P., Bruce S., and Kochhar S.(2009) <doi:10.1021/ac802041e>; Clifford, D. and Stone, G. (2012) <doi:10.18637/jss.v047.i08>).
This package provides a variational Bayesian finite mixture model for the clustering of categorical data, and can implement variable selection and semi-supervised outcome guiding if desired. Incorporates an option to perform model averaging over multiple initialisations to reduce the effects of local optima and improve the automatic estimation of the true number of clusters. For further details, see the paper by Rao and Kirk (2024) <doi:10.48550/arXiv.2406.16227>.
This package provides a collection of tools for analyzing the field of vision. It provides a framework for development and use of innovative methods for visualization, statistical analysis, and clinical interpretation of visual-field loss and its change over time. It is intended to be a tool for collaborative research. The package is described in Marin-Franch and Swanson (2013) <doi:10.1167/13.4.10> and is part of the Open Perimetry Initiative (OPI) [Turpin, Artes, and McKendrick (2012) <doi:10.1167/12.11.22>].
An implementation of the Verhoeff algorithm for calculating check digits (Verhoeff, J. (1969) <doi:10.1002/zamm.19710510323>). Functions are provided to calculate a check digit given an input number, calculate and append a check digit to an input number, and validate that a check digit is correct given an input number.
It provides a comprehensive toolkit for calculating a suite of common vegetation indices (VIs) derived from remote sensing imagery. VIs are essential tools used to quantify vegetation characteristics, such as biomass, leaf area index (LAI) and photosynthetic activity, which are essential parameters in various ecological, agricultural, and environmental studies. Applications of this package include biomass estimation, crop monitoring, forest management, land use and land cover change analysis and climate change studies. For method details see, Deb,D.,Deb,S.,Chakraborty,D.,Singh,J.P.,Singh,A.K.,Dutta,P.and Choudhury,A.(2020)<doi:10.1080/10106049.2020.1756461>. Utilizing this R package, users can effectively extract and analyze critical information from remote sensing imagery, enhancing their comprehension of vegetation dynamics and their importance in global ecosystems. The package includes the function vegetation_indices().
Conversion of characters from unsupported Vietnamese character encodings to Unicode characters. These Vietnamese encodings (TCVN3, VISCII, VPS) are not natively supported in R and lead to printing of wrong characters and garbled text (mojibake). This package fixes that problem and provides readable output with the correct Unicode characters (with or without diacritics).
An implementation of Vasicek and Song goodness-of-fit tests. Several functions are provided to estimate differential Shannon entropy, i.e., estimate Shannon entropy of real random variables with density, and test the goodness-of-fit of some family of distributions, including uniform, Gaussian, log-normal, exponential, gamma, Weibull, Pareto, Fisher, Laplace and beta distributions; see Lequesne and Regnault (2020) <doi:10.18637/jss.v096.c01>.
Create adjacency matrices of vocalisation graphs from dataframes containing sequences of speech and silence intervals, transforming these matrices into Markov diagrams, and generating datasets for classification of these diagrams by flattening them and adding global properties (functionals) etc. Vocalisation diagrams date back to early work in psychiatry (Jaffe and Feldstein, 1970) and social psychology (Dabbs and Ruback, 1987) but have only recently been employed as a data representation method for machine learning tasks including meeting segmentation (Luz, 2012) <doi:10.1145/2328967.2328970> and classification (Luz, 2013) <doi:10.1145/2522848.2533788>.
This package provides methods to calculate the expected value of information from a decision-analytic model. This includes the expected value of perfect information (EVPI), partial perfect information (EVPPI) and sample information (EVSI), and the expected net benefit of sampling (ENBS). A range of alternative computational methods are provided under the same user interface. See Heath et al. (2024) <doi:10.1201/9781003156109>, Jackson et al. (2022) <doi:10.1146/annurev-statistics-040120-010730>.
Static and dynamic 3D plots to be used with ordination results and in diversity analysis, especially with the vegan package.
This package provides direct access to linked names for the same entity across the world's major name authority files, including national and regional variations in language, character set, and spelling. For more information go to <https://viaf.org/>.
Handling of vegetation data from different sources ( Turboveg 2.0 <https://www.synbiosys.alterra.nl/turboveg/>; the German national repository <https://www.vegetweb.de> and others. Taxonomic harmonization (given appropriate taxonomic lists, e.g. the Euro+Med list <https://eurosl.infinitenature.org>).
Estimating the disparity between two groups based on the extended model of the Peters-Belson (PB) method. Our model is the first work on the longitudinal data, and also can set a varying variable to find the complicated association between other variables and the varying variable. Our work is an extension of the Peters-Belson method which was originally published in Peters (1941)<doi:10.1080/00220671.1941.10881036> and Belson (1956)<doi:10.2307/2985420>.
An implementation of the Likelihood ratio Test (LRT) for testing that, in a (non)linear mixed effects model, the variances of a subset of the random effects are equal to zero. There is no restriction on the subset of variances that can be tested: for example, it is possible to test that all the variances are equal to zero. Note that the implemented test is asymptotic. This package should be used on model fits from packages nlme', lmer', and saemix'. Charlotte Baey and Estelle Kuhn (2019) <doi:10.18637/jss.v107.i06>.
This package provides a variety of tools to allow the quantification of videos of the lymphatic vasculature taken under an operating microscope. Lymphatic vessels that have been injected with a variety of blue dyes can be tracked throughout the video to determine their width over time. Code is optimised for efficient processing of multiple large video files. Functions to calculate physiologically relevant parameters and generate graphs from these values are also included.
An interactive document on the topic of variance analysis using rmarkdown and shiny packages. Runtime examples are provided in the package function as well as at <https://predanalyticssessions1.shinyapps.io/chisquareVarianceTest/>.
Interactive visualization for Bayesian prior and posterior distributions. This package facilitates an animated transition between prior and posterior distributions. Additionally, it splits the distribution into bars based on the provided breaks, displaying the probability for each region. If no breaks are provided, it defaults to zero.
This package provides a data.frame processor/conditioner that prepares real-world data for predictive modeling in a statistically sound manner. vtreat prepares variables so that data has fewer exceptional cases, making it easier to safely use models in production. Common problems vtreat defends against: Inf', NA', too many categorical levels, rare categorical levels, and new categorical levels (levels seen during application, but not during training). Reference: "'vtreat': a data.frame Processor for Predictive Modeling", Zumel, Mount, 2016, <DOI:10.5281/zenodo.1173313>.
The goal of the package is to equip the jmcm package (current version 0.2.1) with estimations of the covariance of estimated parameters. Two methods are provided. The first method is to use the inverse of estimated Fisher's information matrix, see M. Pourahmadi (2000) <doi:10.1093/biomet/87.2.425>, M. Maadooliat, M. Pourahmadi and J. Z. Huang (2013) <doi:10.1007/s11222-011-9284-6>, and W. Zhang, C. Leng, C. Tang (2015) <doi:10.1111/rssb.12065>. The second method is bootstrap based, see Liu, R.Y. (1988) <doi:10.1214/aos/1176351062> for reference.
This package provides a Shiny application and functions for visual exploration of hierarchical clustering with numeric datasets. Allows users to iterative set hyperparameters, select features and evaluate results through various plots and computation of evaluation criteria.