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The EconDataverse is a universe of open-source packages to work seamlessly with economic data. This package is designed to make it easy to install and load multiple EconDataverse packages in a single step. Learn more about the EconDataverse at <https://www.econdataverse.org>.
This extension of the pattern-oriented modeling framework of the poems package provides a collection of modules and functions customized for modeling disease transmission on a population scale in a spatiotemporally explicit manner. This includes seasonal time steps, dispersal functions that track disease state of dispersers, results objects that store disease states, and a population simulator that includes disease dynamics.
This package contains the example EEG data used in the package eegkit. Also contains code for easily creating larger EEG datasets from the EEG Database on the UCI Machine Learning Repository.
This package implements a Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithm to approximate exact conditional inference for logistic regression models. Exact conditional inference is based on the distribution of the sufficient statistics for the parameters of interest given the sufficient statistics for the remaining nuisance parameters. Using model formula notation, users specify a logistic model and model terms of interest for exact inference. See Zamar et al. (2007) <doi:10.18637/jss.v021.i03> for more details.
The goal of this package is to provide an easy to use, fast and scalable exhaustive search framework. Exhaustive feature selections typically require a very large number of models to be fitted and evaluated. Execution speed and memory management are crucial factors here. This package provides solutions for both. Execution speed is optimized by using a multi-threaded C++ backend, and memory issues are solved by by only storing the best results during execution and thus keeping memory usage constant.
Descarga, lee y analiza bases de la Encuesta Nacional de Hogares (ENAHO) y otras encuestas del Instituto Nacional de Estadà stica e Informática (INEI) del Perú. (Downloads, reads, and combines data from the Peruvian Home National Survey and other surveys from the National Institute for Statistics (INEI).).
Package computes and displays tables with support for SPSS'-style labels, multiple and nested banners, weights, multiple-response variables and significance testing. There are facilities for nice output of tables in knitr', Shiny', *.xlsx files, R and Jupyter notebooks. Methods for labelled variables add value labels support to base R functions and to some functions from other packages. Additionally, the package brings popular data transformation functions from SPSS Statistics and Excel': RECODE', COUNT', COUNTIF', VLOOKUP and etc. These functions are very useful for data processing in marketing research surveys. Package intended to help people to move data processing from Excel and SPSS to R.
Pacote para análise de delineamentos experimentais (DIC, DBC e DQL), experimentos em esquema fatorial duplo (em DIC e DBC), experimentos em parcelas subdivididas (em DIC e DBC), experimentos em esquema fatorial duplo com um tratamento adicional (em DIC e DBC), experimentos em fatorial triplo (em DIC e DBC) e experimentos em esquema fatorial triplo com um tratamento adicional (em DIC e DBC), fazendo analise de variancia e comparacao de multiplas medias (para tratamentos qualitativos), ou ajustando modelos de regressao ate a terceira potencia (para tratamentos quantitativos); analise de residuos (Ferreira, Cavalcanti and Nogueira, 2014) <doi:10.4236/am.2014.519280>.
This package provides a consistent set of functions for enriching and analyzing sovereign-level economic data. Economists, data scientists, and financial professionals can use the package to add standardized identifiers, demographic and macroeconomic indicators, and derived metrics such as gross domestic product per capita or government expenditure shares.
This package provides various statistical methods for designing and analyzing randomized experiments. One functionality of the package is the implementation of randomized-block and matched-pair designs based on possibly multivariate pre-treatment covariates. The package also provides the tools to analyze various randomized experiments including cluster randomized experiments, two-stage randomized experiments, randomized experiments with noncompliance, and randomized experiments with missing data.
Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBV) are state variables with dimensions on time, space, and biological organization that document biodiversity change. Freely available ecosystem remote sensing products (ERSP) are downloaded and integrated with data for national or regional domains to derive indicators for EBV in the class ecosystem structure (Pereira et al., 2013) <doi:10.1126/science.1229931>, including horizontal ecosystem extents, fragmentation, and information-theory indices. To process ERSP, users must provide a polygon or geographic administrative data map. Downloadable ERSP include Global Surface Water (Peckel et al., 2016) <doi:10.1038/nature20584>, Forest Change (Hansen et al., 2013) <doi:10.1126/science.1244693>, and Continuous Tree Cover data (Sexton et al., 2013) <doi:10.1080/17538947.2013.786146>.
We introduced a novel ensemble-based explainable machine learning model using Model Confidence Set (MCS) and two stage Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS) algorithm. The model combined the predictive capabilities of different machine-learning models and integrates the interpretability of explainability methods. To develop the proposed algorithm, a two-stage Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS) framework was employed. The package has been developed using the algorithm of Paul et al. (2023) <doi:10.1007/s40009-023-01218-x> and Yeasin and Paul (2024) <doi:10.1007/s11227-023-05542-3>.
This package provides a set of functions for computing expected permutation matrices given a matrix of likelihoods for each individual assignment. It has been written to accompany the forthcoming paper Computing expectations and marginal likelihoods for permutations'. Publication details will be updated as soon as they are finalized.
This package contains a collection of examples of evidence factors in observational studies from the book Replication and Evidence Factors in Observational Studies by Paul R. Rosenbaum (2021) <doi:10.1201/9781003039648>.
Extends the ergm.multi packages from the Statnet suite to fit (temporal) exponential-family random graph models for signed networks. The framework models positive and negative ties as interdependent, which allows estimation and testing of structural balance theory. The package also includes options for descriptive summaries, visualization, and simulation of signed networks. See Krivitsky, Koehly, and Marcum (2020) <doi:10.1007/s11336-020-09720-7> and Fritz, C., Mehrl, M., Thurner, P. W., & Kauermann, G. (2025) <doi:10.1017/pan.2024.21>.
Package implements the EDNE-test for equivalence according to Hoffelder et al. (2015) <DOI:10.1080/10543406.2014.920344>. "EDNE" abbreviates "Euclidean Distance between the Non-standardized Expected values". The EDNE-test for equivalence is a multivariate two-sample equivalence test. Distance measure of the test is the Euclidean distance. The test is an asymptotically valid test for the family of distributions fulfilling the assumptions of the multivariate central limit theorem (see Hoffelder et al.,2015). The function EDNE.EQ() implements the EDNE-test for equivalence according to Hoffelder et al. (2015). The function EDNE.EQ.dissolution.profiles() implements a variant of the EDNE-test for equivalence analyses of dissolution profiles (see Suarez-Sharp et al.,2020 <DOI:10.1208/s12248-020-00458-9>). EDNE.EQ.dissolution.profiles() checks whether the quadratic mean of the differences of the expected values of both dissolution profile populations is statistically significantly smaller than 10 [\% of label claim]. The current regulatory standard approach for equivalence analyses of dissolution profiles is the similarity factor f2. The statistical hypotheses underlying EDNE.EQ.dissolution.profiles() coincide with the hypotheses for f2 (see Hoffelder et al.,2015, Suarez-Sharp et al., 2020).
The EvoPER, Evolutionary Parameter Estimation for Individual-based Models is an extensible package providing optimization driven parameter estimation methods using metaheuristics and evolutionary computation techniques (Particle Swarm Optimization, Simulated Annealing, Ant Colony Optimization for continuous domains, Tabu Search, Evolutionary Strategies, ...) which could be more efficient and require, in some cases, fewer model evaluations than alternatives relying on experimental design. Currently there are built in support for models developed with Repast Simphony Agent-Based framework (<https://repast.github.io/>) and with NetLogo (<https://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/>) which are the most used frameworks for Agent-based modeling.
This package contains all the datasets that were used in Social Science Experiments: A Hands-On Introduction and in its R Companion. Relevant materials can be found at <https://osf.io/b78je>.
Convenience functions for implementing extended two-way fixed effect regressions a la Wooldridge (2021, 2023) <doi:10.2139/ssrn.3906345>, <doi:10.1093/ectj/utad016>.
This package implements the Edwards (1997) <doi:10.1002/j.1551-8833.1997.tb08229.x> Langmuir-based semi-empirical coagulation model, which predicts the concentration of organic carbon remaining in water after treatment with an Al- or Fe-based coagulant. Data and methods are provided to optimise empirical coefficients.
High-performance implementation of various effect plots useful for regression and probabilistic classification tasks. The package includes partial dependence plots (Friedman, 2021, <doi:10.1214/aos/1013203451>), accumulated local effect plots and M-plots (both from Apley and Zhu, 2016, <doi:10.1111/rssb.12377>), as well as plots that describe the statistical associations between model response and features. It supports visualizations with either ggplot2 or plotly', and is compatible with most models, including Tidymodels', models wrapped in DALEX explainers, or models with case weights.
This includes a dataset on the outcomes of the USA presidential elections since 1920, and various predictors, as used in <https://www.vanderwalresearch.com/blog/15-elections>.
This package provides functions for the Bayesian analysis of extreme value models, using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods. Allows the construction of both uninformative and informed prior distributions for common statistical models applied to extreme event data, including the generalized extreme value distribution.
Enables simulation of water piping networks using EPANET'. The package provides functions from the EPANET programmer's toolkit as R functions so that basic or customized simulations can be carried out from R. The package uses EPANET version 2.2 from Open Water Analytics <https://github.com/OpenWaterAnalytics/EPANET/releases/tag/v2.2>.