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Fits a model to adjust and consider additional variations in three dimensions of age groups, time, and space on residuals excluded from a prediction model that have residual such as: linear regression, mixed model and so on. Details are given in Foreman et al. (2015) <doi:10.1186/1478-7954-10-1>.
This package provides an interface to the algorithm selection benchmark library at <https://www.coseal.net/aslib/> and the LLAMA package (<https://cran.r-project.org/package=llama>) for building algorithm selection models; see Bischl et al. (2016) <doi:10.1016/j.artint.2016.04.003>.
Package to query the Twitter Academic Research Product Track, providing access to full-archive search and other v2 API endpoints. Functions are written with academic research in mind. They provide flexibility in how the user wishes to store collected data, and encourage regular storage of data to mitigate loss when collecting large volumes of tweets. They also provide workarounds to manage and reshape the format in which data is provided on the client side.
Allows access to the data found in the species list featured in the renowned List of the Birds of Peru Plenge, M. A. (2023) <https://sites.google.com/site/boletinunop/checklist>. This publication stands as one of Peru's most comprehensive reviews of bird diversity. The dataset incorporates detailed species accounts and has been meticulously structured for effortless utilization within the R environment.
This package provides an algebra over probability distributions enabling composition, sampling, and automatic simplification to closed forms. Supports normal, exponential, multivariate normal, and empirical distributions with operations like addition and subtraction that automatically simplify when mathematical identities apply (e.g., the sum of independent normal distributions is normal). Uses S3 classes for distributions and R6 for support objects.
This package provides a (mildly) opinionated set of functions to help assess medication adherence for researchers working with medication claims data. Medication adherence analyses have several complex steps that are often convoluted and can be time-intensive. The focus is to create a set of functions using "tidy principles" geared towards transparency, speed, and flexibility while working with adherence metrics. All functions perform exactly one task with an intuitive name so that a researcher can handle details (often achieved with vectorized solutions) while we handle non-vectorized tasks common to most adherence calculations such as adjusting fill dates and determining episodes of care. The methodologies in referenced in this package come from Canfield SL, et al (2019) "Navigating the Wild West of Medication Adherence Reporting in Specialty Pharmacy" <doi:10.18553/jmcp.2019.25.10.1073>.
Implementation of the augmented Simulation-Extrapolation (SIMEX) algorithm proposed by Yi et al. (2015) <doi:10.1080/01621459.2014.922777> for analyzing the data with mixed measurement error and misclassification. The main function provides a similar summary output as that of glm() function. Both parametric and empirical SIMEX are considered in the package.
Scraping content from archived web pages stored in the Internet Archive (<https://archive.org>) using a systematic workflow. Get an overview of the mementos available from the respective homepage, retrieve the Urls and links of the page and finally scrape the content. The final output is stored in tibbles, which can be then easily used for further analysis.
This package provides a set of functions for interacting with the DigitalOcean API <https://www.digitalocean.com/>, including creating images, destroying them, rebooting, getting details on regions, and available images.
Visualisation of multidimensional data through different Andrews curves: Andrews, D. F. (1972) Plots of High-Dimensional Data. Biometrics, 28(1), 125-136. <doi:10.2307/2528964>.
This package provides a function for estimating factor models. Give factor-adjusted statistics, factor-adjusted mean estimation (one-sample test) or factor-adjusted mean difference estimation (two-sample test).
This package provides tools to compute the center of gravity and moment of inertia tensor of any flying bird. The tools function by modeling a bird as a composite structure of simple geometric objects. This requires detailed morphological measurements of bird specimens although those obtained for the associated paper have been included in the package for use. Refer to the vignettes and supplementary material for detailed information on the package function.
This package contains functions to implement automated covariate selection using methods described in the high-dimensional propensity score (HDPS) algorithm by Schneeweiss et.al. Covariate adjustment in real-world-observational-data (RWD) is important for for estimating adjusted outcomes and this can be done by using methods such as, but not limited to, propensity score matching, propensity score weighting and regression analysis. While these methods strive to statistically adjust for confounding, the major challenge is in selecting the potential covariates that can bias the outcomes comparison estimates in observational RWD (Real-World-Data). This is where the utility of automated covariate selection comes in. The functions in this package help to implement the three major steps of automated covariate selection as described by Schneeweiss et. al elsewhere. These three functions, in order of the steps required to execute automated covariate selection are, get_candidate_covariates(), get_recurrence_covariates() and get_prioritised_covariates(). In addition to these functions, a sample real-world-data from publicly available de-identified medical claims data is also available for running examples and also for further exploration. The original article where the algorithm is described by Schneeweiss et.al. (2009) <doi:10.1097/EDE.0b013e3181a663cc> .
Developed for use by those tasked with the routine detection, characterisation and quantification of discrete changes in air quality time-series, such as identifying the impacts of air quality policy interventions. The main functions use signal isolation then break-point/segment (BP/S) methods based on strucchange and segmented methods to detect and quantify change events (Ropkins & Tate, 2021, <doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142374>).
Data sets are referred to in the text "Applied Survival Analysis Using R" by Dirk F. Moore, Springer, 2016, ISBN: 978-3-319-31243-9, <DOI:10.1007/978-3-319-31245-3>.
An unsupervised fully-automated pipeline for transcriptome analysis or a supervised option to identify characteristic genes from predefined subclasses. We rely on the pamr <http://www.bioconductor.org/packages//2.7/bioc/html/pamr.html> clustering algorithm to cluster the Data and then draw a heatmap of the clusters with the most significant genes and the least significant genes according to the pamr algorithm. This way we get easy to grasp heatmaps that show us for each cluster which are the clusters most defining genes.
This package provides a systematic framework for neural networkâ based model selection and forecasting using single hidden layer feed-forward networks. It evaluates all possible combinations of predictor variables and hidden layer configurations, selecting the optimal model based on predictive accuracy criteria such as root mean squared error (RMSE) and mean absolute percentage error (MAPE). Predictors are automatically standardized, and model performance is assessed using out-of-sample validation. The package is designed for empirical modelling and forecasting in economics, agriculture, trade, climate, and related applied research domains where nonlinear relationships and robust predictive performance are of primary interest.
This package provides a software that implements a method for partitioning genetic trends to quantify the sources of genetic gain in breeding programmes. The partitioning method is described in Garcia-Cortes et al. (2008) <doi:10.1017/S175173110800205X>. The package includes the main function AlphaPart for partitioning breeding values and auxiliary functions for manipulating data and summarizing, visualizing, and saving results.
Colour palettes and a ggplot2 theme to follow the UK Government Analysis Function best practice guidance for producing data visualisations, available at <https://analysisfunction.civilservice.gov.uk/policy-store/data-visualisation-charts/>. Includes continuous and discrete colour and fill scales, as well as a ggplot2 theme.
This package provides statistical methods for analyzing experimental evaluation of the causal impacts of algorithmic recommendations on human decisions developed by Imai, Jiang, Greiner, Halen, and Shin (2023) <doi:10.1093/jrsssa/qnad010> and Ben-Michael, Greiner, Huang, Imai, Jiang, and Shin (2024) <doi:10.48550/arXiv.2403.12108>. The data used for this paper, and made available here, are interim, based on only half of the observations in the study and (for those observations) only half of the study follow-up period. We use them only to illustrate methods, not to draw substantive conclusions.
Utility functions to download and process data produced by the ALARM Project, including 2020 redistricting files Kenny and McCartan (2021) <https://alarm-redist.org/posts/2021-08-10-census-2020/> and the 50-State Redistricting Simulations of McCartan, Kenny, Simko, Garcia, Wang, Wu, Kuriwaki, and Imai (2022) <doi:10.7910/DVN/SLCD3E>. The package extends the data introduced in McCartan, Kenny, Simko, Garcia, Wang, Wu, Kuriwaki, and Imai (2022) <doi:10.1038/s41597-022-01808-2> to also include states with only a single district. The package also includes the Japanese 2022 redistricting files from the 47-Prefecture Redistricting Simulations of Miyazaki, Yamada, Yatsuhashi, and Imai (2022) <doi:10.7910/DVN/Z9UKSH>.
This package implements the differential equations associated to different versions of Allometric Trophic Models (ATN) to estimate the temporal dynamics of species biomasses in food webs. It offers several features to generate synthetic food webs and to parametrise models as well as a wrapper to the ODE solver deSolve.
This package provides a color palette generator inspired by American politics, with colors ranging from blue on the left to gray in the middle and red on the right. A variety of palettes allow for a range of applications from brief discrete scales (e.g., three colors for Democrats, Independents, and Republicans) to continuous interpolated arrays including dozens of shades graded from blue (left) to red (right). This package greatly benefitted from building on the source code (with permission) from Ram and Wickham (2015).
Animate Shiny and R Markdown content when it comes into view using animate-css effects thanks to jQuery AniView'.