Estimate Quantiles of a Zero-Modified Normal Distribution
Estimate quantiles of a zero-modified normal distribution.
eqzmnorm(x, p = 0.5, method = "mvue", digits = 0)
x |
a numeric vector of observations, or an object resulting from a call to an
estimating function that assumes a zero-modified normal distribution
(e.g., |
p |
numeric vector of probabilities for which quantiles will be estimated.
All values of |
method |
character string specifying the method of estimating the disribution parameters.
Currently, the only possible
value is |
digits |
an integer indicating the number of decimal places to round to when printing out
the value of |
The function eqzmnorm
returns estimated quantiles as well as
estimates of the distribution parameters.
If x
is a numeric vector, eqzmnorm
returns a
list of class "estimate"
containing the estimated quantile(s) and other
information. See estimate.object
for details.
If x
is the result of calling an estimation function, eqzmnorm
returns a list whose class is the same as x
. The list
contains the same components as x
, as well as components called
quantiles
and quantile.method
.
The zero-modified normal distribution is sometimes used to model chemical concentrations for which some observations are reported as “Below Detection Limit”. See, for example USEPA (1992c, pp.27-34). In most cases, however, the zero-modified lognormal (delta) distribution will be more appropriate, since chemical concentrations are bounded below at 0 (e.g., Gilliom and Helsel, 1986; Owen and DeRouen, 1980).
Once you estimate the parameters of the zero-modified normal distribution, it is often useful to characterize the uncertainty in the estimate of the mean. This is done with a confidence interval.
One way to try to assess whether a
zero-modified lognormal (delta),
zero-modified normal, censored normal, or
censored lognormal is the best model for the data is to construct both
censored and detects-only probability plots (see qqPlotCensored
).
Steven P. Millard (EnvStats@ProbStatInfo.com)
Aitchison, J. (1955). On the Distribution of a Positive Random Variable Having a Discrete Probability Mass at the Origin. Journal of the American Statistical Association 50, 901–908.
Gilliom, R.J., and D.R. Helsel. (1986). Estimation of Distributional Parameters for Censored Trace Level Water Quality Data: 1. Estimation Techniques. Water Resources Research 22, 135–146.
Owen, W., and T. DeRouen. (1980). Estimation of the Mean for Lognormal Data Containing Zeros and Left-Censored Values, with Applications to the Measurement of Worker Exposure to Air Contaminants. Biometrics 36, 707–719.
USEPA (1992c). Statistical Analysis of Ground-Water Monitoring Data at RCRA Facilities: Addendum to Interim Final Guidance. Office of Solid Waste, Permits and State Programs Division, US Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C.
# Generate 100 observations from a zero-modified normal distribution # with mean=4, sd=2, and p.zero=0.5, then estimate the parameters and # the 80th and 90th percentiles. # (Note: the call to set.seed simply allows you to reproduce this example.) set.seed(250) dat <- rzmnorm(100, mean = 4, sd = 2, p.zero = 0.5) eqzmnorm(dat, p = c(0.8, 0.9)) #Results of Distribution Parameter Estimation #-------------------------------------------- # #Assumed Distribution: Zero-Modified Normal # #Estimated Parameter(s): mean = 4.037732 # sd = 1.917004 # p.zero = 0.450000 # mean.zmnorm = 2.220753 # sd.zmnorm = 2.465829 # #Estimation Method: mvue # #Estimated Quantile(s): 80'th %ile = 4.706298 # 90'th %ile = 5.779250 # #Quantile Estimation Method: Quantile(s) Based on # mvue Estimators # #Data: dat # #Sample Size: 100 #---------- # Compare the estimated quantiles with the true quantiles qzmnorm(mean = 4, sd = 2, p.zero = 0.5, p = c(0.8, 0.9)) #[1] 4.506694 5.683242 #---------- # Clean up rm(dat)
Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.