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panel.bpplot

Box-Percentile Panel Function for Trellis


Description

For all their good points, box plots have a high ink/information ratio in that they mainly display 3 quartiles. Many practitioners have found that the "outer values" are difficult to explain to non-statisticians and many feel that the notion of "outliers" is too dependent on (false) expectations that data distributions should be Gaussian.

panel.bpplot is a panel function for use with trellis, especially for bwplot. It draws box plots (without the whiskers) with any number of user-specified "corners" (corresponding to different quantiles), but it also draws box-percentile plots similar to those drawn by Jeffrey Banfield's (umsfjban@bill.oscs.montana.edu) bpplot function. To quote from Banfield, "box-percentile plots supply more information about the univariate distributions. At any height the width of the irregular 'box' is proportional to the percentile of that height, up to the 50th percentile, and above the 50th percentile the width is proportional to 100 minus the percentile. Thus, the width at any given height is proportional to the percent of observations that are more extreme in that direction. As in boxplots, the median, 25th and 75th percentiles are marked with line segments across the box."

panel.bpplot can also be used with base graphics to add extended box plots to an existing plot, by specifying nogrid=TRUE, height=....

panel.bpplot is a generalization of bpplot and panel.bwplot in that it works with trellis (making the plots horizontal so that category labels are more visable), it allows the user to specify the quantiles to connect and those for which to draw reference lines, and it displays means (by default using dots).

bpplt draws horizontal box-percentile plot much like those drawn by panel.bpplot but taking as the starting point a matrix containing quantiles summarizing the data. bpplt is primarily intended to be used internally by plot.summary.formula.reverse or plot.summaryM but when used with no arguments has a general purpose: to draw an annotated example box-percentile plot with the default quantiles used and with the mean drawn with a solid dot. This schematic plot is rendered nicely in postscript with an image height of 3.5 inches.

bppltp is like bpplt but for plotly graphics, and it does not draw an annotated extended box plot example.

bpplotM uses the lattice bwplot function to depict multiple numeric continuous variables with varying scales in a single lattice graph, after reshaping the dataset into a tall and thin format.

Usage

panel.bpplot(x, y, box.ratio=1, means=TRUE, qref=c(.5,.25,.75),
             probs=c(.05,.125,.25,.375), nout=0,
             nloc=c('right lower', 'right', 'left', 'none'), cex.n=.7,
             datadensity=FALSE, scat1d.opts=NULL,
             violin=FALSE, violin.opts=NULL,
             font=box.dot$font, pch=box.dot$pch, 
             cex.means =box.dot$cex,  col=box.dot$col,
             nogrid=NULL, height=NULL, ...)

# E.g. bwplot(formula, panel=panel.bpplot, panel.bpplot.parameters)

bpplt(stats, xlim, xlab='', box.ratio = 1, means=TRUE,
      qref=c(.5,.25,.75), qomit=c(.025,.975),
      pch=16, cex.labels=par('cex'), cex.points=if(prototype)1 else 0.5,
      grid=FALSE)

bppltp(p=plotly::plot_ly(),
       stats, xlim, xlab='', box.ratio = 1, means=TRUE,
       qref=c(.5,.25,.75), qomit=c(.025,.975),
       teststat=NULL, showlegend=TRUE)

bpplotM(formula=NULL, groups=NULL, data=NULL, subset=NULL, na.action=NULL,
        qlim=0.01, xlim=NULL,
        nloc=c('right lower','right','left','none'),
        vnames=c('labels', 'names'), cex.n=.7, cex.strip=1,
        outerlabels=TRUE, ...)

Arguments

x

continuous variable whose distribution is to be examined

y

grouping variable

box.ratio

see panel.bwplot

means

set to FALSE to suppress drawing a character at the mean value

qref

vector of quantiles for which to draw reference lines. These do not need to be included in probs.

probs

vector of quantiles to display in the box plot. These should all be less than 0.5; the mirror-image quantiles are added automatically. By default, probs is set to c(.05,.125,.25,.375) so that intervals contain 0.9, 0.75, 0.5, and 0.25 of the data. To draw all 99 percentiles, i.e., to draw a box-percentile plot, set probs=seq(.01,.49,by=.01). To make a more traditional box plot, use probs=.25.

nout

tells the function to use scat1d to draw tick marks showing the nout smallest and nout largest values if nout >= 1, or to show all values less than the nout quantile or greater than the 1-nout quantile if 0 < nout <= 0.5. If nout is a whole number, only the first n/2 observations are shown on either side of the median, where n is the total number of observations.

nloc

location to plot number of non-NA observations next to each box. Specify nloc='none' to suppress. For panel.bpplot, the default nloc is 'none' if nogrid=TRUE.

cex.n

character size for nloc

datadensity

set to TRUE to invoke scat1d to draw a data density (one-dimensional scatter diagram or rug plot) inside each box plot.

scat1d.opts

a list containing named arguments (without abbreviations) to pass to scat1d when datadensity=TRUE or nout > 0

violin

set to TRUE to invoke panel.violin in addition to drawing box-percentile plots

violin.opts

a list of options to pass to panel.violin

cex.means

character size for dots representing means

font,pch,col

see panel.bwplot

nogrid

set to TRUE to use in base graphics

height

if nogrid=TRUE, specifies the height of the box in user y units

...

arguments passed to points or panel.bpplot or bwplot

stats,xlim,xlab,qomit,cex.labels,cex.points,grid

undocumented arguments to bpplt. For bpplotM, xlim is a list with elements named as the x-axis variables, to override the qlim calculations with user-specified x-axis limits for selected variables. Example: xlim=list(age=c(20,60)).

p

an already-started plotly object

teststat

an html expression containing a test statistic

showlegend

set to TRUE to have plotly include a legend. Not recommended when plotting more than one variable.

formula

a formula with continuous numeric analysis variables on the left hand side and stratification variables on the right. The first variable on the right is the one that will vary the fastest, forming the y-axis. formula may be omitted, in which case all numeric variables with more than 5 unique values in data will be analyzed. Or formula may be a vector of variable names in data to analyze. In the latter two cases (and only those cases), groups must be given, representing a character vector with names of stratification variables.

groups

see above

data

an optional data frame

subset

an optional subsetting expression or logical vector

na.action

specifies a function to possibly subset the data according to NAs (default is no such subsetting).

qlim

the outer quantiles to use for scaling each panel in bpplotM

vnames

default is to use variable label attributes when they exist, or use variable names otherwise. Specify vnames='names' to always use variable names for panel labels in bpplotM

cex.strip

character size for panel strip labels

outerlabels

if TRUE, pass the lattice graphics through the latticeExtra package's useOuterStrips function if there are two conditioning (paneling) variables, to put panel labels in outer margins.

Author(s)

Frank Harrell
Department of Biostatistics
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
fh@fharrell.com

References

Esty WW, Banfield J: The box-percentile plot. J Statistical Software 8 No. 17, 2003.

See Also

Examples

set.seed(13)
x <- rnorm(1000)
g <- sample(1:6, 1000, replace=TRUE)
x[g==1][1:20] <- rnorm(20)+3   # contaminate 20 x's for group 1


# default trellis box plot
require(lattice)
bwplot(g ~ x)


# box-percentile plot with data density (rug plot)
bwplot(g ~ x, panel=panel.bpplot, probs=seq(.01,.49,by=.01), datadensity=TRUE)
# add ,scat1d.opts=list(tfrac=1) to make all tick marks the same size
# when a group has > 125 observations


# small dot for means, show only .05,.125,.25,.375,.625,.75,.875,.95 quantiles
bwplot(g ~ x, panel=panel.bpplot, cex.means=.3)


# suppress means and reference lines for lower and upper quartiles
bwplot(g ~ x, panel=panel.bpplot, probs=c(.025,.1,.25), means=FALSE, qref=FALSE)


# continuous plot up until quartiles ("Tootsie Roll plot")
bwplot(g ~ x, panel=panel.bpplot, probs=seq(.01,.25,by=.01))


# start at quartiles then make it continuous ("coffin plot")
bwplot(g ~ x, panel=panel.bpplot, probs=seq(.25,.49,by=.01))


# same as previous but add a spike to give 0.95 interval
bwplot(g ~ x, panel=panel.bpplot, probs=c(.025,seq(.25,.49,by=.01)))


# decile plot with reference lines at outer quintiles and median
bwplot(g ~ x, panel=panel.bpplot, probs=c(.1,.2,.3,.4), qref=c(.5,.2,.8))


# default plot with tick marks showing all observations outside the outer
# box (.05 and .95 quantiles), with very small ticks
bwplot(g ~ x, panel=panel.bpplot, nout=.05, scat1d.opts=list(frac=.01))


# show 5 smallest and 5 largest observations
bwplot(g ~ x, panel=panel.bpplot, nout=5)


# Use a scat1d option (preserve=TRUE) to ensure that the right peak extends 
# to the same position as the extreme scat1d
bwplot(~x , panel=panel.bpplot, probs=seq(.00,.5,by=.001), 
       datadensity=TRUE, scat1d.opt=list(preserve=TRUE))

# Add an extended box plot to an existing base graphics plot
plot(x, 1:length(x))
panel.bpplot(x, 1070, nogrid=TRUE, pch=19, height=15, cex.means=.5)

# Draw a prototype showing how to interpret the plots
bpplt()

# Example for bpplotM
set.seed(1)
n <- 800
d <- data.frame(treatment=sample(c('a','b'), n, TRUE),
                sex=sample(c('female','male'), n, TRUE),
                age=rnorm(n, 40, 10),
                bp =rnorm(n, 120, 12),
                wt =rnorm(n, 190, 30))
label(d$bp) <- 'Systolic Blood Pressure'
units(d$bp) <- 'mmHg'
bpplotM(age + bp + wt ~ treatment, data=d)
bpplotM(age + bp + wt ~ treatment * sex, data=d, cex.strip=.8)
bpplotM(age + bp + wt ~ treatment*sex, data=d,
        violin=TRUE,
        violin.opts=list(col=adjustcolor('blue', alpha.f=.15),
                         border=FALSE))


bpplotM(c('age', 'bp', 'wt'), groups='treatment', data=d)
# Can use Hmisc Cs function, e.g. Cs(age, bp, wt)
bpplotM(age + bp + wt ~ treatment, data=d, nloc='left')

# Without treatment: bpplotM(age + bp + wt ~ 1, data=d)

## Not run: 
# Automatically find all variables that appear to be continuous
getHdata(support)
bpplotM(data=support, group='dzgroup',
        cex.strip=.4, cex.means=.3, cex.n=.45)

# Separate displays for categorical vs. continuous baseline variables
getHdata(pbc)
pbc <- upData(pbc, moveUnits=TRUE)

s <- summaryM(stage + sex + spiders ~ drug, data=pbc)
plot(s)
Key(0, .5)
s <- summaryP(stage + sex + spiders ~ drug, data=pbc)
plot(s, val ~ freq | var, groups='drug', pch=1:3, col=1:3,
     key=list(x=.6, y=.8))

bpplotM(bili + albumin + protime + age ~ drug, data=pbc)

## End(Not run)

Hmisc

Harrell Miscellaneous

v4.5-0
GPL (>= 2)
Authors
Frank E Harrell Jr <fh@fharrell.com>, with contributions from Charles Dupont and many others.
Initial release
2021-02-27

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