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plotres

Plot the residuals of a regression model


Description

Plot the residuals of a regression model.

Please see the plotres vignette (also available here).

Usage

plotres(object = stop("no 'object' argument"),
    which = 1:4, info = FALSE, versus = 1,
    standardize = FALSE, delever = FALSE, level = 0,
    id.n = 3, labels.id = NULL, smooth.col = 2,
    grid.col = 0, jitter = 0,
    do.par = NULL, caption = NULL, trace = 0,
    npoints = 3000, center = TRUE,
    type = NULL, nresponse = NA,
    object.name = quote.deparse(substitute(object)), ...)

Arguments

object

The model object.

which

Which plots do draw. Default is 1:4.

1 Model plot. What gets plotted here depends on the model class. For example, for earth models this is a model selection plot. Nothing will be displayed for some models. For details, please see the plotres vignette.

2 Cumulative distribution of abs residuals

3 Residuals vs fitted

4 QQ plot

5 Abs residuals vs fitted

6 Sqrt abs residuals vs fitted

7 Abs residuals vs log fitted

8 Cube root of the squared residuals vs log fitted

9 Log abs residuals vs log fitted

info

Default is FALSE. Use TRUE to print extra information as follows:

i) Display the distribution of the residuals along the bottom of the plot.

ii) Display the training R-Squared.

iii) Display the Spearman Rank Correlation of the absolute residuals with the fitted values. Actually, correlation is measured against the absolute values of whatever is on the horizontal axis — by default this is the fitted response, but may be something else if the versus argument is used.

iv) In the Cumulative Distribution plot (which=2), display additional information on the quantiles.

v) Only for which=5 or 9. Regress the absolute residuals against the fitted values and display the regression slope. Robust linear regression is used via rlm in the MASS package.

vi) Add various annotations to the other plots.

versus

What do we plot the residuals against? One of:

1 Default. Plot the residuals versus the fitted values (or the log values when which=7 to 9).

2 Residuals versus observation number, after observations have been sorted on the fitted value. Same as versus=1, except that the residuals are spaced uniformly along the horizontal axis.

3 Residuals versus the response.

4 Residuals versus the hat leverages.

"b:" Residuals versus the basis functions. Currently only supported for earth, mda::mars, and gam::gam models. A optional regex can follow the "b:" to specify a subset of the terms, e.g. versus="b:wind" will plot terms with "wind" in their name.

Else a character vector specifying which predictors to plot against.
Example 1: versus="" plots against all predictors (since the regex versus="" matches anything).
Example 2: versus=c("wind", "vis") plots predictors with wind or vis in their name.
Example 3: versus=c("wind|vis") equivalent to the above.
Note: These are regexs. Thus versus="wind" will match all variables that have "wind" in their names. Use "^wind$" to match only the variable named "wind".

standardize

Default is FALSE. Use TRUE to standardize the residuals. Only supported for some models, an error message will be issued otherwise.
Each residual is divided by by se_i * sqrt(1 - h_ii), where se_i is the standard error of prediction and h_ii is the leverage (the diagonal entry of the hat matrix). When the variance model holds, the standardized residuals are homoscedastic with unity variance.
The leverages are obtained using hatvalues. (For earth models the leverages are for the linear regression of the response on the basis matrix bx.) A standardized residual with a leverage of 1 is plotted as a star on the axis.
This argument applies to all plots where the residuals are used (including the cumulative distribution and QQ plots, and to annotations displayed by the info argument).

delever

Default is FALSE. Use TRUE to “de-lever” the residuals. Only supported for some models, an error message will be issued otherwise.
Each residual is divided by sqrt(1 - h_ii). See the standardize argument for details.

level

Draw estimated confidence or prediction interval bands at the given level, if the model supports them.
Default is 0, bands not plotted. Else a fraction, for example level=0.90. Example:

    mod <- lm(log(Volume)~log(Girth), data=trees)
    plotres(mod, level=.90)

You can modify the color of the bands with level.shade and level.shade2.
See also “Prediction intervals” in the plotmo vignette (but note that plotmo needs prediction intervals on new data, whereas plotres requires only that the model supports prediction intervals on the training data).

id.n

The largest id.n residuals will be labeled in the plot. Default is 3. Special values TRUE and -1 or mean all.
If id.n is negative (but not -1) the id.n most positive and most negative residuals will be labeled in the plot.
A current implementation restriction is that id.n is ignored when there are more than ten thousand cases.

labels.id

Residual labels. Only used if id.n > 0. Default is the case names, or the case numbers if the cases are unnamed.

smooth.col

Color of the smooth line through the residual points. Default is 2, red. Use smooth.col=0 for no smooth line.
You can adjust the amount of smoothing with smooth.f. This gets passed as f to lowess. The default is 2/3. Lower values make the line more wiggly.

grid.col

Default is 0, no grid. Else add a background grid of the specified color to the degree1 plots. The special value grid.col=TRUE is treated as "lightgray".

jitter

Default is 0, no jitter. Passed as factor to jitter to jitter the plotted points horizontally and vertically. Useful for discrete variables and responses, where the residual points tend to be overlaid.

do.par

One of NULL, FALSE, TRUE, or 2, as follows:

do.par=NULL (default). Same as do.par=FALSE if the number of plots is one; else the same as TRUE.

do.par=FALSE. Use the current par settings. You can pass additional graphics parameters in the “...” argument.

do.par=TRUE. Start a new page and call par as appropriate to display multiple plots on the same page. This automatically sets parameters like mfrow and mar. You can pass additional graphics parameters in the “...” argument.

do.par=2. Like do.par=TRUE but don't restore the par settings to their original state when plotres exits, so you can add something to the plot.

caption

Overall caption. By default create the caption automatically. Use caption="" for no caption. (Use main to set the title of an individual plot.)

trace

Default is 0.
trace=1 (or TRUE) for a summary trace (shows how predict and friends are invoked for the model).
trace=2 for detailed tracing.

npoints

Number of points to be plotted. A sample of npoints is taken; the sample includes the biggest twenty or so residuals.
The default is 3000 (not all, to avoid overplotting on large models). Use npoints=TRUE or -1 for all points.

center

Default is TRUE, meaning center the horizontal axis in the residuals plot, so asymmetry in the residual distribution is more obvious.

type

Type parameter passed first to residuals and if that fails to predict. For allowed values see the residuals and predict methods for your object (such as residuals.rpart or predict.earth). By default, plotres tries to automatically select a suitable value for the model in question (usually "response"), but this will not always be correct. Use trace=1 to see the type argument passed to residuals and predict.

nresponse

Which column to use when residuals or predict returns multiple columns. This can be a column index or column name (which may be abbreviated, partial matching is used).

object.name

The name of the object for error and trace messages. Used internally by plot.earth.

...

Dot arguments are passed to the plot functions. Dot argument names, whether prefixed or not, should be specified in full and not abbreviated.

“Prefixed” arguments are passed directly to the associated function. For example the prefixed argument pt.col="pink" passes col="pink" to points(), overriding the global col setting. The prefixes recognized by plotres are:

residuals. passed to residuals
predict. passed to predict (predict is called if the call to residuals fails)
w1. sent to the model-dependent plot for which=1 e.g. w1.col=2
pt. modify the displayed points e.g. pt.col=as.numeric(survived)+2 or pt.cex=.8.
smooth. modify the smooth line e.g. smooth.col=0 or smooth.f=.5.
level. modify the interval bands, e.g. level.shade="gray" or level.shade2="lightblue"
legend. modify the displayed legend e.g. legend.cex=.9
cum. modify the Cumulative Distribution plot (arguments for plot.stepfun)
qq. modify the QQ plot, e.g. qq.pch=1
qqline modify the qqline in the QQ plot, e.g. qqline.col=0
label. modify the point labels, e.g. label.cex=.9 or label.font=2
cook. modify the Cook's Distance annotations. This affects only the leverage plot (versus=3) for lm models with standardize=TRUE. e.g. cook.levels=c(.5, .8, 1) or cook.col=2.
caption. modify the overall caption (see the caption argument) e.g. caption.col=2.
par. arguments for par (only necessary if a par argument name clashes with a plotres argument)

The cex argument is relative, so specifying cex=1 is the same as not specifying cex.

For backwards compatibility, some dot arguments are supported but not explicitly documented.

Value

If the which=1 plot was plotted, the return value of that plot (model dependent).

Else if the which=3 plot was plotted, return list(x,y) where x and y are the coordinates of the points in that plot (but without jittering even if the jitter argument was used).

Else return NULL.

Note

This function is designed primarily for displaying standard response - fitted residuals for models with a single continuous response, although it will work for a few other models.

In general this function won't work on models that don't save the call and data with the model in a standard way. It uses the same underlying mechanism to access the model data as plotmo. For further discussion please see “Accessing the model data” in the plotmo vignette (also available here). Package authors may want to look at Guidelines for S3 Regression Models (also available here).

See Also

Please see the plotres vignette (also available here).

Examples

# we use lm in this example, but plotres is more useful for models
# that don't have a function like plot.lm for plotting residuals

lm.model <- lm(Volume~., data=trees)

plotres(lm.model)

plotmo

Plot a Model's Residuals, Response, and Partial Dependence Plots

v3.6.0
GPL-3
Authors
Stephen Milborrow
Initial release

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