Probability mapping for rates
The function returns a data frame of rates for counts in populations at risk with crude rates, expected counts of cases, relative risks, and Poisson probabilities.
probmap(n, x, row.names=NULL, alternative="less")
n |
a numeric vector of counts of cases |
x |
a numeric vector of populations at risk |
row.names |
row names passed through to output data frame |
alternative |
default “less”, may be set to “greater” |
The function returns a data frame, from which rates may be mapped after class intervals have been chosen. The class intervals used in the examples are mostly taken from the referenced source.
raw |
raw (crude) rates |
expCount |
expected counts of cases assuming global rate |
relRisk |
relative risks: ratio of observed and expected counts of cases multiplied by 100 |
pmap |
Poisson probability map values: probablility of getting a more “extreme” count than actually observed - one-tailed, default alternative observed “less” than expected |
Roger Bivand Roger.Bivand@nhh.no
Bailey T, Gatrell A (1995) Interactive Spatial Data Analysis, Harlow: Longman, pp. 300–303.
auckland <- st_read(system.file("shapes/auckland.shp", package="spData")[1], quiet=TRUE) res <- probmap(auckland$M77_85, 9*auckland$Und5_81) rt <- sum(auckland$M77_85)/sum(9*auckland$Und5_81) ppois_pmap <- numeric(length(auckland$Und5_81)) for (i in seq(along=ppois_pmap)) { ppois_pmap[i] <- poisson.test(auckland$M77_85[i], r=rt, T=(9*auckland$Und5_81[i]), alternative="less")$p.value all.equal(ppois_pmap, res$pmap) } res$id <- 1:nrow(res) auckland$id <- res$id <- 1:nrow(res) auckland_res <- merge(auckland, res, by="id") plot(auckland_res[, "raw"], main="Crude (raw) estimates") plot(auckland_res[, "relRisk"], main="Standardised mortality ratios") plot(auckland_res[, "pmap"], main="Poisson probabilities", breaks=c(0, 0.05, 0.1, 0.5, 0.9, 0.95, 1))
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