Description Usage Arguments Details Value Author(s) References Examples
The no effect concentration has been proposed as an alternative to both the classical no observed effect concentration (NOEC) and the regression-based EC/ED approach. The NEC model is a dose-response model with a threshold below which the response is assumed constant and equal to the control response.
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fixed |
numeric vector specifying which parameters are fixed and at what value they are fixed. NAs are used for parameters that are not fixed. |
names |
a vector of character strings giving the names of the parameters (should not contain ":"). The default is reasonable (see under 'Usage'). |
fctName |
optional character string used internally by convenience functions. |
fctText |
optional character string used internally by convenience functions. |
upper |
numeric value. The fixed, upper limit in the model. Default is 1. |
... |
additional arguments in |
The NEC model function proposed by Pires et al (2002) is defined as follows
f(x) = c + (d-c)\exp(-b(x-e)I(x-e)) + \frac{d2}{1+\exp(b2(\log(x)-\log(e2)))}
where I(x-e) is the indicator function. It is equal to 0 for x<=e and equal 1 for x>e.
In other words: The parameter e in NEC
in "drc" corresponds to the parameter c' in Pires et al (2002),
the parameter b in NEC
in "drc" corresponds to the parameter m' in Pires et al (2002), the parameter d
in NEC
in "drc" corresponds to the parameter l' in Pires et al (2002), and finally the parameter c in
NEC
in "drc" (the lower horizontal limit) is (implictly) fixed at 0 in Pires et al (2002)
The value returned is a list containing the nonlinear function, the self starter function and the parameter names.
Christian Ritz
Pires, A. M., Branco, J. A., Picado, A., Mendonca, E. (2002) Models for the estimation of a 'no effect concentration', Environmetrics, 13, 15–27.
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