ArcsCSend.int: The arcs of Central Similarity Proximity Catch Digraph...

arcsCSend.intR Documentation

The arcs of Central Similarity Proximity Catch Digraph (CS-PCD) for 1D data - end interval case

Description

An object of class "PCDs". Returns arcs as tails (or sources) and heads (or arrow ends) for 1D data set Xp as the vertices of CS-PCD and related parameters and the quantities of the digraph. Yp determines the end points of the end intervals.

For this function, CS proximity regions are constructed data points outside the intervals based on Yp points with expansion parameter t>0. That is, for this function, arcs may exist for points only inside end intervals. It also provides various descriptions and quantities about the arcs of the CS-PCD such as number of arcs, arc density, etc.

See also (\insertCiteceyhan:revstat-2016;textualpcds).

Usage

arcsCSend.int(Xp, Yp, t)

Arguments

Xp

A set or vector of 1D points which constitute the vertices of the CS-PCD.

Yp

A set or vector of 1D points which constitute the end points of the intervals.

t

A positive real number which serves as the expansion parameter in CS proximity region.

Value

A list with the elements

type

A description of the type of the digraph

parameters

Parameters of the digraph, here, it is the expansion parameter.

tess.points

Points on which the tessellation of the study region is performed, here, tessellation is the intervalization based on Yp.

tess.name

Name of data set used in tessellation, it is Yp for this function

vertices

Vertices of the digraph, Xp points

vert.name

Name of the data set which constitutes the vertices of the digraph

S

Tails (or sources) of the arcs of CS-PCD for 1D data in the end intervals

E

Heads (or arrow ends) of the arcs of CS-PCD for 1D data in the end intervals

mtitle

Text for "main" title in the plot of the digraph

quant

Various quantities for the digraph: number of vertices, number of partition points, number of intervals (which is 2 for end intervals), number of arcs, and arc density.

Author(s)

Elvan Ceyhan

References

\insertAllCited

See Also

arcsCSmid.int, arcsCS1D , arcsPEmid.int, arcsPEend.int and arcsPE1D

Examples

t<-1.5
a<-0; b<-10; int<-c(a,b)

#nx is number of X points (target) and ny is number of Y points (nontarget)
nx<-20; ny<-4;  #try also nx<-40; ny<-10 or nx<-1000; ny<-10;

set.seed(1)
xr<-range(a,b)
xf<-(xr[2]-xr[1])*.5

Xp<-runif(nx,a-xf,b+xf)
Yp<-runif(ny,a,b)

arcsCSend.int(Xp,Yp,t)

Arcs<-arcsCSend.int(Xp,Yp,t)
Arcs
summary(Arcs)
plot(Arcs)

S<-Arcs$S
E<-Arcs$E

jit<-.1
yjit<-runif(nx,-jit,jit)

Xlim<-range(a,b,Xp,Yp)
xd<-Xlim[2]-Xlim[1]

plot(cbind(a,0),pch=".",
main="arcs of CS-PCD with vertices (jittered along y-axis)\n in end intervals ",
     xlab=" ", ylab=" ",xlim=Xlim+xd*c(-.05,.05),ylim=3*c(-jit,jit))
abline(h=0,lty=1)
points(Xp, yjit,pch=".",cex=3)
abline(v=Yp,lty=2)
arrows(S, yjit, E, yjit, length = .05, col= 4)

arcsCSend.int(Xp,Yp,t)


elvanceyhan/pcds documentation built on June 29, 2023, 8:12 a.m.