rsm | R Documentation |
Fit a linear model with a response-surface component, and produce appropriate analyses and summaries.
rsm (formula, data, ...)
## S3 method for class 'rsm'
summary(object, adjust = rev(p.adjust.methods), ...)
## S3 method for class 'summary.rsm'
print(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'rsm'
codings(object)
loftest (object)
canonical (object, threshold = 0.1*max.eigen)
xs (object, ...)
formula |
Formula to pass to |
data |
|
... |
In |
object |
An object of class |
adjust |
Adjustment to apply to the P values in the coefficient matrix, chosen from among the available |
threshold |
Threshold for canonical analysis – see "Canonical analysis" below. |
x |
An object produced by |
In rsm
, the model formula must contain at least an FO
term; optionally, you can add
one or more TWI()
terms and/or a PQ()
term. All variables that appear
in TWI
or PQ
must be included in FO
.
For convenience, specifying SO()
is the same as including FO()
, TWI()
, and PQ()
,
and is the safe, preferred way of specifying a full second-order model.
The variables in FO
comprise the variables to consider in response-surface methods. They need not all appear in TWI
and PQ
terms; and more than one TWI
term is allowed. For example, the following two model formulas are equivalent:
resp ~ Oper + FO(x1,x2,x3,x4) + TWI(x1,x2,x3) + TWI(x2,x3,x4) + PQ(x1,x3,x4) resp ~ Oper + FO(x1,x2,x3,x4) + TWI(formula = ~x1*x2*x3 + x2*x3*x4) + PQ(x1,x3,x4)
The first version, however, creates duplicate x2:x3
terms – which rsm
can handle but there may be warning messages if it is subsequently used for predictions or plotted in contour.lm
.
In summary.rsm
, any ...
arguments are passed to summary.lm
, except for threshold
, which is passed to canonical
.
rsm
returns an rsm
object, which is a lm
object with
additional members as follows:
order |
The order of the model: 1 for first-order, 1.5 for first-order plus interactions, or 2 for a model that contains square terms. |
b |
The first-order response-surface coefficients. |
B |
The matrix of second-order response-surface coefficients, if present. |
labels |
Labels for the response-surface terms. These make the summary much more readable. |
coding |
Coding formulas, if provided in the |
The print
method for rsm
objects just shows the call and the regression
coefficints.
The summary
method for rsm
objects returns an object of class
summary.rsm
, which is an extension of the summary.lm
class with these additional list elements:
Unit-length vector of the path of steepest ascent (first-order models only).
Canonical analysis (second-order models only) from canonical
ANOVA table including lack-of-fit test.
Coding formulas in parent rsm
object.
Its print
method shows the regression summary,
followed by an ANOVA and lack-of-fit test.
For first-order models, it shows the direction of
steepest ascent (see steepest
), and for second-order models, it shows the canonical analysis of the
response surface.
canonical
returns a list with elements xs
, the stationary point, and eigen
, the eigenanalysis of the matrix B of second-order coefficients. Any eigenvalues less than threshold
are taken to be zero, and a message is displayed.
If this happens, the stationary point is determined using only the surviving eigenvectors,
and stationary ridges or valleys are assumed to exist in their
corresponding canonical directions. The default threshold is one tenth
of the maximum eigenvalue, internally named max.eigen
.
Setting a small threshold
may move the stationary point much farther from the origin.
When uncoded data are used, the canonical analysis and stationary point are not very meaningful and those results should probably be ignored. See ‘vignette("rsm")’ for more details.
The function xs
returns just the stationary point.
loftest
returns an anova
object that tests the fitted model against a model
that interpolates the means of the response-surface-variable combinations.
codings
returns a list
of coding formulas if the model was fitted to
coded.data
, or NULL
otherwise.
Support is provided for the emmeans package: its emmeans
and related functions work with special provisions for models fitted to coded data. The optional mode
argument can have values of "asis"
(the default), "coded"
, or "decoded"
. The first two are equivalent and simply return LS means based on the original model formula and the variables therein (raw or coded), without any conversion. When coded data were used and the user specifies mode = "decoded"
, the user must specify results in terms of the decoded variables rather than the coded ones. See the illustration in the Examples section.
Russell V. Lenth
Lenth RV (2009) “Response-Surface Methods in R, Using rsm”, Journal of Statistical Software, 32(7), 1–17. \Sexpr[results=rd]{tools:::Rd_expr_doi("10.18637/jss.v032.i07")}
FO
, SO
,
lm
, summary
, coded.data
library(rsm)
CR <- coded.data (ChemReact, x1~(Time-85)/5, x2~(Temp-175)/5)
### 1st-order model, using only the first block
CR.rs1 <- rsm (Yield ~ FO(x1,x2), data=CR, subset=1:7)
summary(CR.rs1)
### 2nd-order model, using both blocks
CR.rs2 <- rsm (Yield ~ Block + SO(x1,x2), data=CR)
summary(CR.rs2)
### Example of a rising-ridge situation from Montgomery et al, Table 6.2
RRex <- ccd(Response ~ A + B, n0 = c(0, 3), alpha = "face",
randomize = FALSE, oneblock = TRUE)
RRex$Response <- c(52.3, 5.3, 46.7, 44.2, 58.5, 33.5, 32.8, 49.2, 49.3, 50.2, 51.6)
RRex.rsm <- rsm(Response ~ SO(A,B), data = RRex)
canonical(RRex.rsm) # rising ridge is detected
canonical(RRex.rsm, threshold = 0) # xs is far outside of the experimental region
## Not run:
# Illustration of emmeans support
emmeans::emmeans(CR.rs2, ~ x1 * x2, mode = "coded",
at = list(x1 = c(-1, 0, 1), x2 = c(-2, 2)))
# The following will yield the same results, but based on the decoded data
emmeans::emmeans(CR.rs2, ~ Time * Temp, mode = "decoded",
at = list(Time = c(80, 85, 90), Temp = c(165, 185)))
## End(Not run)
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