Learn R Programming

psych (version 1.7.8)

lowerUpper: Combine two square matrices to have a lower off diagonal for one, upper off diagonal for the other

Description

When reporting correlation matrices for two samples (e.g., males and females), it is convenient to show them as one matrix, with entries below the diagonal representing one matrix, and entries above the diagonal the other matrix. It is also useful to compare a correlation matrix with the residuals from a fitted (e.g., factor) model.

Usage

lowerUpper(lower, upper=NULL, diff=FALSE)

Arguments

lower

A square matrix

upper

A square matrix of the same size as the first (if omitted, then the matrix is converted to two symmetric matrices).

diff

Find the difference between the first and second matrix and put the results in the above the diagonal entries.

Value

Either one matrix or a list of two

Details

If just one matrix is provided (i.e., upper is missing), it is decomposed into two square matrices, one equal to the lower off diagonal entries, the other to the upper off diagonal entries. In the normal case two symmetric matrices are provided and combined into one non-symmetric matrix with the lower off diagonals representing the lower matrix and the upper off diagonals representing the upper matrix.

If diff is true, the upper off diagonal matrix reflects the differences between the two matrices.

See Also

read.clipboard.lower, cor.plot

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
 b1 <- Bechtoldt.1
 b2 <- Bechtoldt.2
 b12 <- lowerUpper(b1,b2)
 cor.plot(b12)
 diff12 <- lowerUpper(b1,b2,diff=TRUE)

 cor.plot(t(diff12),numbers=TRUE,main="Bechtoldt1 and the differences from Bechtoldt2")

# }

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab