ZIPIG defines the zero inflated Poisson inverse Gaussian distribution,
a three parameter distribution, for a
gamlss.family object to be used in GAMLSS fitting using the function gamlss().
The functions dZIPIG, pZIPIG,
qZIPIG and rZIPIG define the
density, distribution function, quantile function
and random generation for the zero inflated negative binomial, ZIPIG(), distribution.ZIPIG(mu.link = "log", sigma.link = "log", nu.link = "logit")
dZIPIG(x, mu = 1, sigma = 1, nu = 0.3, log = FALSE)
pZIPIG(q, mu = 1, sigma = 1, nu = 0.3, lower.tail = TRUE, log.p = FALSE)
qZIPIG(p, mu = 1, sigma = 1, nu = 0.3, lower.tail = TRUE, log.p = FALSE)
rZIPIG(n, mu = 1, sigma = 1, nu = 0.3)mu.link, with "log" link as the default for the mu parametersigma.link, with "log" link as the default for the sigma parametermu.link, with "logit" link as the default for the nu parameterZIPIG return a gamlss.family object which can be used to fit a
zero inflated Poisson inverse Gaussian in the gamlss() functionStasinopoulos D. M., Rigby R.A. and Akantziliotou C. (2006) Instructions on how to use the GAMLSS package in R.
Accompanying documentation in the current GAMLSS help files, (see also
Stasinopoulos D. M. Rigby R.A. (2007) Generalized additive models for location scale and shape (GAMLSS) in R.
Journal of Statistical Software, Vol. 23, Issue 7, Dec 2007,
Rigby, R. A. and Stasinopoulos D. M. (2010) The gamlss.family distributions, (distributed with this package or see
gamlss.family, PIGZIPIG()
# creating data and plotting them
dat <- rZIPIG(1000, mu=5, sigma=.5, nu=0.1)
r <- barplot(table(dat), col='lightblue')Run the code above in your browser using DataLab