The function ZAP
defines the zero adjusted Poisson distribution, a two parameter distribution, for a gamlss.family
object to be
used in GAMLSS fitting using the function gamlss()
. The functions dZAP
, pZAP
, qZAP
and rZAP
define the
density, distribution function, quantile function
and random generation for the inflated poisson, ZAP()
, distribution.
ZAP(mu.link = "log", sigma.link = "logit")
dZAP(x, mu = 5, sigma = 0.1, log = FALSE)
pZAP(q, mu = 5, sigma = 0.1, lower.tail = TRUE, log.p = FALSE)
qZAP(p, mu = 5, sigma = 0.1, lower.tail = TRUE, log.p = FALSE)
rZAP(n, mu = 5, sigma = 0.1)
defines the mu.link
, with "log" link as the default for the mu
parameter
defines the sigma.link
, with "logit" link as the default for the sigma parameter which in this case is the probability at zero.
Other links are "probit" and "cloglog"'(complementary log-log)
vector of (non-negative integer)
vector of positive means
vector of probabilities at zero
vector of probabilities
vector of quantiles
number of random values to return
logical; if TRUE, probabilities p are given as log(p)
logical; if TRUE (default), probabilities are P[X <= x], otherwise, P[X > x]
The function ZAP
returns a gamlss.family
object which can be used to fit a zero inflated poisson distribution in the gamlss()
function.
For the definition of the distribution see Rigby and Stasinopoulos (2010) below.
Rigby, R. A. and Stasinopoulos D. M. (2005). Generalized additive models for location, scale and shape,(with discussion), Appl. Statist., 54, part 3, pp 507-554.
Stasinopoulos 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 http://www.gamlss.org/).
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, http://www.jstatsoft.org/v23/i07.
Rigby, R. A. and Stasinopoulos D. M. (2010) The gamlss.family distributions, (distributed with this package or see http://www.gamlss.org/)
gamlss.family
, PO
, ZIP
, ZIP2
, ZALG
ZAP()
# creating data and plotting them
dat<-rZAP(1000, mu=5, sigma=.1)
r <- barplot(table(dat), col='lightblue')
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