Produces the albatros plot of Harrison et al
albatros(p, n, axes = list(xlimit = NULL, ylimit = NULL,
lefttext = NULL, righttext = NULL),
contours = list(type = NULL, contvals = NULL, ltys = NULL, contlabs = NULL),
plotpars = list(yscale = NULL, pchs = NULL, cols = NULL), ...)
Returns a list containing
The limits for the x-axis in plotting units
The limits for the y-axis in plotting units
A vector of p values
A vector of sample sizes
A list containing
xlimit
a single value, the limit
for the x-axis which is used symmetrically
ylimit
a vector of length 2, limits for the y-axis
lefttext
character, to label below plot
righttext
character, to label below plot
A list containing
type
what effect size to use, a character one of "corr",
"or", "smd"
contvals
a vector, what values to draw the contours at
ltys
a vector, what line types to use
contlabs
logical, draw the labels of the countours?
A list containing
yscale
Scaling for y-axis, See details
pchs
Symbols to be used
cols
Colours for points
Arguments to be passed through to plot
Michael Dewey
Plots n against p and draws contours of constant effect size. harrison17metap
The p value scale on the x-axis is a logarithmic one
but folded at the null value so that the extreme values represent
small probabilities in each direction.
The scale for the y-axis is user selectable.
The original scale in the Stata version is
(_10n)^2log(n, base = 10) ^ 2 which is obtained by
setting yscale
to "classic"
but it is
also possible to use nsqrt(n)
which is the default or n by setting
yscale
to "n".
If the dataset contains extreme values the
plot may be uninformative and the xlimit
and ylimit
parameters my be helpful to clip
the plot.
If they are not specified the function tries
to choose suitable values.
For the contours if the type
parameter in contours
is NULL (the default) no contours will be plotted.
The options available are
“smd” (Standardised mean difference)
“corr” (Correlation)
“or” (Odds ratio).
The contours are labelled unless contlabs is set to FALSE
.
The function tries to position these so they are not obscured
by the contour lines but if that is unsatisfactory then
it is best to suppress them and position them manually
or use a legend to identify line types.
The pch
parameter may either be a single value
or a vector of the same length as p
.
It may contain anything which is legal as input to
the parameter of the same name in the graphics
library and will be used for the plotted points.
The cols
parameter works similarly.
The values of lefttext
and righttext
are
used to produce labels under the x-axis and
are placed level with the label.
By default they are not produced.
The return values from the function may be useful if further annotations are required as they give the axis limits in plotting units.
For plotting parameters
see par
data(dat.metap)
validity <- dat.metap$validity
fit.v <- albatros(validity$p, validity$n,
contours = list(type = "corr", contvals = c(0.25, 0.5, 0.8), ltys = 1:3),
axes = list(ylimit = c(1,200), lefttext = "Negative correlation",
righttext = "Positive correlation"),
main = "Validity")
#
fit.z <- albatros(dat.metap$zhang$p, dat.metap$zhang$n,
contours = list(type = "smd", contvals = c(0.25, 0.5, 1), ltys = 1:3),
plotpars = list(pchs = letters[unclass(dat.metap$zhang$phase)]),
axes = list(lefttext = "Favours control", righttext = "Favours exercise"),
main = "Zhang"
)
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