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mixOmics (version 4.1-4)

nearZeroVar: Identification of zero- or near-zero variance predictors

Description

Borrowed from the mclust package and, used as internal function. This function diagnoses predictors that have one unique value (i.e. are zero variance predictors) or predictors that are have both of the following characteristics: they have very few unique values relative to the number of samples and the ratio of the frequency of the most common value to the frequency of the second most common value is large.

Usage

nearZeroVar(x, freqCut = 95/5, uniqueCut = 10)

Arguments

x
a numeric vector or matrix, or a data frame with all numeric data.
freqCut
the cutoff for the ratio of the most common value to the second most common value.
uniqueCut
the cutoff for the percentage of distinct values out of the number of total samples.

Value

  • nearZeroVar returns a list that contains the following components:
  • Positiona vector of integers corresponding to the column positions of the problematic predictors.
  • Metricsa data frame containing the zero- or near-zero predictors information with columns: freqRatio, the ratio of frequencies for the most common value over the second most common value and, percentUnique, the percentage of unique data points out of the total number of data points.

encoding

latin1

Details

For example, an example of near zero variance predictor is one that, for 1000 samples, has two distinct values and 999 of them are a single value.

To be flagged, first the frequency of the most prevalent value over the second most frequent value (called the ``frequency ratio'') must be above freqCut. Secondly, the ``percent of unique values,'' the number of unique values divided by the total number of samples (times 100), must also be below uniqueCut.

In the above example, the frequency ratio is 999 and the unique value percentage is 0.0001.