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pROC (version 1.12.1)

pROC-package: pROC

Description

Tools for visualizing, smoothing and comparing receiver operating characteristic (ROC curves). (Partial) area under the curve (AUC) can be compared with statistical tests based on U-statistics or bootstrap. Confidence intervals can be computed for (p)AUC or ROC curves. Sample size / power computation for one or two ROC curves are available.

Arguments

Citation

If you use pROC in published research, please cite the following paper:

Xavier Robin, Natacha Turck, Alexandre Hainard, Natalia Tiberti, Fr<U+00E9>d<U+00E9>rique Lisacek, Jean-Charles Sanchez and Markus M<U+00FC>ller (2011). ``pROC: an open-source package for R and S+ to analyze and compare ROC curves''. BMC Bioinformatics, 12, p. 77. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-12-77

Type citation("pROC") for a BibTeX entry.

The authors would be glad to hear how pROC is employed. You are kindly encouraged to notify Xavier Robin <pROC-cran@xavier.robin.name> about any work you publish.

Abbreviations

The following abbreviations are employed extensively in this package:

  • ROC: receiver operating characteristic

  • AUC: area under the ROC curve

  • pAUC: partial area under the ROC curve

  • CI: confidence interval

  • SP: specificity

  • SE: sensitivity

Functions

roc Build a ROC curve
are.paired Dertermine if two ROC curves are paired
auc Compute the area under the ROC curve
ci Compute confidence intervals of a ROC curve
ci.auc Compute the CI of the AUC
ci.coords Compute the CI of arbitrary coordinates
ci.se Compute the CI of sensitivities at given specificities
ci.sp Compute the CI of specificities at given sensitivities
ci.thresholds Compute the CI of specificity and sensitivity of thresholds
ci.coords Compute the CI of arbitrary coordinates
coords Coordinates of the ROC curve
cov Covariance between two AUCs
ggroc Plot a ROC curve with ggplot2 (Experimental)
has.partial.auc Determine if the ROC curve have a partial AUC
lines.roc Add a ROC line to a ROC plot
plot.ci Plot CIs
plot Plot a ROC curve
print Print a ROC curve object
roc.test Compare the AUC of two ROC curves
smooth Smooth a ROC curve

Dataset

This package comes with a dataset of 141 patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage: aSAH.

Installing and using

To install this package, make sure you are connected to the internet and issue the following command in the R prompt:

    install.packages("pROC")
  

To load the package in R:

    library(pROC)
  

Bootstrap

All the bootstrap operations for significance testing, confidence interval, variance and covariance computation are performed with non-parametric stratified or non-stratified resampling (according to the stratified argument) and with the percentile method, as described in Carpenter and Bithell (2000) sections 2.1 and 3.3.

Stratification of bootstrap can be controlled with boot.stratified. In stratified bootstrap (the default), each replicate contains the same number of cases and controls than the original sample. Stratification is especially useful if one group has only little observations, or if groups are not balanced.

The number of bootstrap replicates is controlled by boot.n. Higher numbers will give a more precise estimate of the significance tests and confidence intervals but take more time to compute. 2000 is recommanded by Carpenter and Bithell (2000) for confidence intervals. In our experience this is sufficient for a good estimation of the first significant digit only, so we recommend the use of 10000 bootstrap replicates to obtain a good estimate of the second significant digit whenever possible.

Progress bars

A progressbar shows the progress of bootstrap operations. It is handled by the plyr package (Wickham, 2011), and is created by the progress_* family of functions. Sensible defaults are guessed during the package loading:

The default can be changed with the option “pROCProgress”. The option must be a list with a name item setting the type of progress bar (“none”, “win”, “tk” or “text”). Optional items of the list are “width”, “char” and “style”, corresponding to the arguments to the underlying progressbar functions. For example, to force a text progress bar:

options(pROCProgress = list(name = "text", width = NA, char = "=", style = 3)

To inhibit the progress bars completely:

options(pROCProgress = list(name = "none"))

Handling large datasets

Algorithms

Since version 1.12, pROC can automatically select the fastest algorithm for your dataset. The choice is based on the number of thresholds of the ROC curve: until about 1500 thresholds, algorithm 3 is used. Above that limit, pROC switches to algorithm 2.

This simple selection should work in most cases. However if you are unsure or want to test it for yourself, use algorithm=0 to run a quick benchmark between 2 and 3. Make sure microbenchmark is installed. Beware, this is very slow as it will repeat the computation 10 times to obtain a decent estimate of each algorithm speed.

if (!requireNamespace("microbenchmark")) install.packages("microbenchmark")

# First a ROC curve with many thresholds response <- rbinom(5E4, 1, .5) predictor <- rnorm(5E4) rocobj <- roc(response, predictor, algorithm = 0) # Very slow!

# Next a ROC curve with few thresholds but more data points response <- rbinom(1E6, 1, .5) predictor <- rpois(1E6, 1) rocobj <- roc(response, predictor, algorithm = 0) # Very slow!

Boostrap

Bootstrap is typically slow because it involves repeatedly computing the ROC curve (or a part of it).

Some bootstrap functions are faster than others. Typically, ci.thresholds is the fastest, and ci.coords the slowest. Use ci.coords only if the CI you need cannot be computed by the specialized CI functions ci.thresholds, ci.se and ci.sp. Note that ci.auc cannot be replaced anyway.

A naive way to speed-up the boostrap is by removing the progress bar:

rocobj <- roc(response, round(predictor))
system.time(ci(rocobj))
system.time(ci(rocobj, progress = "none"))
    

It is of course possible to reduce the number of boostrap iterations. See the boot.n argument to ci. This will reduce the precision of the bootstrap estimate.

Parallel processing

Bootstrap operations can be performed in parallel. The backend provided by the plyr package is used, which in turn relies on the foreach package.

To enable parallell processing, you first need to load an adaptor for the foreach package (doMC, doMPI, doParallel, doRedis, doRNG or doSNOW)), register the backend, and set parallel=TRUE.

library(doParallel)
registerDoParallel(cl <- makeCluster(getOption("mc.cores", 2)))
ci(rocobj, method="bootstrap", parallel=TRUE)
stopCluster(cl)
  		

Progress bars are not available when parallel processing is enabled.

Using DeLong instead of boostrap

DeLong is an asymptotically exact method to evaluate the uncertainty of an AUC (DeLong et al. (1988)). Since version 1.9, pROC uses the algorithm proposed by Sun and Xu (2014) which has an O(N log N) complexity and is always faster than bootstrapping. By default, pROC will choose the DeLong method whenever possible.

rocobj <- roc(response, round(predictor), algorithm=3)
system.time(ci(rocobj, method="delong"))
system.time(ci(rocobj, method="bootstrap", parallel = TRUE))
    

Details

The basic unit of the pROC package is the roc function. It will build a ROC curve, smooth it if requested (if smooth=TRUE), compute the AUC (if auc=TRUE), the confidence interval (CI) if requested (if ci=TRUE) and plot the curve if requested (if plot=TRUE).

The roc function will call smooth, auc, ci and plot as necessary. See these individual functions for the arguments that can be passed to them through roc. These function can be called separately.

Two paired (that is roc objects with the same response) or unpaired (with different response) ROC curves can be compared with the roc.test function.

References

James Carpenter and John Bithell (2000) ``Bootstrap condence intervals: when, which, what? A practical guide for medical statisticians''. Statistics in Medicine 19, 1141--1164. DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0258(20000515)19:9<1141::AID-SIM479>3.0.CO;2-F.

Elisabeth R. DeLong, David M. DeLong and Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson (1988) ``Comparing the areas under two or more correlated receiver operating characteristic curves: a nonparametric approach''. Biometrics 44, 837--845.

Tom Fawcett (2006) ``An introduction to ROC analysis''. Pattern Recognition Letters 27, 861--874. DOI: 10.1016/j.patrec.2005.10.010.

Xavier Robin, Natacha Turck, Alexandre Hainard, et al. (2011) ``pROC: an open-source package for R and S+ to analyze and compare ROC curves''. BMC Bioinformatics, 7, 77. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-12-77.

Xu Sun and Weichao Xu (2014) ``Fast Implementation of DeLongs Algorithm for Comparing the Areas Under Correlated Receiver Operating Characteristic Curves''. IEEE Signal Processing Letters, 21, 1389--1393. DOI: 10.1109/LSP.2014.2337313.

Hadley Wickham (2011) ``The Split-Apply-Combine Strategy for Data Analysis''. Journal of Statistical Software, 40, 1--29. URL: www.jstatsoft.org/v40/i01.

See Also

CRAN packages ROCR, verification or Bioconductor's roc for ROC curves.

CRAN packages plyr, MASS and logcondens employed in this package.

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
data(aSAH)

# Build a ROC object and compute the AUC
roc(aSAH$outcome, aSAH$s100b)
roc(outcome ~ s100b, aSAH)

# Smooth ROC curve
roc(outcome ~ s100b, aSAH, smooth=TRUE)

# more options, CI and plotting
roc1 <- roc(aSAH$outcome,
            aSAH$s100b, percent=TRUE,
            # arguments for auc
            partial.auc=c(100, 90), partial.auc.correct=TRUE,
            partial.auc.focus="sens",
            # arguments for ci
            ci=TRUE, boot.n=100, ci.alpha=0.9, stratified=FALSE,
            # arguments for plot
            plot=TRUE, auc.polygon=TRUE, max.auc.polygon=TRUE, grid=TRUE,
            print.auc=TRUE, show.thres=TRUE)

# Add to an existing plot. Beware of 'percent' specification!
roc2 <- roc(aSAH$outcome, aSAH$wfns,
            plot=TRUE, add=TRUE, percent=roc1$percent)

## Coordinates of the curve ##
coords(roc1, "best", ret=c("threshold", "specificity", "1-npv"))
coords(roc2, "local maximas", ret=c("threshold", "sens", "spec", "ppv", "npv"))

## Confidence intervals ##

# CI of the AUC
ci(roc2)

# }
# NOT RUN {
# CI of the curve
sens.ci <- ci.se(roc1, specificities=seq(0, 100, 5))
plot(sens.ci, type="shape", col="lightblue")
plot(sens.ci, type="bars")
# }
# NOT RUN {
# need to re-add roc2 over the shape
plot(roc2, add=TRUE)

# }
# NOT RUN {
# CI of thresholds
plot(ci.thresholds(roc2))
# }
# NOT RUN {
# In parallel
if (require(doParallel)) {
    registerDoParallel(cl <- makeCluster(getOption("mc.cores", 2L)))
    
# }
# NOT RUN {
ci(roc2, method="bootstrap", parallel=TRUE)
# }
# NOT RUN {
    
# }
# NOT RUN {
    stopCluster(cl)
}

## Comparisons ##

# Test on the whole AUC
roc.test(roc1, roc2, reuse.auc=FALSE)

# }
# NOT RUN {
# Test on a portion of the whole AUC
roc.test(roc1, roc2, reuse.auc=FALSE, partial.auc=c(100, 90),
         partial.auc.focus="se", partial.auc.correct=TRUE)

# With modified bootstrap parameters
roc.test(roc1, roc2, reuse.auc=FALSE, partial.auc=c(100, 90),
         partial.auc.correct=TRUE, boot.n=1000, boot.stratified=FALSE)
# }

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