stats (version 3.2.2)

acf: Auto- and Cross- Covariance and -Correlation Function Estimation

Description

The function acf computes (and by default plots) estimates of the autocovariance or autocorrelation function. Function pacf is the function used for the partial autocorrelations. Function ccf computes the cross-correlation or cross-covariance of two univariate series.

Usage

acf(x, lag.max = NULL, type = c("correlation", "covariance", "partial"), plot = TRUE, na.action = na.fail, demean = TRUE, ...)
pacf(x, lag.max, plot, na.action, ...)
"pacf"(x, lag.max = NULL, plot = TRUE, na.action = na.fail, ...)
ccf(x, y, lag.max = NULL, type = c("correlation", "covariance"), plot = TRUE, na.action = na.fail, ...)
"["(x, i, j)

Arguments

x, y
a univariate or multivariate (not ccf) numeric time series object or a numeric vector or matrix, or an "acf" object.
lag.max
maximum lag at which to calculate the acf. Default is $10*log10(N/m)$ where $N$ is the number of observations and $m$ the number of series. Will be automatically limited to one less than the number of observations in the series.
type
character string giving the type of acf to be computed. Allowed values are "correlation" (the default), "covariance" or "partial". Will be partially matched.
plot
logical. If TRUE (the default) the acf is plotted.
na.action
function to be called to handle missing values. na.pass can be used.
demean
logical. Should the covariances be about the sample means?
...
further arguments to be passed to plot.acf.
i
a set of lags (time differences) to retain.
j
a set of series (names or numbers) to retain.

Value

An object of class "acf", which is a list with the following elements:
lag
A three dimensional array containing the lags at which the acf is estimated.
acf
An array with the same dimensions as lag containing the estimated acf.
type
The type of correlation (same as the type argument).
n.used
The number of observations in the time series.
series
The name of the series x.
snames
The series names for a multivariate time series.
The lag k value returned by ccf(x, y) estimates the correlation between x[t+k] and y[t].The result is returned invisibly if plot is TRUE.

Details

For type = "correlation" and "covariance", the estimates are based on the sample covariance. (The lag 0 autocorrelation is fixed at 1 by convention.)

By default, no missing values are allowed. If the na.action function passes through missing values (as na.pass does), the covariances are computed from the complete cases. This means that the estimate computed may well not be a valid autocorrelation sequence, and may contain missing values. Missing values are not allowed when computing the PACF of a multivariate time series.

The partial correlation coefficient is estimated by fitting autoregressive models of successively higher orders up to lag.max.

The generic function plot has a method for objects of class "acf".

The lag is returned and plotted in units of time, and not numbers of observations.

There are print and subsetting methods for objects of class "acf".

References

Venables, W. N. and Ripley, B. D. (2002) Modern Applied Statistics with S. Fourth Edition. Springer-Verlag.

(This contains the exact definitions used.)

See Also

plot.acf, ARMAacf for the exact autocorrelations of a given ARMA process.

Examples

Run this code
require(graphics)

## Examples from Venables & Ripley
acf(lh)
acf(lh, type = "covariance")
pacf(lh)

acf(ldeaths)
acf(ldeaths, ci.type = "ma")
acf(ts.union(mdeaths, fdeaths))
ccf(mdeaths, fdeaths, ylab = "cross-correlation")
# (just the cross-correlations)

presidents # contains missing values
acf(presidents, na.action = na.pass)
pacf(presidents, na.action = na.pass)

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