fitdistrplus (version 1.0-8)

quantiles: Quantile estimation from a fitted distribution

Description

Quantile estimation from a fitted distribution, optionally with confidence intervals calculated from the bootstrap result.

Usage

"quantile"(x, probs = seq(0.1, 0.9, by=0.1), ...) "quantile"(x, probs = seq(0.1, 0.9, by=0.1), ...) "quantile"(x, probs = seq(0.1, 0.9, by=0.1),CI.type = "two.sided", CI.level = 0.95, ...) "quantile"(x, probs = seq(0.1, 0.9, by=0.1),CI.type = "two.sided", CI.level = 0.95, ...) "print"(x, ...) "print"(x, ...) "print"(x, ...) "print"(x, ...)

Arguments

x
An object of class "fitdist", "fitdistcens", "bootdist", "bootdistcens" or "quantile.fitdist", "quantile.fitdistcens", "quantile.bootdist", "quantile.bootdistcens" for the print generic function.
probs
A numeric vector of probabilities with values in [0, 1] at which quantiles must be calculated.
CI.type
Type of confidence intervals : either "two.sided" or one-sided intervals ("less" or "greater").
CI.level
The confidence level.
...
Further arguments to be passed to generic functions.

Value

quantile returns a list with 2 components (the first two described below) when called with an object of class "fitdist" or "fitdistcens" and 8 components (described below) when called with an object of class "bootdist" or "bootdistcens" :

Details

Quantiles of the parametric distribution are calculated for each probability specified in probs, using the estimated parameters. When used with an object of class "bootdist" or "bootdistcens", percentile confidence intervals and medians etimates are also calculated from the bootstrap result. If CI.type is two.sided, the CI.level two-sided confidence intervals of quantiles are calculated. If CI.type is less or greater, the CI.level one-sided confidence intervals of quantiles are calculated. The print functions show the estimated quantiles with percentile confidence intervals and median estimates when a bootstrap resampling has been done previously, and the number of bootstrap iterations for which the estimation converges if it is inferior to the whole number of bootstrap iterations.

References

Delignette-Muller ML and Dutang C (2015), fitdistrplus: An R Package for Fitting Distributions. Journal of Statistical Software, 64(4), 1-34.

See Also

fitdist, bootdist, fitdistcens, bootdistcens and CIcdfplot.

Examples

Run this code
# (1) Fit of a normal distribution on acute toxicity log-transformed values of 
# endosulfan for nonarthropod invertebrates, using maximum likelihood estimation
# to estimate what is called a species sensitivity distribution 
# (SSD) in ecotoxicology, followed by estimation of the 5, 10 and 20 percent quantile  
# values of the fitted distribution, which are called the 5, 10, 20 percent hazardous 
# concentrations (HC5, HC10, HC20) in ecotoxicology, followed with calculations of their
# confidence intervals with various definitions, from a small number of bootstrap 
# iterations to satisfy CRAN running times constraint.
# For practical applications, we recommend to use at least niter=501 or niter=1001.
#
data(endosulfan)
ATV <- subset(endosulfan, group == "NonArthroInvert")$ATV
log10ATV <- log10(subset(endosulfan, group == "NonArthroInvert")$ATV)
fln <- fitdist(log10ATV, "norm")
quantile(fln, probs = c(0.05, 0.1, 0.2))
bln <- bootdist(fln, bootmethod="param", niter=101)
quantile(bln, probs = c(0.05, 0.1, 0.2))
quantile(bln, probs = c(0.05, 0.1, 0.2), CI.type = "greater")
quantile(bln, probs = c(0.05, 0.1, 0.2), CI.level = 0.9)

# (2) Draw of 95 percent confidence intervals on quantiles of the 
# previously fitted distribution
#
cdfcomp(fln)
q1 <- quantile(bln, probs = seq(0,1,length=101))
points(q1$quantCI[1,],q1$probs,type="l")
points(q1$quantCI[2,],q1$probs,type="l")

# (2b) Draw of 95 percent confidence intervals on quantiles of the 
# previously fitted distribution
# using the NEW function CIcdfplot
#
CIcdfplot(bln, CI.output = "quantile", CI.fill = "pink")

# (3) Fit of a distribution on acute salinity log-transformed tolerance 
# for riverine macro-invertebrates, using maximum likelihood estimation
# to estimate what is called a species sensitivity distribution 
# (SSD) in ecotoxicology, followed by estimation of the 5, 10 and 20 percent quantile
# values of the fitted distribution, which are called the 5, 10, 20 percent hazardous 
# concentrations (HC5, HC10, HC20) in ecotoxicology, followed with calculations of 
# their confidence intervals with various definitions.
# from a small number of bootstrap iterations to satisfy CRAN running times constraint.
# For practical applications, we recommend to use at least niter=501 or niter=1001.
#
data(salinity)
log10LC50 <-log10(salinity)
flncens <- fitdistcens(log10LC50,"norm")
quantile(flncens, probs = c(0.05, 0.1, 0.2))
blncens <- bootdistcens(flncens, niter = 101)
quantile(blncens, probs = c(0.05, 0.1, 0.2))
quantile(blncens, probs = c(0.05, 0.1, 0.2), CI.type = "greater")
quantile(blncens, probs = c(0.05, 0.1, 0.2), CI.level = 0.9)


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