lme4 (version 1.1-10)

plot.merMod: diagnostic plots for merMod fits

Description

diagnostic plots for merMod fits

Usage

## S3 method for class 'merMod':
plot(x,
    form = resid(., type = "pearson") ~ fitted(.), abline,
    id = NULL, idLabels = NULL, grid, ...)
## S3 method for class 'merMod':
qqmath( x, id = NULL, idLabels = NULL, \dots)

Arguments

x
a fitted [ng]lmer model
form
an optional formula specifying the desired type of plot. Any variable present in the original data frame used to obtain x can be referenced. In addition, x itself can be referenced in the formula using the symbol ".
abline
an optional numeric value, or numeric vector of length two. If given as a single value, a horizontal line will be added to the plot at that coordinate; else, if given as a vector, its values are used as the intercept and slope for a line added to
id
an optional numeric value, or one-sided formula. If given as a value, it is used as a significance level for a two-sided outlier test for the standardized, or normalized residuals. Observations with absolute standardized (normalized) residuals gre
idLabels
an optional vector, or one-sided formula. If given as a vector, it is converted to character and used to label the observations identified according to id. If given as a vector, it is converted to character and used to label the obser
grid
an optional logical value indicating whether a grid should be added to plot. Default depends on the type of lattice plot used: if xyplot defaults to TRUE, else defaults to FALSE.
...
optional arguments passed to the lattice plot function.

Details

Diagnostic plots for the linear mixed-effects fit are obtained. The form argument gives considerable flexibility in the type of plot specification. A conditioning expression (on the right side of a | operator) always implies that different panels are used for each level of the conditioning factor, according to a lattice display. If form is a one-sided formula, histograms of the variable on the right hand side of the formula, before a | operator, are displayed (the lattice function histogram is used). If form is two-sided and both its left and right hand side variables are numeric, scatter plots are displayed (the lattice function xyplot is used). Finally, if form is two-sided and its left had side variable is a factor, box-plots of the right hand side variable by the levels of the left hand side variable are displayed (the lattice function bwplot is used).

qqmath produces a Q-Q plot of the residuals (see link{qqmath.ranef.mer} for Q-Q plots of the conditional mode values).

Examples

Run this code
data(Orthodont,package="nlme")
fm1 <- lmer(distance ~ age + (age|Subject), data=Orthodont)
## standardized residuals versus fitted values by gender
plot(fm1, resid(., scaled=TRUE) ~ fitted(.) | Sex, abline = 0)
## box-plots of residuals by Subject
plot(fm1, Subject ~ resid(., scaled=TRUE))
## observed versus fitted values by Subject
plot(fm1, distance ~ fitted(.) | Subject, abline = c(0,1))
## residuals by age, separated by Subject
plot(fm1, resid(., scaled=TRUE) ~ age | Sex, abline = 0)
require("lattice")
qqmath(fm1, id=0.05)
if (require("ggplot2")) {
    ## we can create the same plots using ggplot2 and the fortify() function
    fm1F <- fortify(fm1)
    ggplot(fm1F, aes(.fitted,.resid)) + geom_point(colour="blue") +
           facet_grid(.~Sex) + geom_hline(yintercept=0)
    ## note: Subjects are ordered by mean distance
    ggplot(fm1F, aes(Subject,.resid)) + geom_boxplot() + coord_flip()
    ggplot(fm1F, aes(.fitted,distance))+ geom_point(colour="blue") +
        facet_wrap(~Subject) +geom_abline(intercept=0,slope=1)
    ggplot(fm1F, aes(age,.resid)) + geom_point(colour="blue") + facet_grid(.~Sex) +
        geom_hline(yintercept=0)+geom_line(aes(group=Subject),alpha=0.4)+geom_smooth(method="loess")
    ## (warnings about loess are due to having only 4 unique x values)
    detach("package:ggplot2")
}

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