Digit preference is the observation that the final number in a measurement
occurs with a greater frequency that is expected by chance. This can occur
because of rounding, the practice of increasing or decreasing the value in a
measurement to the nearest whole or half unit, or because data are made up.
The digitPreference() function assesses the level by which digit
preference exists in a given dataset using a digit preference score (DPS).
Usage
digitPreference(x, digits = 1, values = 0:9)
Value
A list of class "digitPreference" with:
Variable
Description
dps
Digit Preference Score (DPS)
tab
Table of final digit counts
pct
Table of proportions (\%) of final digit counts
Arguments
x
Numeric vector of measurements
digits
Number of decimal places in x. Using digits = 1
(e.g.) allows 105 to be treated as 105.0
values
A vector of possible values for the final digit (default = 0:9)
Details
DPS definition from:
Kari Kuulasmaa K, Hense HW, Tolonen H (for the WHO MONICA Project),
Quality Assessment of Data on Blood Pressure in the WHO MONICA Project,
WHO MONICA Project e-publications No. 9, WHO, Geneva, May 1998 available
from https://www.thl.fi/publications/monica/bp/bpqa.htm
# Digit preference test applied to anthropometric data from a single state# from a DHS survey in a West African countrysvy <- dp.ex01
digitPreference(svy$wt, digits = 1)