[R] Confidence Intervals on Standard Curve
David Winsemius
dwinsemius at comcast.net
Sun Feb 20 19:52:46 CET 2011
On Feb 20, 2011, at 1:27 PM, Ben Ward wrote:
> However, the
>
> Y ~ X + Y^2
>
> Produces the best fitting line - it is pretty much on the data
> points - I'm trying to make a standard curve, with which to take
> readings from a spectrophotometer off of. Rather than what I would
> normally use models for - such as hypothesis testing and analysis of
> data from experiments.
I thought we were leaving behind the model that had the dependent
variable on both sides of hte equation. Can you explain how you would
construct a chart or a function that will turn those results into
something useful?
> Thanks,
> Ben.
>
> On 20/02/2011 11:53, nzcoops wrote:
>> model<- lm(Approximate.Counts~X..Light.Transmission +
>> I(Approximate.Counts^2), data=Standards)
>>
>> Might not be addressing the problem, don't you have Y ~ X + Y^2
>> here? That's
>> a violation of the assumptions of an lm isn't it?
>>
>> Also for plotting CI on a curve look into ggplot2::geom_ribbon,
>> it's much
>> nicer than just plotting lines and is easy to use. had.co.nz should
>> set you
>> right for setting this up.
>
David Winsemius, MD
West Hartford, CT
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