[R] 2 D density plot interpretation and manipulating the data

Bert Gunter bgunter@4567 @end|ng |rom gm@||@com
Fri Oct 9 18:31:37 CEST 2020


I recommend that you consult with a local statistical expert. Much of what
you say (outliers?!?) seems to make little sense, and your statistical
knowledge seems minimal. Perhaps more to the point, none of your questions
can be properly answered without subject matter context, which this list is
not designed to provide. That's why I believe you need local expertise.

Bert Gunter

"The trouble with having an open mind is that people keep coming along and
sticking things into it."
-- Opus (aka Berkeley Breathed in his "Bloom County" comic strip )


On Fri, Oct 9, 2020 at 8:25 AM Ana Marija <sokovic.anamarija using gmail.com>
wrote:

> Hi Abby,
>
> thank you for getting back to me and for this useful information.
>
> I'm trying to detect the outliers in my distribution based of mean and
> variance. Can I see that from the plot I provided? Would outliers be
> outside of ellipses? If so how do I extract those from my data frame,
> based on which parameter?
>
> So I am trying to connect outliers based on what the plot is showing:
> s <- ggplot(SNP, mapping = aes(x = mean, y = var))
> s <- s +  geom_density_2d() + geom_point() + my.theme + ggtitle("SNPs")
>
> versus what is in the data:
>
> > head(SNP)
>                mean      var     sd
> FQC.10090295 0.0327 0.002678 0.0517
> FQC.10119363 0.0220 0.000978 0.0313
> FQC.10132112 0.0275 0.002088 0.0457
> FQC.10201128 0.0169 0.000289 0.0170
> FQC.10208432 0.0443 0.004081 0.0639
> FQC.10218466 0.0116 0.000131 0.0115
> ...
>
> the distribution is not normal, it is right-skewed.
>
> Cheers,
> Ana
>
> On Fri, Oct 9, 2020 at 2:13 AM Abby Spurdle <spurdle.a using gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > > My understanding is that this represents bivariate normal
> > > approximation of the data which uses the kernel density function to
> > > test for inclusion within a level set. (please correct me)
> >
> > You can fit a bivariate normal distribution by computing five parameters.
> > Two means, two standard deviations (or two variances) and one
> > correlation (or covariance) coefficient.
> > The bivariate normal *has* elliptical contours.
> >
> > A kernel density estimate is usually regarded as an estimate of an
> > unknown density function.
> > Often they use a normal (or Gaussian) kernel, but I wouldn't describe
> > them as normal approximations.
> > In general, bivariate kernel density estimates do *not* have
> > elliptical contours.
> > But in saying that, if the data is close to normality, then contours
> > will be close to elliptical.
> >
> > Kernel density estimates do not test for inclusion, as such.
> > (But technically, there are some exceptions to that).
> >
> > I'm not sure what you're trying to achieve here.
>
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