""" An extension of scipy.stats._stats_py to support masked arrays """ # Original author (2007): Pierre GF Gerard-Marchant __all__ = ['argstoarray', 'count_tied_groups', 'describe', 'f_oneway', 'find_repeats','friedmanchisquare', 'kendalltau','kendalltau_seasonal','kruskal','kruskalwallis', 'ks_twosamp', 'ks_2samp', 'kurtosis', 'kurtosistest', 'ks_1samp', 'kstest', 'linregress', 'mannwhitneyu', 'meppf','mode','moment','mquantiles','msign', 'normaltest', 'obrientransform', 'pearsonr','plotting_positions','pointbiserialr', 'rankdata', 'scoreatpercentile','sem', 'sen_seasonal_slopes','skew','skewtest','spearmanr', 'siegelslopes', 'theilslopes', 'tmax','tmean','tmin','trim','trimboth', 'trimtail','trima','trimr','trimmed_mean','trimmed_std', 'trimmed_stde','trimmed_var','tsem','ttest_1samp','ttest_onesamp', 'ttest_ind','ttest_rel','tvar', 'variation', 'winsorize', 'brunnermunzel', ] import numpy as np from numpy import ndarray import numpy.ma as ma from numpy.ma import masked, nomask import math import itertools import warnings from collections import namedtuple from . import distributions from scipy._lib._util import _rename_parameter, _contains_nan from scipy._lib._bunch import _make_tuple_bunch import scipy.special as special import scipy.stats._stats_py from ._stats_mstats_common import ( _find_repeats, linregress as stats_linregress, LinregressResult as stats_LinregressResult, theilslopes as stats_theilslopes, siegelslopes as stats_siegelslopes ) def _chk_asarray(a, axis): # Always returns a masked array, raveled for axis=None a = ma.asanyarray(a) if axis is None: a = ma.ravel(a) outaxis = 0 else: outaxis = axis return a, outaxis def _chk2_asarray(a, b, axis): a = ma.asanyarray(a) b = ma.asanyarray(b) if axis is None: a = ma.ravel(a) b = ma.ravel(b) outaxis = 0 else: outaxis = axis return a, b, outaxis def _chk_size(a, b): a = ma.asanyarray(a) b = ma.asanyarray(b) (na, nb) = (a.size, b.size) if na != nb: raise ValueError("The size of the input array should match!" f" ({na} <> {nb})") return (a, b, na) def _ttest_finish(df, t, alternative): """Common code between all 3 t-test functions.""" # We use ``stdtr`` directly here to preserve masked arrays if alternative == 'less': pval = special.stdtr(df, t) elif alternative == 'greater': pval = special.stdtr(df, -t) elif alternative == 'two-sided': pval = special.stdtr(df, -np.abs(t))*2 else: raise ValueError("alternative must be " "'less', 'greater' or 'two-sided'") if t.ndim == 0: t = t[()] if pval.ndim == 0: pval = pval[()] return t, pval def argstoarray(*args): """ Constructs a 2D array from a group of sequences. Sequences are filled with missing values to match the length of the longest sequence. Parameters ---------- *args : sequences Group of sequences. Returns ------- argstoarray : MaskedArray A ( `m` x `n` ) masked array, where `m` is the number of arguments and `n` the length of the longest argument. Notes ----- `numpy.ma.vstack` has identical behavior, but is called with a sequence of sequences. Examples -------- A 2D masked array constructed from a group of sequences is returned. >>> from scipy.stats.mstats import argstoarray >>> argstoarray([1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]) masked_array( data=[[1.0, 2.0, 3.0], [4.0, 5.0, 6.0]], mask=[[False, False, False], [False, False, False]], fill_value=1e+20) The returned masked array filled with missing values when the lengths of sequences are different. >>> argstoarray([1, 3], [4, 5, 6]) masked_array( data=[[1.0, 3.0, --], [4.0, 5.0, 6.0]], mask=[[False, False, True], [False, False, False]], fill_value=1e+20) """ if len(args) == 1 and not isinstance(args[0], ndarray): output = ma.asarray(args[0]) if output.ndim != 2: raise ValueError("The input should be 2D") else: n = len(args) m = max([len(k) for k in args]) output = ma.array(np.empty((n,m), dtype=float), mask=True) for (k,v) in enumerate(args): output[k,:len(v)] = v output[np.logical_not(np.isfinite(output._data))] = masked return output def find_repeats(arr): """Find repeats in arr and return a tuple (repeats, repeat_count). The input is cast to float64. Masked values are discarded. Parameters ---------- arr : sequence Input array. The array is flattened if it is not 1D. Returns ------- repeats : ndarray Array of repeated values. counts : ndarray Array of counts. Examples -------- >>> from scipy.stats import mstats >>> mstats.find_repeats([2, 1, 2, 3, 2, 2, 5]) (array([2.]), array([4])) In the above example, 2 repeats 4 times. >>> mstats.find_repeats([[10, 20, 1, 2], [5, 5, 4, 4]]) (array([4., 5.]), array([2, 2])) In the above example, both 4 and 5 repeat 2 times. """ # Make sure we get a copy. ma.compressed promises a "new array", but can # actually return a reference. compr = np.asarray(ma.compressed(arr), dtype=np.float64) try: need_copy = np.may_share_memory(compr, arr) except AttributeError: # numpy < 1.8.2 bug: np.may_share_memory([], []) raises, # while in numpy 1.8.2 and above it just (correctly) returns False. need_copy = False if need_copy: compr = compr.copy() return _find_repeats(compr) def count_tied_groups(x, use_missing=False): """ Counts the number of tied values. Parameters ---------- x : sequence Sequence of data on which to counts the ties use_missing : bool, optional Whether to consider missing values as tied. Returns ------- count_tied_groups : dict Returns a dictionary (nb of ties: nb of groups). Examples -------- >>> from scipy.stats import mstats >>> import numpy as np >>> z = [0, 0, 0, 2, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 5, 6] >>> mstats.count_tied_groups(z) {2: 1, 3: 2} In the above example, the ties were 0 (3x), 2 (3x) and 3 (2x). >>> z = np.ma.array([0, 0, 1, 2, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 5, 6]) >>> mstats.count_tied_groups(z) {2: 2, 3: 1} >>> z[[1,-1]] = np.ma.masked >>> mstats.count_tied_groups(z, use_missing=True) {2: 2, 3: 1} """ nmasked = ma.getmask(x).sum() # We need the copy as find_repeats will overwrite the initial data data = ma.compressed(x).copy() (ties, counts) = find_repeats(data) nties = {} if len(ties): nties = dict(zip(np.unique(counts), itertools.repeat(1))) nties.update(dict(zip(*find_repeats(counts)))) if nmasked and use_missing: try: nties[nmasked] += 1 except KeyError: nties[nmasked] = 1 return nties def rankdata(data, axis=None, use_missing=False): """Returns the rank (also known as order statistics) of each data point along the given axis. If some values are tied, their rank is averaged. If some values are masked, their rank is set to 0 if use_missing is False, or set to the average rank of the unmasked values if use_missing is True. Parameters ---------- data : sequence Input data. The data is transformed to a masked array axis : {None,int}, optional Axis along which to perform the ranking. If None, the array is first flattened. An exception is raised if the axis is specified for arrays with a dimension larger than 2 use_missing : bool, optional Whether the masked values have a rank of 0 (False) or equal to the average rank of the unmasked values (True). """ def _rank1d(data, use_missing=False): n = data.count() rk = np.empty(data.size, dtype=float) idx = data.argsort() rk[idx[:n]] = np.arange(1,n+1) if use_missing: rk[idx[n:]] = (n+1)/2. else: rk[idx[n:]] = 0 repeats = find_repeats(data.copy()) for r in repeats[0]: condition = (data == r).filled(False) rk[condition] = rk[condition].mean() return rk data = ma.array(data, copy=False) if axis is None: if data.ndim > 1: return _rank1d(data.ravel(), use_missing).reshape(data.shape) else: return _rank1d(data, use_missing) else: return ma.apply_along_axis(_rank1d,axis,data,use_missing).view(ndarray) ModeResult = namedtuple('ModeResult', ('mode', 'count')) def mode(a, axis=0): """ Returns an array of the modal (most common) value in the passed array. Parameters ---------- a : array_like n-dimensional array of which to find mode(s). axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to operate. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. Returns ------- mode : ndarray Array of modal values. count : ndarray Array of counts for each mode. Notes ----- For more details, see `scipy.stats.mode`. Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy import stats >>> from scipy.stats import mstats >>> m_arr = np.ma.array([1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0], mask=[0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 0]) >>> mstats.mode(m_arr) # note that most zeros are masked ModeResult(mode=array([1.]), count=array([2.])) """ return _mode(a, axis=axis, keepdims=True) def _mode(a, axis=0, keepdims=True): # Don't want to expose `keepdims` from the public `mstats.mode` a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) def _mode1D(a): (rep,cnt) = find_repeats(a) if not cnt.ndim: return (0, 0) elif cnt.size: return (rep[cnt.argmax()], cnt.max()) else: return (a.min(), 1) if axis is None: output = _mode1D(ma.ravel(a)) output = (ma.array(output[0]), ma.array(output[1])) else: output = ma.apply_along_axis(_mode1D, axis, a) if keepdims is None or keepdims: newshape = list(a.shape) newshape[axis] = 1 slices = [slice(None)] * output.ndim slices[axis] = 0 modes = output[tuple(slices)].reshape(newshape) slices[axis] = 1 counts = output[tuple(slices)].reshape(newshape) output = (modes, counts) else: output = np.moveaxis(output, axis, 0) return ModeResult(*output) def _betai(a, b, x): x = np.asanyarray(x) x = ma.where(x < 1.0, x, 1.0) # if x > 1 then return 1.0 return special.betainc(a, b, x) def msign(x): """Returns the sign of x, or 0 if x is masked.""" return ma.filled(np.sign(x), 0) def pearsonr(x, y): r""" Pearson correlation coefficient and p-value for testing non-correlation. The Pearson correlation coefficient [1]_ measures the linear relationship between two datasets. The calculation of the p-value relies on the assumption that each dataset is normally distributed. (See Kowalski [3]_ for a discussion of the effects of non-normality of the input on the distribution of the correlation coefficient.) Like other correlation coefficients, this one varies between -1 and +1 with 0 implying no correlation. Correlations of -1 or +1 imply an exact linear relationship. Parameters ---------- x : (N,) array_like Input array. y : (N,) array_like Input array. Returns ------- r : float Pearson's correlation coefficient. p-value : float Two-tailed p-value. Warns ----- `~scipy.stats.ConstantInputWarning` Raised if an input is a constant array. The correlation coefficient is not defined in this case, so ``np.nan`` is returned. `~scipy.stats.NearConstantInputWarning` Raised if an input is "nearly" constant. The array ``x`` is considered nearly constant if ``norm(x - mean(x)) < 1e-13 * abs(mean(x))``. Numerical errors in the calculation ``x - mean(x)`` in this case might result in an inaccurate calculation of r. See Also -------- spearmanr : Spearman rank-order correlation coefficient. kendalltau : Kendall's tau, a correlation measure for ordinal data. Notes ----- The correlation coefficient is calculated as follows: .. math:: r = \frac{\sum (x - m_x) (y - m_y)} {\sqrt{\sum (x - m_x)^2 \sum (y - m_y)^2}} where :math:`m_x` is the mean of the vector x and :math:`m_y` is the mean of the vector y. Under the assumption that x and y are drawn from independent normal distributions (so the population correlation coefficient is 0), the probability density function of the sample correlation coefficient r is ([1]_, [2]_): .. math:: f(r) = \frac{{(1-r^2)}^{n/2-2}}{\mathrm{B}(\frac{1}{2},\frac{n}{2}-1)} where n is the number of samples, and B is the beta function. This is sometimes referred to as the exact distribution of r. This is the distribution that is used in `pearsonr` to compute the p-value. The distribution is a beta distribution on the interval [-1, 1], with equal shape parameters a = b = n/2 - 1. In terms of SciPy's implementation of the beta distribution, the distribution of r is:: dist = scipy.stats.beta(n/2 - 1, n/2 - 1, loc=-1, scale=2) The p-value returned by `pearsonr` is a two-sided p-value. The p-value roughly indicates the probability of an uncorrelated system producing datasets that have a Pearson correlation at least as extreme as the one computed from these datasets. More precisely, for a given sample with correlation coefficient r, the p-value is the probability that abs(r') of a random sample x' and y' drawn from the population with zero correlation would be greater than or equal to abs(r). In terms of the object ``dist`` shown above, the p-value for a given r and length n can be computed as:: p = 2*dist.cdf(-abs(r)) When n is 2, the above continuous distribution is not well-defined. One can interpret the limit of the beta distribution as the shape parameters a and b approach a = b = 0 as a discrete distribution with equal probability masses at r = 1 and r = -1. More directly, one can observe that, given the data x = [x1, x2] and y = [y1, y2], and assuming x1 != x2 and y1 != y2, the only possible values for r are 1 and -1. Because abs(r') for any sample x' and y' with length 2 will be 1, the two-sided p-value for a sample of length 2 is always 1. References ---------- .. [1] "Pearson correlation coefficient", Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearson_correlation_coefficient .. [2] Student, "Probable error of a correlation coefficient", Biometrika, Volume 6, Issue 2-3, 1 September 1908, pp. 302-310. .. [3] C. J. Kowalski, "On the Effects of Non-Normality on the Distribution of the Sample Product-Moment Correlation Coefficient" Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series C (Applied Statistics), Vol. 21, No. 1 (1972), pp. 1-12. Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy import stats >>> from scipy.stats import mstats >>> mstats.pearsonr([1, 2, 3, 4, 5], [10, 9, 2.5, 6, 4]) (-0.7426106572325057, 0.1505558088534455) There is a linear dependence between x and y if y = a + b*x + e, where a,b are constants and e is a random error term, assumed to be independent of x. For simplicity, assume that x is standard normal, a=0, b=1 and let e follow a normal distribution with mean zero and standard deviation s>0. >>> s = 0.5 >>> x = stats.norm.rvs(size=500) >>> e = stats.norm.rvs(scale=s, size=500) >>> y = x + e >>> mstats.pearsonr(x, y) (0.9029601878969703, 8.428978827629898e-185) # may vary This should be close to the exact value given by >>> 1/np.sqrt(1 + s**2) 0.8944271909999159 For s=0.5, we observe a high level of correlation. In general, a large variance of the noise reduces the correlation, while the correlation approaches one as the variance of the error goes to zero. It is important to keep in mind that no correlation does not imply independence unless (x, y) is jointly normal. Correlation can even be zero when there is a very simple dependence structure: if X follows a standard normal distribution, let y = abs(x). Note that the correlation between x and y is zero. Indeed, since the expectation of x is zero, cov(x, y) = E[x*y]. By definition, this equals E[x*abs(x)] which is zero by symmetry. The following lines of code illustrate this observation: >>> y = np.abs(x) >>> mstats.pearsonr(x, y) (-0.016172891856853524, 0.7182823678751942) # may vary A non-zero correlation coefficient can be misleading. For example, if X has a standard normal distribution, define y = x if x < 0 and y = 0 otherwise. A simple calculation shows that corr(x, y) = sqrt(2/Pi) = 0.797..., implying a high level of correlation: >>> y = np.where(x < 0, x, 0) >>> mstats.pearsonr(x, y) (0.8537091583771509, 3.183461621422181e-143) # may vary This is unintuitive since there is no dependence of x and y if x is larger than zero which happens in about half of the cases if we sample x and y. """ (x, y, n) = _chk_size(x, y) (x, y) = (x.ravel(), y.ravel()) # Get the common mask and the total nb of unmasked elements m = ma.mask_or(ma.getmask(x), ma.getmask(y)) n -= m.sum() df = n-2 if df < 0: return (masked, masked) return scipy.stats._stats_py.pearsonr( ma.masked_array(x, mask=m).compressed(), ma.masked_array(y, mask=m).compressed()) def spearmanr(x, y=None, use_ties=True, axis=None, nan_policy='propagate', alternative='two-sided'): """ Calculates a Spearman rank-order correlation coefficient and the p-value to test for non-correlation. The Spearman correlation is a nonparametric measure of the linear relationship between two datasets. Unlike the Pearson correlation, the Spearman correlation does not assume that both datasets are normally distributed. Like other correlation coefficients, this one varies between -1 and +1 with 0 implying no correlation. Correlations of -1 or +1 imply a monotonic relationship. Positive correlations imply that as `x` increases, so does `y`. Negative correlations imply that as `x` increases, `y` decreases. Missing values are discarded pair-wise: if a value is missing in `x`, the corresponding value in `y` is masked. The p-value roughly indicates the probability of an uncorrelated system producing datasets that have a Spearman correlation at least as extreme as the one computed from these datasets. The p-values are not entirely reliable but are probably reasonable for datasets larger than 500 or so. Parameters ---------- x, y : 1D or 2D array_like, y is optional One or two 1-D or 2-D arrays containing multiple variables and observations. When these are 1-D, each represents a vector of observations of a single variable. For the behavior in the 2-D case, see under ``axis``, below. use_ties : bool, optional DO NOT USE. Does not do anything, keyword is only left in place for backwards compatibility reasons. axis : int or None, optional If axis=0 (default), then each column represents a variable, with observations in the rows. If axis=1, the relationship is transposed: each row represents a variable, while the columns contain observations. If axis=None, then both arrays will be raveled. nan_policy : {'propagate', 'raise', 'omit'}, optional Defines how to handle when input contains nan. 'propagate' returns nan, 'raise' throws an error, 'omit' performs the calculations ignoring nan values. Default is 'propagate'. alternative : {'two-sided', 'less', 'greater'}, optional Defines the alternative hypothesis. Default is 'two-sided'. The following options are available: * 'two-sided': the correlation is nonzero * 'less': the correlation is negative (less than zero) * 'greater': the correlation is positive (greater than zero) .. versionadded:: 1.7.0 Returns ------- res : SignificanceResult An object containing attributes: statistic : float or ndarray (2-D square) Spearman correlation matrix or correlation coefficient (if only 2 variables are given as parameters). Correlation matrix is square with length equal to total number of variables (columns or rows) in ``a`` and ``b`` combined. pvalue : float The p-value for a hypothesis test whose null hypothesis is that two sets of data are linearly uncorrelated. See `alternative` above for alternative hypotheses. `pvalue` has the same shape as `statistic`. References ---------- [CRCProbStat2000] section 14.7 """ if not use_ties: raise ValueError("`use_ties=False` is not supported in SciPy >= 1.2.0") # Always returns a masked array, raveled if axis=None x, axisout = _chk_asarray(x, axis) if y is not None: # Deal only with 2-D `x` case. y, _ = _chk_asarray(y, axis) if axisout == 0: x = ma.column_stack((x, y)) else: x = ma.vstack((x, y)) if axisout == 1: # To simplify the code that follow (always use `n_obs, n_vars` shape) x = x.T if nan_policy == 'omit': x = ma.masked_invalid(x) def _spearmanr_2cols(x): # Mask the same observations for all variables, and then drop those # observations (can't leave them masked, rankdata is weird). x = ma.mask_rowcols(x, axis=0) x = x[~x.mask.any(axis=1), :] # If either column is entirely NaN or Inf if not np.any(x.data): res = scipy.stats._stats_py.SignificanceResult(np.nan, np.nan) res.correlation = np.nan return res m = ma.getmask(x) n_obs = x.shape[0] dof = n_obs - 2 - int(m.sum(axis=0)[0]) if dof < 0: raise ValueError("The input must have at least 3 entries!") # Gets the ranks and rank differences x_ranked = rankdata(x, axis=0) rs = ma.corrcoef(x_ranked, rowvar=False).data # rs can have elements equal to 1, so avoid zero division warnings with np.errstate(divide='ignore'): # clip the small negative values possibly caused by rounding # errors before taking the square root t = rs * np.sqrt((dof / ((rs+1.0) * (1.0-rs))).clip(0)) t, prob = _ttest_finish(dof, t, alternative) # For backwards compatibility, return scalars when comparing 2 columns if rs.shape == (2, 2): res = scipy.stats._stats_py.SignificanceResult(rs[1, 0], prob[1, 0]) res.correlation = rs[1, 0] return res else: res = scipy.stats._stats_py.SignificanceResult(rs, prob) res.correlation = rs return res # Need to do this per pair of variables, otherwise the dropped observations # in a third column mess up the result for a pair. n_vars = x.shape[1] if n_vars == 2: return _spearmanr_2cols(x) else: rs = np.ones((n_vars, n_vars), dtype=float) prob = np.zeros((n_vars, n_vars), dtype=float) for var1 in range(n_vars - 1): for var2 in range(var1+1, n_vars): result = _spearmanr_2cols(x[:, [var1, var2]]) rs[var1, var2] = result.correlation rs[var2, var1] = result.correlation prob[var1, var2] = result.pvalue prob[var2, var1] = result.pvalue res = scipy.stats._stats_py.SignificanceResult(rs, prob) res.correlation = rs return res def _kendall_p_exact(n, c, alternative='two-sided'): # Use the fact that distribution is symmetric: always calculate a CDF in # the left tail. # This will be the one-sided p-value if `c` is on the side of # the null distribution predicted by the alternative hypothesis. # The two-sided p-value will be twice this value. # If `c` is on the other side of the null distribution, we'll need to # take the complement and add back the probability mass at `c`. in_right_tail = (c >= (n*(n-1))//2 - c) alternative_greater = (alternative == 'greater') c = int(min(c, (n*(n-1))//2 - c)) # Exact p-value, see Maurice G. Kendall, "Rank Correlation Methods" # (4th Edition), Charles Griffin & Co., 1970. if n <= 0: raise ValueError(f'n ({n}) must be positive') elif c < 0 or 4*c > n*(n-1): raise ValueError(f'c ({c}) must satisfy 0 <= 4c <= n(n-1) = {n*(n-1)}.') elif n == 1: prob = 1.0 p_mass_at_c = 1 elif n == 2: prob = 1.0 p_mass_at_c = 0.5 elif c == 0: prob = 2.0/math.factorial(n) if n < 171 else 0.0 p_mass_at_c = prob/2 elif c == 1: prob = 2.0/math.factorial(n-1) if n < 172 else 0.0 p_mass_at_c = (n-1)/math.factorial(n) elif 4*c == n*(n-1) and alternative == 'two-sided': # I'm sure there's a simple formula for p_mass_at_c in this # case, but I don't know it. Use generic formula for one-sided p-value. prob = 1.0 elif n < 171: new = np.zeros(c+1) new[0:2] = 1.0 for j in range(3,n+1): new = np.cumsum(new) if j <= c: new[j:] -= new[:c+1-j] prob = 2.0*np.sum(new)/math.factorial(n) p_mass_at_c = new[-1]/math.factorial(n) else: new = np.zeros(c+1) new[0:2] = 1.0 for j in range(3, n+1): new = np.cumsum(new)/j if j <= c: new[j:] -= new[:c+1-j] prob = np.sum(new) p_mass_at_c = new[-1]/2 if alternative != 'two-sided': # if the alternative hypothesis and alternative agree, # one-sided p-value is half the two-sided p-value if in_right_tail == alternative_greater: prob /= 2 else: prob = 1 - prob/2 + p_mass_at_c prob = np.clip(prob, 0, 1) return prob def kendalltau(x, y, use_ties=True, use_missing=False, method='auto', alternative='two-sided'): """ Computes Kendall's rank correlation tau on two variables *x* and *y*. Parameters ---------- x : sequence First data list (for example, time). y : sequence Second data list. use_ties : {True, False}, optional Whether ties correction should be performed. use_missing : {False, True}, optional Whether missing data should be allocated a rank of 0 (False) or the average rank (True) method : {'auto', 'asymptotic', 'exact'}, optional Defines which method is used to calculate the p-value [1]_. 'asymptotic' uses a normal approximation valid for large samples. 'exact' computes the exact p-value, but can only be used if no ties are present. As the sample size increases, the 'exact' computation time may grow and the result may lose some precision. 'auto' is the default and selects the appropriate method based on a trade-off between speed and accuracy. alternative : {'two-sided', 'less', 'greater'}, optional Defines the alternative hypothesis. Default is 'two-sided'. The following options are available: * 'two-sided': the rank correlation is nonzero * 'less': the rank correlation is negative (less than zero) * 'greater': the rank correlation is positive (greater than zero) Returns ------- res : SignificanceResult An object containing attributes: statistic : float The tau statistic. pvalue : float The p-value for a hypothesis test whose null hypothesis is an absence of association, tau = 0. References ---------- .. [1] Maurice G. Kendall, "Rank Correlation Methods" (4th Edition), Charles Griffin & Co., 1970. """ (x, y, n) = _chk_size(x, y) (x, y) = (x.flatten(), y.flatten()) m = ma.mask_or(ma.getmask(x), ma.getmask(y)) if m is not nomask: x = ma.array(x, mask=m, copy=True) y = ma.array(y, mask=m, copy=True) # need int() here, otherwise numpy defaults to 32 bit # integer on all Windows architectures, causing overflow. # int() will keep it infinite precision. n -= int(m.sum()) if n < 2: res = scipy.stats._stats_py.SignificanceResult(np.nan, np.nan) res.correlation = np.nan return res rx = ma.masked_equal(rankdata(x, use_missing=use_missing), 0) ry = ma.masked_equal(rankdata(y, use_missing=use_missing), 0) idx = rx.argsort() (rx, ry) = (rx[idx], ry[idx]) C = np.sum([((ry[i+1:] > ry[i]) * (rx[i+1:] > rx[i])).filled(0).sum() for i in range(len(ry)-1)], dtype=float) D = np.sum([((ry[i+1:] < ry[i])*(rx[i+1:] > rx[i])).filled(0).sum() for i in range(len(ry)-1)], dtype=float) xties = count_tied_groups(x) yties = count_tied_groups(y) if use_ties: corr_x = np.sum([v*k*(k-1) for (k,v) in xties.items()], dtype=float) corr_y = np.sum([v*k*(k-1) for (k,v) in yties.items()], dtype=float) denom = ma.sqrt((n*(n-1)-corr_x)/2. * (n*(n-1)-corr_y)/2.) else: denom = n*(n-1)/2. tau = (C-D) / denom if method == 'exact' and (xties or yties): raise ValueError("Ties found, exact method cannot be used.") if method == 'auto': if (not xties and not yties) and (n <= 33 or min(C, n*(n-1)/2.0-C) <= 1): method = 'exact' else: method = 'asymptotic' if not xties and not yties and method == 'exact': prob = _kendall_p_exact(n, C, alternative) elif method == 'asymptotic': var_s = n*(n-1)*(2*n+5) if use_ties: var_s -= np.sum([v*k*(k-1)*(2*k+5)*1. for (k,v) in xties.items()]) var_s -= np.sum([v*k*(k-1)*(2*k+5)*1. for (k,v) in yties.items()]) v1 = (np.sum([v*k*(k-1) for (k, v) in xties.items()], dtype=float) * np.sum([v*k*(k-1) for (k, v) in yties.items()], dtype=float)) v1 /= 2.*n*(n-1) if n > 2: v2 = np.sum([v*k*(k-1)*(k-2) for (k,v) in xties.items()], dtype=float) * \ np.sum([v*k*(k-1)*(k-2) for (k,v) in yties.items()], dtype=float) v2 /= 9.*n*(n-1)*(n-2) else: v2 = 0 else: v1 = v2 = 0 var_s /= 18. var_s += (v1 + v2) z = (C-D)/np.sqrt(var_s) prob = scipy.stats._stats_py._get_pvalue(z, distributions.norm, alternative) else: raise ValueError("Unknown method "+str(method)+" specified, please " "use auto, exact or asymptotic.") res = scipy.stats._stats_py.SignificanceResult(tau[()], prob[()]) res.correlation = tau return res def kendalltau_seasonal(x): """ Computes a multivariate Kendall's rank correlation tau, for seasonal data. Parameters ---------- x : 2-D ndarray Array of seasonal data, with seasons in columns. """ x = ma.array(x, subok=True, copy=False, ndmin=2) (n,m) = x.shape n_p = x.count(0) S_szn = sum(msign(x[i:]-x[i]).sum(0) for i in range(n)) S_tot = S_szn.sum() n_tot = x.count() ties = count_tied_groups(x.compressed()) corr_ties = sum(v*k*(k-1) for (k,v) in ties.items()) denom_tot = ma.sqrt(1.*n_tot*(n_tot-1)*(n_tot*(n_tot-1)-corr_ties))/2. R = rankdata(x, axis=0, use_missing=True) K = ma.empty((m,m), dtype=int) covmat = ma.empty((m,m), dtype=float) denom_szn = ma.empty(m, dtype=float) for j in range(m): ties_j = count_tied_groups(x[:,j].compressed()) corr_j = sum(v*k*(k-1) for (k,v) in ties_j.items()) cmb = n_p[j]*(n_p[j]-1) for k in range(j,m,1): K[j,k] = sum(msign((x[i:,j]-x[i,j])*(x[i:,k]-x[i,k])).sum() for i in range(n)) covmat[j,k] = (K[j,k] + 4*(R[:,j]*R[:,k]).sum() - n*(n_p[j]+1)*(n_p[k]+1))/3. K[k,j] = K[j,k] covmat[k,j] = covmat[j,k] denom_szn[j] = ma.sqrt(cmb*(cmb-corr_j)) / 2. var_szn = covmat.diagonal() z_szn = msign(S_szn) * (abs(S_szn)-1) / ma.sqrt(var_szn) z_tot_ind = msign(S_tot) * (abs(S_tot)-1) / ma.sqrt(var_szn.sum()) z_tot_dep = msign(S_tot) * (abs(S_tot)-1) / ma.sqrt(covmat.sum()) prob_szn = special.erfc(abs(z_szn.data)/np.sqrt(2)) prob_tot_ind = special.erfc(abs(z_tot_ind)/np.sqrt(2)) prob_tot_dep = special.erfc(abs(z_tot_dep)/np.sqrt(2)) chi2_tot = (z_szn*z_szn).sum() chi2_trd = m * z_szn.mean()**2 output = {'seasonal tau': S_szn/denom_szn, 'global tau': S_tot/denom_tot, 'global tau (alt)': S_tot/denom_szn.sum(), 'seasonal p-value': prob_szn, 'global p-value (indep)': prob_tot_ind, 'global p-value (dep)': prob_tot_dep, 'chi2 total': chi2_tot, 'chi2 trend': chi2_trd, } return output PointbiserialrResult = namedtuple('PointbiserialrResult', ('correlation', 'pvalue')) def pointbiserialr(x, y): """Calculates a point biserial correlation coefficient and its p-value. Parameters ---------- x : array_like of bools Input array. y : array_like Input array. Returns ------- correlation : float R value pvalue : float 2-tailed p-value Notes ----- Missing values are considered pair-wise: if a value is missing in x, the corresponding value in y is masked. For more details on `pointbiserialr`, see `scipy.stats.pointbiserialr`. """ x = ma.fix_invalid(x, copy=True).astype(bool) y = ma.fix_invalid(y, copy=True).astype(float) # Get rid of the missing data m = ma.mask_or(ma.getmask(x), ma.getmask(y)) if m is not nomask: unmask = np.logical_not(m) x = x[unmask] y = y[unmask] n = len(x) # phat is the fraction of x values that are True phat = x.sum() / float(n) y0 = y[~x] # y-values where x is False y1 = y[x] # y-values where x is True y0m = y0.mean() y1m = y1.mean() rpb = (y1m - y0m)*np.sqrt(phat * (1-phat)) / y.std() df = n-2 t = rpb*ma.sqrt(df/(1.0-rpb**2)) prob = _betai(0.5*df, 0.5, df/(df+t*t)) return PointbiserialrResult(rpb, prob) def linregress(x, y=None): r""" Linear regression calculation Note that the non-masked version is used, and that this docstring is replaced by the non-masked docstring + some info on missing data. """ if y is None: x = ma.array(x) if x.shape[0] == 2: x, y = x elif x.shape[1] == 2: x, y = x.T else: raise ValueError("If only `x` is given as input, " "it has to be of shape (2, N) or (N, 2), " f"provided shape was {x.shape}") else: x = ma.array(x) y = ma.array(y) x = x.flatten() y = y.flatten() if np.amax(x) == np.amin(x) and len(x) > 1: raise ValueError("Cannot calculate a linear regression " "if all x values are identical") m = ma.mask_or(ma.getmask(x), ma.getmask(y), shrink=False) if m is not nomask: x = ma.array(x, mask=m) y = ma.array(y, mask=m) if np.any(~m): result = stats_linregress(x.data[~m], y.data[~m]) else: # All data is masked result = stats_LinregressResult(slope=None, intercept=None, rvalue=None, pvalue=None, stderr=None, intercept_stderr=None) else: result = stats_linregress(x.data, y.data) return result def theilslopes(y, x=None, alpha=0.95, method='separate'): r""" Computes the Theil-Sen estimator for a set of points (x, y). `theilslopes` implements a method for robust linear regression. It computes the slope as the median of all slopes between paired values. Parameters ---------- y : array_like Dependent variable. x : array_like or None, optional Independent variable. If None, use ``arange(len(y))`` instead. alpha : float, optional Confidence degree between 0 and 1. Default is 95% confidence. Note that `alpha` is symmetric around 0.5, i.e. both 0.1 and 0.9 are interpreted as "find the 90% confidence interval". method : {'joint', 'separate'}, optional Method to be used for computing estimate for intercept. Following methods are supported, * 'joint': Uses np.median(y - slope * x) as intercept. * 'separate': Uses np.median(y) - slope * np.median(x) as intercept. The default is 'separate'. .. versionadded:: 1.8.0 Returns ------- result : ``TheilslopesResult`` instance The return value is an object with the following attributes: slope : float Theil slope. intercept : float Intercept of the Theil line. low_slope : float Lower bound of the confidence interval on `slope`. high_slope : float Upper bound of the confidence interval on `slope`. See Also -------- siegelslopes : a similar technique using repeated medians Notes ----- For more details on `theilslopes`, see `scipy.stats.theilslopes`. """ y = ma.asarray(y).flatten() if x is None: x = ma.arange(len(y), dtype=float) else: x = ma.asarray(x).flatten() if len(x) != len(y): raise ValueError(f"Incompatible lengths ! ({len(y)}<>{len(x)})") m = ma.mask_or(ma.getmask(x), ma.getmask(y)) y._mask = x._mask = m # Disregard any masked elements of x or y y = y.compressed() x = x.compressed().astype(float) # We now have unmasked arrays so can use `scipy.stats.theilslopes` return stats_theilslopes(y, x, alpha=alpha, method=method) def siegelslopes(y, x=None, method="hierarchical"): r""" Computes the Siegel estimator for a set of points (x, y). `siegelslopes` implements a method for robust linear regression using repeated medians to fit a line to the points (x, y). The method is robust to outliers with an asymptotic breakdown point of 50%. Parameters ---------- y : array_like Dependent variable. x : array_like or None, optional Independent variable. If None, use ``arange(len(y))`` instead. method : {'hierarchical', 'separate'} If 'hierarchical', estimate the intercept using the estimated slope ``slope`` (default option). If 'separate', estimate the intercept independent of the estimated slope. See Notes for details. Returns ------- result : ``SiegelslopesResult`` instance The return value is an object with the following attributes: slope : float Estimate of the slope of the regression line. intercept : float Estimate of the intercept of the regression line. See Also -------- theilslopes : a similar technique without repeated medians Notes ----- For more details on `siegelslopes`, see `scipy.stats.siegelslopes`. """ y = ma.asarray(y).ravel() if x is None: x = ma.arange(len(y), dtype=float) else: x = ma.asarray(x).ravel() if len(x) != len(y): raise ValueError(f"Incompatible lengths ! ({len(y)}<>{len(x)})") m = ma.mask_or(ma.getmask(x), ma.getmask(y)) y._mask = x._mask = m # Disregard any masked elements of x or y y = y.compressed() x = x.compressed().astype(float) # We now have unmasked arrays so can use `scipy.stats.siegelslopes` return stats_siegelslopes(y, x, method=method) SenSeasonalSlopesResult = _make_tuple_bunch('SenSeasonalSlopesResult', ['intra_slope', 'inter_slope']) def sen_seasonal_slopes(x): r""" Computes seasonal Theil-Sen and Kendall slope estimators. The seasonal generalization of Sen's slope computes the slopes between all pairs of values within a "season" (column) of a 2D array. It returns an array containing the median of these "within-season" slopes for each season (the Theil-Sen slope estimator of each season), and it returns the median of the within-season slopes across all seasons (the seasonal Kendall slope estimator). Parameters ---------- x : 2D array_like Each column of `x` contains measurements of the dependent variable within a season. The independent variable (usually time) of each season is assumed to be ``np.arange(x.shape[0])``. Returns ------- result : ``SenSeasonalSlopesResult`` instance The return value is an object with the following attributes: intra_slope : ndarray For each season, the Theil-Sen slope estimator: the median of within-season slopes. inter_slope : float The seasonal Kendall slope estimateor: the median of within-season slopes *across all* seasons. See Also -------- theilslopes : the analogous function for non-seasonal data scipy.stats.theilslopes : non-seasonal slopes for non-masked arrays Notes ----- The slopes :math:`d_{ijk}` within season :math:`i` are: .. math:: d_{ijk} = \frac{x_{ij} - x_{ik}} {j - k} for pairs of distinct integer indices :math:`j, k` of :math:`x`. Element :math:`i` of the returned `intra_slope` array is the median of the :math:`d_{ijk}` over all :math:`j < k`; this is the Theil-Sen slope estimator of season :math:`i`. The returned `inter_slope` value, better known as the seasonal Kendall slope estimator, is the median of the :math:`d_{ijk}` over all :math:`i, j, k`. References ---------- .. [1] Hirsch, Robert M., James R. Slack, and Richard A. Smith. "Techniques of trend analysis for monthly water quality data." *Water Resources Research* 18.1 (1982): 107-121. Examples -------- Suppose we have 100 observations of a dependent variable for each of four seasons: >>> import numpy as np >>> rng = np.random.default_rng() >>> x = rng.random(size=(100, 4)) We compute the seasonal slopes as: >>> from scipy import stats >>> intra_slope, inter_slope = stats.mstats.sen_seasonal_slopes(x) If we define a function to compute all slopes between observations within a season: >>> def dijk(yi): ... n = len(yi) ... x = np.arange(n) ... dy = yi - yi[:, np.newaxis] ... dx = x - x[:, np.newaxis] ... # we only want unique pairs of distinct indices ... mask = np.triu(np.ones((n, n), dtype=bool), k=1) ... return dy[mask]/dx[mask] then element ``i`` of ``intra_slope`` is the median of ``dijk[x[:, i]]``: >>> i = 2 >>> np.allclose(np.median(dijk(x[:, i])), intra_slope[i]) True and ``inter_slope`` is the median of the values returned by ``dijk`` for all seasons: >>> all_slopes = np.concatenate([dijk(x[:, i]) for i in range(x.shape[1])]) >>> np.allclose(np.median(all_slopes), inter_slope) True Because the data are randomly generated, we would expect the median slopes to be nearly zero both within and across all seasons, and indeed they are: >>> intra_slope.data array([ 0.00124504, -0.00277761, -0.00221245, -0.00036338]) >>> inter_slope -0.0010511779872922058 """ x = ma.array(x, subok=True, copy=False, ndmin=2) (n,_) = x.shape # Get list of slopes per season szn_slopes = ma.vstack([(x[i+1:]-x[i])/np.arange(1,n-i)[:,None] for i in range(n)]) szn_medslopes = ma.median(szn_slopes, axis=0) medslope = ma.median(szn_slopes, axis=None) return SenSeasonalSlopesResult(szn_medslopes, medslope) Ttest_1sampResult = namedtuple('Ttest_1sampResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def ttest_1samp(a, popmean, axis=0, alternative='two-sided'): """ Calculates the T-test for the mean of ONE group of scores. Parameters ---------- a : array_like sample observation popmean : float or array_like expected value in null hypothesis, if array_like than it must have the same shape as `a` excluding the axis dimension axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to compute test. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. alternative : {'two-sided', 'less', 'greater'}, optional Defines the alternative hypothesis. The following options are available (default is 'two-sided'): * 'two-sided': the mean of the underlying distribution of the sample is different than the given population mean (`popmean`) * 'less': the mean of the underlying distribution of the sample is less than the given population mean (`popmean`) * 'greater': the mean of the underlying distribution of the sample is greater than the given population mean (`popmean`) .. versionadded:: 1.7.0 Returns ------- statistic : float or array t-statistic pvalue : float or array The p-value Notes ----- For more details on `ttest_1samp`, see `scipy.stats.ttest_1samp`. """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) if a.size == 0: return (np.nan, np.nan) x = a.mean(axis=axis) v = a.var(axis=axis, ddof=1) n = a.count(axis=axis) # force df to be an array for masked division not to throw a warning df = ma.asanyarray(n - 1.0) svar = ((n - 1.0) * v) / df with np.errstate(divide='ignore', invalid='ignore'): t = (x - popmean) / ma.sqrt(svar / n) t, prob = _ttest_finish(df, t, alternative) return Ttest_1sampResult(t, prob) ttest_onesamp = ttest_1samp Ttest_indResult = namedtuple('Ttest_indResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def ttest_ind(a, b, axis=0, equal_var=True, alternative='two-sided'): """ Calculates the T-test for the means of TWO INDEPENDENT samples of scores. Parameters ---------- a, b : array_like The arrays must have the same shape, except in the dimension corresponding to `axis` (the first, by default). axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to compute test. If None, compute over the whole arrays, `a`, and `b`. equal_var : bool, optional If True, perform a standard independent 2 sample test that assumes equal population variances. If False, perform Welch's t-test, which does not assume equal population variance. .. versionadded:: 0.17.0 alternative : {'two-sided', 'less', 'greater'}, optional Defines the alternative hypothesis. The following options are available (default is 'two-sided'): * 'two-sided': the means of the distributions underlying the samples are unequal. * 'less': the mean of the distribution underlying the first sample is less than the mean of the distribution underlying the second sample. * 'greater': the mean of the distribution underlying the first sample is greater than the mean of the distribution underlying the second sample. .. versionadded:: 1.7.0 Returns ------- statistic : float or array The calculated t-statistic. pvalue : float or array The p-value. Notes ----- For more details on `ttest_ind`, see `scipy.stats.ttest_ind`. """ a, b, axis = _chk2_asarray(a, b, axis) if a.size == 0 or b.size == 0: return Ttest_indResult(np.nan, np.nan) (x1, x2) = (a.mean(axis), b.mean(axis)) (v1, v2) = (a.var(axis=axis, ddof=1), b.var(axis=axis, ddof=1)) (n1, n2) = (a.count(axis), b.count(axis)) if equal_var: # force df to be an array for masked division not to throw a warning df = ma.asanyarray(n1 + n2 - 2.0) svar = ((n1-1)*v1+(n2-1)*v2) / df denom = ma.sqrt(svar*(1.0/n1 + 1.0/n2)) # n-D computation here! else: vn1 = v1/n1 vn2 = v2/n2 with np.errstate(divide='ignore', invalid='ignore'): df = (vn1 + vn2)**2 / (vn1**2 / (n1 - 1) + vn2**2 / (n2 - 1)) # If df is undefined, variances are zero. # It doesn't matter what df is as long as it is not NaN. df = np.where(np.isnan(df), 1, df) denom = ma.sqrt(vn1 + vn2) with np.errstate(divide='ignore', invalid='ignore'): t = (x1-x2) / denom t, prob = _ttest_finish(df, t, alternative) return Ttest_indResult(t, prob) Ttest_relResult = namedtuple('Ttest_relResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def ttest_rel(a, b, axis=0, alternative='two-sided'): """ Calculates the T-test on TWO RELATED samples of scores, a and b. Parameters ---------- a, b : array_like The arrays must have the same shape. axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to compute test. If None, compute over the whole arrays, `a`, and `b`. alternative : {'two-sided', 'less', 'greater'}, optional Defines the alternative hypothesis. The following options are available (default is 'two-sided'): * 'two-sided': the means of the distributions underlying the samples are unequal. * 'less': the mean of the distribution underlying the first sample is less than the mean of the distribution underlying the second sample. * 'greater': the mean of the distribution underlying the first sample is greater than the mean of the distribution underlying the second sample. .. versionadded:: 1.7.0 Returns ------- statistic : float or array t-statistic pvalue : float or array two-tailed p-value Notes ----- For more details on `ttest_rel`, see `scipy.stats.ttest_rel`. """ a, b, axis = _chk2_asarray(a, b, axis) if len(a) != len(b): raise ValueError('unequal length arrays') if a.size == 0 or b.size == 0: return Ttest_relResult(np.nan, np.nan) n = a.count(axis) df = ma.asanyarray(n-1.0) d = (a-b).astype('d') dm = d.mean(axis) v = d.var(axis=axis, ddof=1) denom = ma.sqrt(v / n) with np.errstate(divide='ignore', invalid='ignore'): t = dm / denom t, prob = _ttest_finish(df, t, alternative) return Ttest_relResult(t, prob) MannwhitneyuResult = namedtuple('MannwhitneyuResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def mannwhitneyu(x,y, use_continuity=True): """ Computes the Mann-Whitney statistic Missing values in `x` and/or `y` are discarded. Parameters ---------- x : sequence Input y : sequence Input use_continuity : {True, False}, optional Whether a continuity correction (1/2.) should be taken into account. Returns ------- statistic : float The minimum of the Mann-Whitney statistics pvalue : float Approximate two-sided p-value assuming a normal distribution. """ x = ma.asarray(x).compressed().view(ndarray) y = ma.asarray(y).compressed().view(ndarray) ranks = rankdata(np.concatenate([x,y])) (nx, ny) = (len(x), len(y)) nt = nx + ny U = ranks[:nx].sum() - nx*(nx+1)/2. U = max(U, nx*ny - U) u = nx*ny - U mu = (nx*ny)/2. sigsq = (nt**3 - nt)/12. ties = count_tied_groups(ranks) sigsq -= sum(v*(k**3-k) for (k,v) in ties.items())/12. sigsq *= nx*ny/float(nt*(nt-1)) if use_continuity: z = (U - 1/2. - mu) / ma.sqrt(sigsq) else: z = (U - mu) / ma.sqrt(sigsq) prob = special.erfc(abs(z)/np.sqrt(2)) return MannwhitneyuResult(u, prob) KruskalResult = namedtuple('KruskalResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def kruskal(*args): """ Compute the Kruskal-Wallis H-test for independent samples Parameters ---------- sample1, sample2, ... : array_like Two or more arrays with the sample measurements can be given as arguments. Returns ------- statistic : float The Kruskal-Wallis H statistic, corrected for ties pvalue : float The p-value for the test using the assumption that H has a chi square distribution Notes ----- For more details on `kruskal`, see `scipy.stats.kruskal`. Examples -------- >>> from scipy.stats.mstats import kruskal Random samples from three different brands of batteries were tested to see how long the charge lasted. Results were as follows: >>> a = [6.3, 5.4, 5.7, 5.2, 5.0] >>> b = [6.9, 7.0, 6.1, 7.9] >>> c = [7.2, 6.9, 6.1, 6.5] Test the hypothesis that the distribution functions for all of the brands' durations are identical. Use 5% level of significance. >>> kruskal(a, b, c) KruskalResult(statistic=7.113812154696133, pvalue=0.028526948491942164) The null hypothesis is rejected at the 5% level of significance because the returned p-value is less than the critical value of 5%. """ output = argstoarray(*args) ranks = ma.masked_equal(rankdata(output, use_missing=False), 0) sumrk = ranks.sum(-1) ngrp = ranks.count(-1) ntot = ranks.count() H = 12./(ntot*(ntot+1)) * (sumrk**2/ngrp).sum() - 3*(ntot+1) # Tie correction ties = count_tied_groups(ranks) T = 1. - sum(v*(k**3-k) for (k,v) in ties.items())/float(ntot**3-ntot) if T == 0: raise ValueError('All numbers are identical in kruskal') H /= T df = len(output) - 1 prob = distributions.chi2.sf(H, df) return KruskalResult(H, prob) kruskalwallis = kruskal @_rename_parameter("mode", "method") def ks_1samp(x, cdf, args=(), alternative="two-sided", method='auto'): """ Computes the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test on one sample of masked values. Missing values in `x` are discarded. Parameters ---------- x : array_like a 1-D array of observations of random variables. cdf : str or callable If a string, it should be the name of a distribution in `scipy.stats`. If a callable, that callable is used to calculate the cdf. args : tuple, sequence, optional Distribution parameters, used if `cdf` is a string. alternative : {'two-sided', 'less', 'greater'}, optional Indicates the alternative hypothesis. Default is 'two-sided'. method : {'auto', 'exact', 'asymp'}, optional Defines the method used for calculating the p-value. The following options are available (default is 'auto'): * 'auto' : use 'exact' for small size arrays, 'asymp' for large * 'exact' : use approximation to exact distribution of test statistic * 'asymp' : use asymptotic distribution of test statistic Returns ------- d : float Value of the Kolmogorov Smirnov test p : float Corresponding p-value. """ alternative = {'t': 'two-sided', 'g': 'greater', 'l': 'less'}.get( alternative.lower()[0], alternative) return scipy.stats._stats_py.ks_1samp( x, cdf, args=args, alternative=alternative, method=method) @_rename_parameter("mode", "method") def ks_2samp(data1, data2, alternative="two-sided", method='auto'): """ Computes the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test on two samples. Missing values in `x` and/or `y` are discarded. Parameters ---------- data1 : array_like First data set data2 : array_like Second data set alternative : {'two-sided', 'less', 'greater'}, optional Indicates the alternative hypothesis. Default is 'two-sided'. method : {'auto', 'exact', 'asymp'}, optional Defines the method used for calculating the p-value. The following options are available (default is 'auto'): * 'auto' : use 'exact' for small size arrays, 'asymp' for large * 'exact' : use approximation to exact distribution of test statistic * 'asymp' : use asymptotic distribution of test statistic Returns ------- d : float Value of the Kolmogorov Smirnov test p : float Corresponding p-value. """ # Ideally this would be accomplished by # ks_2samp = scipy.stats._stats_py.ks_2samp # but the circular dependencies between _mstats_basic and stats prevent that. alternative = {'t': 'two-sided', 'g': 'greater', 'l': 'less'}.get( alternative.lower()[0], alternative) return scipy.stats._stats_py.ks_2samp(data1, data2, alternative=alternative, method=method) ks_twosamp = ks_2samp @_rename_parameter("mode", "method") def kstest(data1, data2, args=(), alternative='two-sided', method='auto'): """ Parameters ---------- data1 : array_like data2 : str, callable or array_like args : tuple, sequence, optional Distribution parameters, used if `data1` or `data2` are strings. alternative : str, as documented in stats.kstest method : str, as documented in stats.kstest Returns ------- tuple of (K-S statistic, probability) """ return scipy.stats._stats_py.kstest(data1, data2, args, alternative=alternative, method=method) def trima(a, limits=None, inclusive=(True,True)): """ Trims an array by masking the data outside some given limits. Returns a masked version of the input array. Parameters ---------- a : array_like Input array. limits : {None, tuple}, optional Tuple of (lower limit, upper limit) in absolute values. Values of the input array lower (greater) than the lower (upper) limit will be masked. A limit is None indicates an open interval. inclusive : (bool, bool) tuple, optional Tuple of (lower flag, upper flag), indicating whether values exactly equal to the lower (upper) limit are allowed. Examples -------- >>> from scipy.stats.mstats import trima >>> import numpy as np >>> a = np.arange(10) The interval is left-closed and right-open, i.e., `[2, 8)`. Trim the array by keeping only values in the interval. >>> trima(a, limits=(2, 8), inclusive=(True, False)) masked_array(data=[--, --, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, --, --], mask=[ True, True, False, False, False, False, False, False, True, True], fill_value=999999) """ a = ma.asarray(a) a.unshare_mask() if (limits is None) or (limits == (None, None)): return a (lower_lim, upper_lim) = limits (lower_in, upper_in) = inclusive condition = False if lower_lim is not None: if lower_in: condition |= (a < lower_lim) else: condition |= (a <= lower_lim) if upper_lim is not None: if upper_in: condition |= (a > upper_lim) else: condition |= (a >= upper_lim) a[condition.filled(True)] = masked return a def trimr(a, limits=None, inclusive=(True, True), axis=None): """ Trims an array by masking some proportion of the data on each end. Returns a masked version of the input array. Parameters ---------- a : sequence Input array. limits : {None, tuple}, optional Tuple of the percentages to cut on each side of the array, with respect to the number of unmasked data, as floats between 0. and 1. Noting n the number of unmasked data before trimming, the (n*limits[0])th smallest data and the (n*limits[1])th largest data are masked, and the total number of unmasked data after trimming is n*(1.-sum(limits)). The value of one limit can be set to None to indicate an open interval. inclusive : {(True,True) tuple}, optional Tuple of flags indicating whether the number of data being masked on the left (right) end should be truncated (True) or rounded (False) to integers. axis : {None,int}, optional Axis along which to trim. If None, the whole array is trimmed, but its shape is maintained. """ def _trimr1D(a, low_limit, up_limit, low_inclusive, up_inclusive): n = a.count() idx = a.argsort() if low_limit: if low_inclusive: lowidx = int(low_limit*n) else: lowidx = int(np.round(low_limit*n)) a[idx[:lowidx]] = masked if up_limit is not None: if up_inclusive: upidx = n - int(n*up_limit) else: upidx = n - int(np.round(n*up_limit)) a[idx[upidx:]] = masked return a a = ma.asarray(a) a.unshare_mask() if limits is None: return a # Check the limits (lolim, uplim) = limits errmsg = "The proportion to cut from the %s should be between 0. and 1." if lolim is not None: if lolim > 1. or lolim < 0: raise ValueError(errmsg % 'beginning' + "(got %s)" % lolim) if uplim is not None: if uplim > 1. or uplim < 0: raise ValueError(errmsg % 'end' + "(got %s)" % uplim) (loinc, upinc) = inclusive if axis is None: shp = a.shape return _trimr1D(a.ravel(),lolim,uplim,loinc,upinc).reshape(shp) else: return ma.apply_along_axis(_trimr1D, axis, a, lolim,uplim,loinc,upinc) trimdoc = """ Parameters ---------- a : sequence Input array limits : {None, tuple}, optional If `relative` is False, tuple (lower limit, upper limit) in absolute values. Values of the input array lower (greater) than the lower (upper) limit are masked. If `relative` is True, tuple (lower percentage, upper percentage) to cut on each side of the array, with respect to the number of unmasked data. Noting n the number of unmasked data before trimming, the (n*limits[0])th smallest data and the (n*limits[1])th largest data are masked, and the total number of unmasked data after trimming is n*(1.-sum(limits)) In each case, the value of one limit can be set to None to indicate an open interval. If limits is None, no trimming is performed inclusive : {(bool, bool) tuple}, optional If `relative` is False, tuple indicating whether values exactly equal to the absolute limits are allowed. If `relative` is True, tuple indicating whether the number of data being masked on each side should be rounded (True) or truncated (False). relative : bool, optional Whether to consider the limits as absolute values (False) or proportions to cut (True). axis : int, optional Axis along which to trim. """ def trim(a, limits=None, inclusive=(True,True), relative=False, axis=None): """ Trims an array by masking the data outside some given limits. Returns a masked version of the input array. %s Examples -------- >>> from scipy.stats.mstats import trim >>> z = [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,10] >>> print(trim(z,(3,8))) [-- -- 3 4 5 6 7 8 -- --] >>> print(trim(z,(0.1,0.2),relative=True)) [-- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 -- --] """ if relative: return trimr(a, limits=limits, inclusive=inclusive, axis=axis) else: return trima(a, limits=limits, inclusive=inclusive) if trim.__doc__: trim.__doc__ = trim.__doc__ % trimdoc def trimboth(data, proportiontocut=0.2, inclusive=(True,True), axis=None): """ Trims the smallest and largest data values. Trims the `data` by masking the ``int(proportiontocut * n)`` smallest and ``int(proportiontocut * n)`` largest values of data along the given axis, where n is the number of unmasked values before trimming. Parameters ---------- data : ndarray Data to trim. proportiontocut : float, optional Percentage of trimming (as a float between 0 and 1). If n is the number of unmasked values before trimming, the number of values after trimming is ``(1 - 2*proportiontocut) * n``. Default is 0.2. inclusive : {(bool, bool) tuple}, optional Tuple indicating whether the number of data being masked on each side should be rounded (True) or truncated (False). axis : int, optional Axis along which to perform the trimming. If None, the input array is first flattened. """ return trimr(data, limits=(proportiontocut,proportiontocut), inclusive=inclusive, axis=axis) def trimtail(data, proportiontocut=0.2, tail='left', inclusive=(True,True), axis=None): """ Trims the data by masking values from one tail. Parameters ---------- data : array_like Data to trim. proportiontocut : float, optional Percentage of trimming. If n is the number of unmasked values before trimming, the number of values after trimming is ``(1 - proportiontocut) * n``. Default is 0.2. tail : {'left','right'}, optional If 'left' the `proportiontocut` lowest values will be masked. If 'right' the `proportiontocut` highest values will be masked. Default is 'left'. inclusive : {(bool, bool) tuple}, optional Tuple indicating whether the number of data being masked on each side should be rounded (True) or truncated (False). Default is (True, True). axis : int, optional Axis along which to perform the trimming. If None, the input array is first flattened. Default is None. Returns ------- trimtail : ndarray Returned array of same shape as `data` with masked tail values. """ tail = str(tail).lower()[0] if tail == 'l': limits = (proportiontocut,None) elif tail == 'r': limits = (None, proportiontocut) else: raise TypeError("The tail argument should be in ('left','right')") return trimr(data, limits=limits, axis=axis, inclusive=inclusive) trim1 = trimtail def trimmed_mean(a, limits=(0.1,0.1), inclusive=(1,1), relative=True, axis=None): """Returns the trimmed mean of the data along the given axis. %s """ if (not isinstance(limits,tuple)) and isinstance(limits,float): limits = (limits, limits) if relative: return trimr(a,limits=limits,inclusive=inclusive,axis=axis).mean(axis=axis) else: return trima(a,limits=limits,inclusive=inclusive).mean(axis=axis) if trimmed_mean.__doc__: trimmed_mean.__doc__ = trimmed_mean.__doc__ % trimdoc def trimmed_var(a, limits=(0.1,0.1), inclusive=(1,1), relative=True, axis=None, ddof=0): """Returns the trimmed variance of the data along the given axis. %s ddof : {0,integer}, optional Means Delta Degrees of Freedom. The denominator used during computations is (n-ddof). DDOF=0 corresponds to a biased estimate, DDOF=1 to an un- biased estimate of the variance. """ if (not isinstance(limits,tuple)) and isinstance(limits,float): limits = (limits, limits) if relative: out = trimr(a,limits=limits, inclusive=inclusive,axis=axis) else: out = trima(a,limits=limits,inclusive=inclusive) return out.var(axis=axis, ddof=ddof) if trimmed_var.__doc__: trimmed_var.__doc__ = trimmed_var.__doc__ % trimdoc def trimmed_std(a, limits=(0.1,0.1), inclusive=(1,1), relative=True, axis=None, ddof=0): """Returns the trimmed standard deviation of the data along the given axis. %s ddof : {0,integer}, optional Means Delta Degrees of Freedom. The denominator used during computations is (n-ddof). DDOF=0 corresponds to a biased estimate, DDOF=1 to an un- biased estimate of the variance. """ if (not isinstance(limits,tuple)) and isinstance(limits,float): limits = (limits, limits) if relative: out = trimr(a,limits=limits,inclusive=inclusive,axis=axis) else: out = trima(a,limits=limits,inclusive=inclusive) return out.std(axis=axis,ddof=ddof) if trimmed_std.__doc__: trimmed_std.__doc__ = trimmed_std.__doc__ % trimdoc def trimmed_stde(a, limits=(0.1,0.1), inclusive=(1,1), axis=None): """ Returns the standard error of the trimmed mean along the given axis. Parameters ---------- a : sequence Input array limits : {(0.1,0.1), tuple of float}, optional tuple (lower percentage, upper percentage) to cut on each side of the array, with respect to the number of unmasked data. If n is the number of unmasked data before trimming, the values smaller than ``n * limits[0]`` and the values larger than ``n * `limits[1]`` are masked, and the total number of unmasked data after trimming is ``n * (1.-sum(limits))``. In each case, the value of one limit can be set to None to indicate an open interval. If `limits` is None, no trimming is performed. inclusive : {(bool, bool) tuple} optional Tuple indicating whether the number of data being masked on each side should be rounded (True) or truncated (False). axis : int, optional Axis along which to trim. Returns ------- trimmed_stde : scalar or ndarray """ def _trimmed_stde_1D(a, low_limit, up_limit, low_inclusive, up_inclusive): "Returns the standard error of the trimmed mean for a 1D input data." n = a.count() idx = a.argsort() if low_limit: if low_inclusive: lowidx = int(low_limit*n) else: lowidx = np.round(low_limit*n) a[idx[:lowidx]] = masked if up_limit is not None: if up_inclusive: upidx = n - int(n*up_limit) else: upidx = n - np.round(n*up_limit) a[idx[upidx:]] = masked a[idx[:lowidx]] = a[idx[lowidx]] a[idx[upidx:]] = a[idx[upidx-1]] winstd = a.std(ddof=1) return winstd / ((1-low_limit-up_limit)*np.sqrt(len(a))) a = ma.array(a, copy=True, subok=True) a.unshare_mask() if limits is None: return a.std(axis=axis,ddof=1)/ma.sqrt(a.count(axis)) if (not isinstance(limits,tuple)) and isinstance(limits,float): limits = (limits, limits) # Check the limits (lolim, uplim) = limits errmsg = "The proportion to cut from the %s should be between 0. and 1." if lolim is not None: if lolim > 1. or lolim < 0: raise ValueError(errmsg % 'beginning' + "(got %s)" % lolim) if uplim is not None: if uplim > 1. or uplim < 0: raise ValueError(errmsg % 'end' + "(got %s)" % uplim) (loinc, upinc) = inclusive if (axis is None): return _trimmed_stde_1D(a.ravel(),lolim,uplim,loinc,upinc) else: if a.ndim > 2: raise ValueError("Array 'a' must be at most two dimensional, " "but got a.ndim = %d" % a.ndim) return ma.apply_along_axis(_trimmed_stde_1D, axis, a, lolim,uplim,loinc,upinc) def _mask_to_limits(a, limits, inclusive): """Mask an array for values outside of given limits. This is primarily a utility function. Parameters ---------- a : array limits : (float or None, float or None) A tuple consisting of the (lower limit, upper limit). Values in the input array less than the lower limit or greater than the upper limit will be masked out. None implies no limit. inclusive : (bool, bool) A tuple consisting of the (lower flag, upper flag). These flags determine whether values exactly equal to lower or upper are allowed. Returns ------- A MaskedArray. Raises ------ A ValueError if there are no values within the given limits. """ lower_limit, upper_limit = limits lower_include, upper_include = inclusive am = ma.MaskedArray(a) if lower_limit is not None: if lower_include: am = ma.masked_less(am, lower_limit) else: am = ma.masked_less_equal(am, lower_limit) if upper_limit is not None: if upper_include: am = ma.masked_greater(am, upper_limit) else: am = ma.masked_greater_equal(am, upper_limit) if am.count() == 0: raise ValueError("No array values within given limits") return am def tmean(a, limits=None, inclusive=(True, True), axis=None): """ Compute the trimmed mean. Parameters ---------- a : array_like Array of values. limits : None or (lower limit, upper limit), optional Values in the input array less than the lower limit or greater than the upper limit will be ignored. When limits is None (default), then all values are used. Either of the limit values in the tuple can also be None representing a half-open interval. inclusive : (bool, bool), optional A tuple consisting of the (lower flag, upper flag). These flags determine whether values exactly equal to the lower or upper limits are included. The default value is (True, True). axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to operate. If None, compute over the whole array. Default is None. Returns ------- tmean : float Notes ----- For more details on `tmean`, see `scipy.stats.tmean`. Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy.stats import mstats >>> a = np.array([[6, 8, 3, 0], ... [3, 9, 1, 2], ... [8, 7, 8, 2], ... [5, 6, 0, 2], ... [4, 5, 5, 2]]) ... ... >>> mstats.tmean(a, (2,5)) 3.3 >>> mstats.tmean(a, (2,5), axis=0) masked_array(data=[4.0, 5.0, 4.0, 2.0], mask=[False, False, False, False], fill_value=1e+20) """ return trima(a, limits=limits, inclusive=inclusive).mean(axis=axis) def tvar(a, limits=None, inclusive=(True, True), axis=0, ddof=1): """ Compute the trimmed variance This function computes the sample variance of an array of values, while ignoring values which are outside of given `limits`. Parameters ---------- a : array_like Array of values. limits : None or (lower limit, upper limit), optional Values in the input array less than the lower limit or greater than the upper limit will be ignored. When limits is None, then all values are used. Either of the limit values in the tuple can also be None representing a half-open interval. The default value is None. inclusive : (bool, bool), optional A tuple consisting of the (lower flag, upper flag). These flags determine whether values exactly equal to the lower or upper limits are included. The default value is (True, True). axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to operate. If None, compute over the whole array. Default is zero. ddof : int, optional Delta degrees of freedom. Default is 1. Returns ------- tvar : float Trimmed variance. Notes ----- For more details on `tvar`, see `scipy.stats.tvar`. """ a = a.astype(float).ravel() if limits is None: n = (~a.mask).sum() # todo: better way to do that? return np.ma.var(a) * n/(n-1.) am = _mask_to_limits(a, limits=limits, inclusive=inclusive) return np.ma.var(am, axis=axis, ddof=ddof) def tmin(a, lowerlimit=None, axis=0, inclusive=True): """ Compute the trimmed minimum Parameters ---------- a : array_like array of values lowerlimit : None or float, optional Values in the input array less than the given limit will be ignored. When lowerlimit is None, then all values are used. The default value is None. axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to operate. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. inclusive : {True, False}, optional This flag determines whether values exactly equal to the lower limit are included. The default value is True. Returns ------- tmin : float, int or ndarray Notes ----- For more details on `tmin`, see `scipy.stats.tmin`. Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy.stats import mstats >>> a = np.array([[6, 8, 3, 0], ... [3, 2, 1, 2], ... [8, 1, 8, 2], ... [5, 3, 0, 2], ... [4, 7, 5, 2]]) ... >>> mstats.tmin(a, 5) masked_array(data=[5, 7, 5, --], mask=[False, False, False, True], fill_value=999999) """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) am = trima(a, (lowerlimit, None), (inclusive, False)) return ma.minimum.reduce(am, axis) def tmax(a, upperlimit=None, axis=0, inclusive=True): """ Compute the trimmed maximum This function computes the maximum value of an array along a given axis, while ignoring values larger than a specified upper limit. Parameters ---------- a : array_like array of values upperlimit : None or float, optional Values in the input array greater than the given limit will be ignored. When upperlimit is None, then all values are used. The default value is None. axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to operate. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. inclusive : {True, False}, optional This flag determines whether values exactly equal to the upper limit are included. The default value is True. Returns ------- tmax : float, int or ndarray Notes ----- For more details on `tmax`, see `scipy.stats.tmax`. Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy.stats import mstats >>> a = np.array([[6, 8, 3, 0], ... [3, 9, 1, 2], ... [8, 7, 8, 2], ... [5, 6, 0, 2], ... [4, 5, 5, 2]]) ... ... >>> mstats.tmax(a, 4) masked_array(data=[4, --, 3, 2], mask=[False, True, False, False], fill_value=999999) """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) am = trima(a, (None, upperlimit), (False, inclusive)) return ma.maximum.reduce(am, axis) def tsem(a, limits=None, inclusive=(True, True), axis=0, ddof=1): """ Compute the trimmed standard error of the mean. This function finds the standard error of the mean for given values, ignoring values outside the given `limits`. Parameters ---------- a : array_like array of values limits : None or (lower limit, upper limit), optional Values in the input array less than the lower limit or greater than the upper limit will be ignored. When limits is None, then all values are used. Either of the limit values in the tuple can also be None representing a half-open interval. The default value is None. inclusive : (bool, bool), optional A tuple consisting of the (lower flag, upper flag). These flags determine whether values exactly equal to the lower or upper limits are included. The default value is (True, True). axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to operate. If None, compute over the whole array. Default is zero. ddof : int, optional Delta degrees of freedom. Default is 1. Returns ------- tsem : float Notes ----- For more details on `tsem`, see `scipy.stats.tsem`. """ a = ma.asarray(a).ravel() if limits is None: n = float(a.count()) return a.std(axis=axis, ddof=ddof)/ma.sqrt(n) am = trima(a.ravel(), limits, inclusive) sd = np.sqrt(am.var(axis=axis, ddof=ddof)) return sd / np.sqrt(am.count()) def winsorize(a, limits=None, inclusive=(True, True), inplace=False, axis=None, nan_policy='propagate'): """Returns a Winsorized version of the input array. The (limits[0])th lowest values are set to the (limits[0])th percentile, and the (limits[1])th highest values are set to the (1 - limits[1])th percentile. Masked values are skipped. Parameters ---------- a : sequence Input array. limits : {None, tuple of float}, optional Tuple of the percentages to cut on each side of the array, with respect to the number of unmasked data, as floats between 0. and 1. Noting n the number of unmasked data before trimming, the (n*limits[0])th smallest data and the (n*limits[1])th largest data are masked, and the total number of unmasked data after trimming is n*(1.-sum(limits)) The value of one limit can be set to None to indicate an open interval. inclusive : {(True, True) tuple}, optional Tuple indicating whether the number of data being masked on each side should be truncated (True) or rounded (False). inplace : {False, True}, optional Whether to winsorize in place (True) or to use a copy (False) axis : {None, int}, optional Axis along which to trim. If None, the whole array is trimmed, but its shape is maintained. nan_policy : {'propagate', 'raise', 'omit'}, optional Defines how to handle when input contains nan. The following options are available (default is 'propagate'): * 'propagate': allows nan values and may overwrite or propagate them * 'raise': throws an error * 'omit': performs the calculations ignoring nan values Notes ----- This function is applied to reduce the effect of possibly spurious outliers by limiting the extreme values. Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy.stats.mstats import winsorize A shuffled array contains integers from 1 to 10. >>> a = np.array([10, 4, 9, 8, 5, 3, 7, 2, 1, 6]) The 10% of the lowest value (i.e., `1`) and the 20% of the highest values (i.e., `9` and `10`) are replaced. >>> winsorize(a, limits=[0.1, 0.2]) masked_array(data=[8, 4, 8, 8, 5, 3, 7, 2, 2, 6], mask=False, fill_value=999999) """ def _winsorize1D(a, low_limit, up_limit, low_include, up_include, contains_nan, nan_policy): n = a.count() idx = a.argsort() if contains_nan: nan_count = np.count_nonzero(np.isnan(a)) if low_limit: if low_include: lowidx = int(low_limit * n) else: lowidx = np.round(low_limit * n).astype(int) if contains_nan and nan_policy == 'omit': lowidx = min(lowidx, n-nan_count-1) a[idx[:lowidx]] = a[idx[lowidx]] if up_limit is not None: if up_include: upidx = n - int(n * up_limit) else: upidx = n - np.round(n * up_limit).astype(int) if contains_nan and nan_policy == 'omit': a[idx[upidx:-nan_count]] = a[idx[upidx - 1]] else: a[idx[upidx:]] = a[idx[upidx - 1]] return a contains_nan, nan_policy = _contains_nan(a, nan_policy) # We are going to modify a: better make a copy a = ma.array(a, copy=np.logical_not(inplace)) if limits is None: return a if (not isinstance(limits, tuple)) and isinstance(limits, float): limits = (limits, limits) # Check the limits (lolim, uplim) = limits errmsg = "The proportion to cut from the %s should be between 0. and 1." if lolim is not None: if lolim > 1. or lolim < 0: raise ValueError(errmsg % 'beginning' + "(got %s)" % lolim) if uplim is not None: if uplim > 1. or uplim < 0: raise ValueError(errmsg % 'end' + "(got %s)" % uplim) (loinc, upinc) = inclusive if axis is None: shp = a.shape return _winsorize1D(a.ravel(), lolim, uplim, loinc, upinc, contains_nan, nan_policy).reshape(shp) else: return ma.apply_along_axis(_winsorize1D, axis, a, lolim, uplim, loinc, upinc, contains_nan, nan_policy) def moment(a, moment=1, axis=0): """ Calculates the nth moment about the mean for a sample. Parameters ---------- a : array_like data moment : int, optional order of central moment that is returned axis : int or None, optional Axis along which the central moment is computed. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. Returns ------- n-th central moment : ndarray or float The appropriate moment along the given axis or over all values if axis is None. The denominator for the moment calculation is the number of observations, no degrees of freedom correction is done. Notes ----- For more details about `moment`, see `scipy.stats.moment`. """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) if a.size == 0: moment_shape = list(a.shape) del moment_shape[axis] dtype = a.dtype.type if a.dtype.kind in 'fc' else np.float64 # empty array, return nan(s) with shape matching `moment` out_shape = (moment_shape if np.isscalar(moment) else [len(moment)] + moment_shape) if len(out_shape) == 0: return dtype(np.nan) else: return ma.array(np.full(out_shape, np.nan, dtype=dtype)) # for array_like moment input, return a value for each. if not np.isscalar(moment): mean = a.mean(axis, keepdims=True) mmnt = [_moment(a, i, axis, mean=mean) for i in moment] return ma.array(mmnt) else: return _moment(a, moment, axis) # Moment with optional pre-computed mean, equal to a.mean(axis, keepdims=True) def _moment(a, moment, axis, *, mean=None): if np.abs(moment - np.round(moment)) > 0: raise ValueError("All moment parameters must be integers") if moment == 0 or moment == 1: # By definition the zeroth moment about the mean is 1, and the first # moment is 0. shape = list(a.shape) del shape[axis] dtype = a.dtype.type if a.dtype.kind in 'fc' else np.float64 if len(shape) == 0: return dtype(1.0 if moment == 0 else 0.0) else: return (ma.ones(shape, dtype=dtype) if moment == 0 else ma.zeros(shape, dtype=dtype)) else: # Exponentiation by squares: form exponent sequence n_list = [moment] current_n = moment while current_n > 2: if current_n % 2: current_n = (current_n-1)/2 else: current_n /= 2 n_list.append(current_n) # Starting point for exponentiation by squares mean = a.mean(axis, keepdims=True) if mean is None else mean a_zero_mean = a - mean if n_list[-1] == 1: s = a_zero_mean.copy() else: s = a_zero_mean**2 # Perform multiplications for n in n_list[-2::-1]: s = s**2 if n % 2: s *= a_zero_mean return s.mean(axis) def variation(a, axis=0, ddof=0): """ Compute the coefficient of variation. The coefficient of variation is the standard deviation divided by the mean. This function is equivalent to:: np.std(x, axis=axis, ddof=ddof) / np.mean(x) The default for ``ddof`` is 0, but many definitions of the coefficient of variation use the square root of the unbiased sample variance for the sample standard deviation, which corresponds to ``ddof=1``. Parameters ---------- a : array_like Input array. axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to calculate the coefficient of variation. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. ddof : int, optional Delta degrees of freedom. Default is 0. Returns ------- variation : ndarray The calculated variation along the requested axis. Notes ----- For more details about `variation`, see `scipy.stats.variation`. Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy.stats.mstats import variation >>> a = np.array([2,8,4]) >>> variation(a) 0.5345224838248487 >>> b = np.array([2,8,3,4]) >>> c = np.ma.masked_array(b, mask=[0,0,1,0]) >>> variation(c) 0.5345224838248487 In the example above, it can be seen that this works the same as `scipy.stats.variation` except 'stats.mstats.variation' ignores masked array elements. """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) return a.std(axis, ddof=ddof)/a.mean(axis) def skew(a, axis=0, bias=True): """ Computes the skewness of a data set. Parameters ---------- a : ndarray data axis : int or None, optional Axis along which skewness is calculated. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. bias : bool, optional If False, then the calculations are corrected for statistical bias. Returns ------- skewness : ndarray The skewness of values along an axis, returning 0 where all values are equal. Notes ----- For more details about `skew`, see `scipy.stats.skew`. """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a,axis) mean = a.mean(axis, keepdims=True) m2 = _moment(a, 2, axis, mean=mean) m3 = _moment(a, 3, axis, mean=mean) zero = (m2 <= (np.finfo(m2.dtype).resolution * mean.squeeze(axis))**2) with np.errstate(all='ignore'): vals = ma.where(zero, 0, m3 / m2**1.5) if not bias and zero is not ma.masked and m2 is not ma.masked: n = a.count(axis) can_correct = ~zero & (n > 2) if can_correct.any(): n = np.extract(can_correct, n) m2 = np.extract(can_correct, m2) m3 = np.extract(can_correct, m3) nval = ma.sqrt((n-1.0)*n)/(n-2.0)*m3/m2**1.5 np.place(vals, can_correct, nval) return vals def kurtosis(a, axis=0, fisher=True, bias=True): """ Computes the kurtosis (Fisher or Pearson) of a dataset. Kurtosis is the fourth central moment divided by the square of the variance. If Fisher's definition is used, then 3.0 is subtracted from the result to give 0.0 for a normal distribution. If bias is False then the kurtosis is calculated using k statistics to eliminate bias coming from biased moment estimators Use `kurtosistest` to see if result is close enough to normal. Parameters ---------- a : array data for which the kurtosis is calculated axis : int or None, optional Axis along which the kurtosis is calculated. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. fisher : bool, optional If True, Fisher's definition is used (normal ==> 0.0). If False, Pearson's definition is used (normal ==> 3.0). bias : bool, optional If False, then the calculations are corrected for statistical bias. Returns ------- kurtosis : array The kurtosis of values along an axis. If all values are equal, return -3 for Fisher's definition and 0 for Pearson's definition. Notes ----- For more details about `kurtosis`, see `scipy.stats.kurtosis`. """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) mean = a.mean(axis, keepdims=True) m2 = _moment(a, 2, axis, mean=mean) m4 = _moment(a, 4, axis, mean=mean) zero = (m2 <= (np.finfo(m2.dtype).resolution * mean.squeeze(axis))**2) with np.errstate(all='ignore'): vals = ma.where(zero, 0, m4 / m2**2.0) if not bias and zero is not ma.masked and m2 is not ma.masked: n = a.count(axis) can_correct = ~zero & (n > 3) if can_correct.any(): n = np.extract(can_correct, n) m2 = np.extract(can_correct, m2) m4 = np.extract(can_correct, m4) nval = 1.0/(n-2)/(n-3)*((n*n-1.0)*m4/m2**2.0-3*(n-1)**2.0) np.place(vals, can_correct, nval+3.0) if fisher: return vals - 3 else: return vals DescribeResult = namedtuple('DescribeResult', ('nobs', 'minmax', 'mean', 'variance', 'skewness', 'kurtosis')) def describe(a, axis=0, ddof=0, bias=True): """ Computes several descriptive statistics of the passed array. Parameters ---------- a : array_like Data array axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to calculate statistics. Default 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. ddof : int, optional degree of freedom (default 0); note that default ddof is different from the same routine in stats.describe bias : bool, optional If False, then the skewness and kurtosis calculations are corrected for statistical bias. Returns ------- nobs : int (size of the data (discarding missing values) minmax : (int, int) min, max mean : float arithmetic mean variance : float unbiased variance skewness : float biased skewness kurtosis : float biased kurtosis Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy.stats.mstats import describe >>> ma = np.ma.array(range(6), mask=[0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1]) >>> describe(ma) DescribeResult(nobs=3, minmax=(masked_array(data=0, mask=False, fill_value=999999), masked_array(data=2, mask=False, fill_value=999999)), mean=1.0, variance=0.6666666666666666, skewness=masked_array(data=0., mask=False, fill_value=1e+20), kurtosis=-1.5) """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) n = a.count(axis) mm = (ma.minimum.reduce(a, axis=axis), ma.maximum.reduce(a, axis=axis)) m = a.mean(axis) v = a.var(axis, ddof=ddof) sk = skew(a, axis, bias=bias) kurt = kurtosis(a, axis, bias=bias) return DescribeResult(n, mm, m, v, sk, kurt) def stde_median(data, axis=None): """Returns the McKean-Schrader estimate of the standard error of the sample median along the given axis. masked values are discarded. Parameters ---------- data : ndarray Data to trim. axis : {None,int}, optional Axis along which to perform the trimming. If None, the input array is first flattened. """ def _stdemed_1D(data): data = np.sort(data.compressed()) n = len(data) z = 2.5758293035489004 k = int(np.round((n+1)/2. - z * np.sqrt(n/4.),0)) return ((data[n-k] - data[k-1])/(2.*z)) data = ma.array(data, copy=False, subok=True) if (axis is None): return _stdemed_1D(data) else: if data.ndim > 2: raise ValueError("Array 'data' must be at most two dimensional, " "but got data.ndim = %d" % data.ndim) return ma.apply_along_axis(_stdemed_1D, axis, data) SkewtestResult = namedtuple('SkewtestResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def skewtest(a, axis=0, alternative='two-sided'): """ Tests whether the skew is different from the normal distribution. Parameters ---------- a : array_like The data to be tested axis : int or None, optional Axis along which statistics are calculated. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. alternative : {'two-sided', 'less', 'greater'}, optional Defines the alternative hypothesis. Default is 'two-sided'. The following options are available: * 'two-sided': the skewness of the distribution underlying the sample is different from that of the normal distribution (i.e. 0) * 'less': the skewness of the distribution underlying the sample is less than that of the normal distribution * 'greater': the skewness of the distribution underlying the sample is greater than that of the normal distribution .. versionadded:: 1.7.0 Returns ------- statistic : array_like The computed z-score for this test. pvalue : array_like A p-value for the hypothesis test Notes ----- For more details about `skewtest`, see `scipy.stats.skewtest`. """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) if axis is None: a = a.ravel() axis = 0 b2 = skew(a,axis) n = a.count(axis) if np.min(n) < 8: raise ValueError( "skewtest is not valid with less than 8 samples; %i samples" " were given." % np.min(n)) y = b2 * ma.sqrt(((n+1)*(n+3)) / (6.0*(n-2))) beta2 = (3.0*(n*n+27*n-70)*(n+1)*(n+3)) / ((n-2.0)*(n+5)*(n+7)*(n+9)) W2 = -1 + ma.sqrt(2*(beta2-1)) delta = 1/ma.sqrt(0.5*ma.log(W2)) alpha = ma.sqrt(2.0/(W2-1)) y = ma.where(y == 0, 1, y) Z = delta*ma.log(y/alpha + ma.sqrt((y/alpha)**2+1)) pvalue = scipy.stats._stats_py._get_pvalue(Z, distributions.norm, alternative) return SkewtestResult(Z[()], pvalue[()]) KurtosistestResult = namedtuple('KurtosistestResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def kurtosistest(a, axis=0, alternative='two-sided'): """ Tests whether a dataset has normal kurtosis Parameters ---------- a : array_like array of the sample data axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to compute test. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. alternative : {'two-sided', 'less', 'greater'}, optional Defines the alternative hypothesis. The following options are available (default is 'two-sided'): * 'two-sided': the kurtosis of the distribution underlying the sample is different from that of the normal distribution * 'less': the kurtosis of the distribution underlying the sample is less than that of the normal distribution * 'greater': the kurtosis of the distribution underlying the sample is greater than that of the normal distribution .. versionadded:: 1.7.0 Returns ------- statistic : array_like The computed z-score for this test. pvalue : array_like The p-value for the hypothesis test Notes ----- For more details about `kurtosistest`, see `scipy.stats.kurtosistest`. """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) n = a.count(axis=axis) if np.min(n) < 5: raise ValueError( "kurtosistest requires at least 5 observations; %i observations" " were given." % np.min(n)) if np.min(n) < 20: warnings.warn( "kurtosistest only valid for n>=20 ... continuing anyway, n=%i" % np.min(n), stacklevel=2, ) b2 = kurtosis(a, axis, fisher=False) E = 3.0*(n-1) / (n+1) varb2 = 24.0*n*(n-2.)*(n-3) / ((n+1)*(n+1.)*(n+3)*(n+5)) x = (b2-E)/ma.sqrt(varb2) sqrtbeta1 = 6.0*(n*n-5*n+2)/((n+7)*(n+9)) * np.sqrt((6.0*(n+3)*(n+5)) / (n*(n-2)*(n-3))) A = 6.0 + 8.0/sqrtbeta1 * (2.0/sqrtbeta1 + np.sqrt(1+4.0/(sqrtbeta1**2))) term1 = 1 - 2./(9.0*A) denom = 1 + x*ma.sqrt(2/(A-4.0)) if np.ma.isMaskedArray(denom): # For multi-dimensional array input denom[denom == 0.0] = masked elif denom == 0.0: denom = masked term2 = np.ma.where(denom > 0, ma.power((1-2.0/A)/denom, 1/3.0), -ma.power(-(1-2.0/A)/denom, 1/3.0)) Z = (term1 - term2) / np.sqrt(2/(9.0*A)) pvalue = scipy.stats._stats_py._get_pvalue(Z, distributions.norm, alternative) return KurtosistestResult(Z[()], pvalue[()]) NormaltestResult = namedtuple('NormaltestResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def normaltest(a, axis=0): """ Tests whether a sample differs from a normal distribution. Parameters ---------- a : array_like The array containing the data to be tested. axis : int or None, optional Axis along which to compute test. Default is 0. If None, compute over the whole array `a`. Returns ------- statistic : float or array ``s^2 + k^2``, where ``s`` is the z-score returned by `skewtest` and ``k`` is the z-score returned by `kurtosistest`. pvalue : float or array A 2-sided chi squared probability for the hypothesis test. Notes ----- For more details about `normaltest`, see `scipy.stats.normaltest`. """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) s, _ = skewtest(a, axis) k, _ = kurtosistest(a, axis) k2 = s*s + k*k return NormaltestResult(k2, distributions.chi2.sf(k2, 2)) def mquantiles(a, prob=list([.25,.5,.75]), alphap=.4, betap=.4, axis=None, limit=()): """ Computes empirical quantiles for a data array. Samples quantile are defined by ``Q(p) = (1-gamma)*x[j] + gamma*x[j+1]``, where ``x[j]`` is the j-th order statistic, and gamma is a function of ``j = floor(n*p + m)``, ``m = alphap + p*(1 - alphap - betap)`` and ``g = n*p + m - j``. Reinterpreting the above equations to compare to **R** lead to the equation: ``p(k) = (k - alphap)/(n + 1 - alphap - betap)`` Typical values of (alphap,betap) are: - (0,1) : ``p(k) = k/n`` : linear interpolation of cdf (**R** type 4) - (.5,.5) : ``p(k) = (k - 1/2.)/n`` : piecewise linear function (**R** type 5) - (0,0) : ``p(k) = k/(n+1)`` : (**R** type 6) - (1,1) : ``p(k) = (k-1)/(n-1)``: p(k) = mode[F(x[k])]. (**R** type 7, **R** default) - (1/3,1/3): ``p(k) = (k-1/3)/(n+1/3)``: Then p(k) ~ median[F(x[k])]. The resulting quantile estimates are approximately median-unbiased regardless of the distribution of x. (**R** type 8) - (3/8,3/8): ``p(k) = (k-3/8)/(n+1/4)``: Blom. The resulting quantile estimates are approximately unbiased if x is normally distributed (**R** type 9) - (.4,.4) : approximately quantile unbiased (Cunnane) - (.35,.35): APL, used with PWM Parameters ---------- a : array_like Input data, as a sequence or array of dimension at most 2. prob : array_like, optional List of quantiles to compute. alphap : float, optional Plotting positions parameter, default is 0.4. betap : float, optional Plotting positions parameter, default is 0.4. axis : int, optional Axis along which to perform the trimming. If None (default), the input array is first flattened. limit : tuple, optional Tuple of (lower, upper) values. Values of `a` outside this open interval are ignored. Returns ------- mquantiles : MaskedArray An array containing the calculated quantiles. Notes ----- This formulation is very similar to **R** except the calculation of ``m`` from ``alphap`` and ``betap``, where in **R** ``m`` is defined with each type. References ---------- .. [1] *R* statistical software: https://www.r-project.org/ .. [2] *R* ``quantile`` function: http://stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-devel/library/stats/html/quantile.html Examples -------- >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy.stats.mstats import mquantiles >>> a = np.array([6., 47., 49., 15., 42., 41., 7., 39., 43., 40., 36.]) >>> mquantiles(a) array([ 19.2, 40. , 42.8]) Using a 2D array, specifying axis and limit. >>> data = np.array([[ 6., 7., 1.], ... [ 47., 15., 2.], ... [ 49., 36., 3.], ... [ 15., 39., 4.], ... [ 42., 40., -999.], ... [ 41., 41., -999.], ... [ 7., -999., -999.], ... [ 39., -999., -999.], ... [ 43., -999., -999.], ... [ 40., -999., -999.], ... [ 36., -999., -999.]]) >>> print(mquantiles(data, axis=0, limit=(0, 50))) [[19.2 14.6 1.45] [40. 37.5 2.5 ] [42.8 40.05 3.55]] >>> data[:, 2] = -999. >>> print(mquantiles(data, axis=0, limit=(0, 50))) [[19.200000000000003 14.6 --] [40.0 37.5 --] [42.800000000000004 40.05 --]] """ def _quantiles1D(data,m,p): x = np.sort(data.compressed()) n = len(x) if n == 0: return ma.array(np.empty(len(p), dtype=float), mask=True) elif n == 1: return ma.array(np.resize(x, p.shape), mask=nomask) aleph = (n*p + m) k = np.floor(aleph.clip(1, n-1)).astype(int) gamma = (aleph-k).clip(0,1) return (1.-gamma)*x[(k-1).tolist()] + gamma*x[k.tolist()] data = ma.array(a, copy=False) if data.ndim > 2: raise TypeError("Array should be 2D at most !") if limit: condition = (limit[0] < data) & (data < limit[1]) data[~condition.filled(True)] = masked p = np.atleast_1d(np.asarray(prob)) m = alphap + p*(1.-alphap-betap) # Computes quantiles along axis (or globally) if (axis is None): return _quantiles1D(data, m, p) return ma.apply_along_axis(_quantiles1D, axis, data, m, p) def scoreatpercentile(data, per, limit=(), alphap=.4, betap=.4): """Calculate the score at the given 'per' percentile of the sequence a. For example, the score at per=50 is the median. This function is a shortcut to mquantile """ if (per < 0) or (per > 100.): raise ValueError("The percentile should be between 0. and 100. !" " (got %s)" % per) return mquantiles(data, prob=[per/100.], alphap=alphap, betap=betap, limit=limit, axis=0).squeeze() def plotting_positions(data, alpha=0.4, beta=0.4): """ Returns plotting positions (or empirical percentile points) for the data. Plotting positions are defined as ``(i-alpha)/(n+1-alpha-beta)``, where: - i is the rank order statistics - n is the number of unmasked values along the given axis - `alpha` and `beta` are two parameters. Typical values for `alpha` and `beta` are: - (0,1) : ``p(k) = k/n``, linear interpolation of cdf (R, type 4) - (.5,.5) : ``p(k) = (k-1/2.)/n``, piecewise linear function (R, type 5) - (0,0) : ``p(k) = k/(n+1)``, Weibull (R type 6) - (1,1) : ``p(k) = (k-1)/(n-1)``, in this case, ``p(k) = mode[F(x[k])]``. That's R default (R type 7) - (1/3,1/3): ``p(k) = (k-1/3)/(n+1/3)``, then ``p(k) ~ median[F(x[k])]``. The resulting quantile estimates are approximately median-unbiased regardless of the distribution of x. (R type 8) - (3/8,3/8): ``p(k) = (k-3/8)/(n+1/4)``, Blom. The resulting quantile estimates are approximately unbiased if x is normally distributed (R type 9) - (.4,.4) : approximately quantile unbiased (Cunnane) - (.35,.35): APL, used with PWM - (.3175, .3175): used in scipy.stats.probplot Parameters ---------- data : array_like Input data, as a sequence or array of dimension at most 2. alpha : float, optional Plotting positions parameter. Default is 0.4. beta : float, optional Plotting positions parameter. Default is 0.4. Returns ------- positions : MaskedArray The calculated plotting positions. """ data = ma.array(data, copy=False).reshape(1,-1) n = data.count() plpos = np.empty(data.size, dtype=float) plpos[n:] = 0 plpos[data.argsort(axis=None)[:n]] = ((np.arange(1, n+1) - alpha) / (n + 1.0 - alpha - beta)) return ma.array(plpos, mask=data._mask) meppf = plotting_positions def obrientransform(*args): """ Computes a transform on input data (any number of columns). Used to test for homogeneity of variance prior to running one-way stats. Each array in ``*args`` is one level of a factor. If an `f_oneway()` run on the transformed data and found significant, variances are unequal. From Maxwell and Delaney, p.112. Returns: transformed data for use in an ANOVA """ data = argstoarray(*args).T v = data.var(axis=0,ddof=1) m = data.mean(0) n = data.count(0).astype(float) # result = ((N-1.5)*N*(a-m)**2 - 0.5*v*(n-1))/((n-1)*(n-2)) data -= m data **= 2 data *= (n-1.5)*n data -= 0.5*v*(n-1) data /= (n-1.)*(n-2.) if not ma.allclose(v,data.mean(0)): raise ValueError("Lack of convergence in obrientransform.") return data def sem(a, axis=0, ddof=1): """ Calculates the standard error of the mean of the input array. Also sometimes called standard error of measurement. Parameters ---------- a : array_like An array containing the values for which the standard error is returned. axis : int or None, optional If axis is None, ravel `a` first. If axis is an integer, this will be the axis over which to operate. Defaults to 0. ddof : int, optional Delta degrees-of-freedom. How many degrees of freedom to adjust for bias in limited samples relative to the population estimate of variance. Defaults to 1. Returns ------- s : ndarray or float The standard error of the mean in the sample(s), along the input axis. Notes ----- The default value for `ddof` changed in scipy 0.15.0 to be consistent with `scipy.stats.sem` as well as with the most common definition used (like in the R documentation). Examples -------- Find standard error along the first axis: >>> import numpy as np >>> from scipy import stats >>> a = np.arange(20).reshape(5,4) >>> print(stats.mstats.sem(a)) [2.8284271247461903 2.8284271247461903 2.8284271247461903 2.8284271247461903] Find standard error across the whole array, using n degrees of freedom: >>> print(stats.mstats.sem(a, axis=None, ddof=0)) 1.2893796958227628 """ a, axis = _chk_asarray(a, axis) n = a.count(axis=axis) s = a.std(axis=axis, ddof=ddof) / ma.sqrt(n) return s F_onewayResult = namedtuple('F_onewayResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def f_oneway(*args): """ Performs a 1-way ANOVA, returning an F-value and probability given any number of groups. From Heiman, pp.394-7. Usage: ``f_oneway(*args)``, where ``*args`` is 2 or more arrays, one per treatment group. Returns ------- statistic : float The computed F-value of the test. pvalue : float The associated p-value from the F-distribution. """ # Construct a single array of arguments: each row is a group data = argstoarray(*args) ngroups = len(data) ntot = data.count() sstot = (data**2).sum() - (data.sum())**2/float(ntot) ssbg = (data.count(-1) * (data.mean(-1)-data.mean())**2).sum() sswg = sstot-ssbg dfbg = ngroups-1 dfwg = ntot - ngroups msb = ssbg/float(dfbg) msw = sswg/float(dfwg) f = msb/msw prob = special.fdtrc(dfbg, dfwg, f) # equivalent to stats.f.sf return F_onewayResult(f, prob) FriedmanchisquareResult = namedtuple('FriedmanchisquareResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def friedmanchisquare(*args): """Friedman Chi-Square is a non-parametric, one-way within-subjects ANOVA. This function calculates the Friedman Chi-square test for repeated measures and returns the result, along with the associated probability value. Each input is considered a given group. Ideally, the number of treatments among each group should be equal. If this is not the case, only the first n treatments are taken into account, where n is the number of treatments of the smallest group. If a group has some missing values, the corresponding treatments are masked in the other groups. The test statistic is corrected for ties. Masked values in one group are propagated to the other groups. Returns ------- statistic : float the test statistic. pvalue : float the associated p-value. """ data = argstoarray(*args).astype(float) k = len(data) if k < 3: raise ValueError("Less than 3 groups (%i): " % k + "the Friedman test is NOT appropriate.") ranked = ma.masked_values(rankdata(data, axis=0), 0) if ranked._mask is not nomask: ranked = ma.mask_cols(ranked) ranked = ranked.compressed().reshape(k,-1).view(ndarray) else: ranked = ranked._data (k,n) = ranked.shape # Ties correction repeats = [find_repeats(row) for row in ranked.T] ties = np.array([y for x, y in repeats if x.size > 0]) tie_correction = 1 - (ties**3-ties).sum()/float(n*(k**3-k)) ssbg = np.sum((ranked.sum(-1) - n*(k+1)/2.)**2) chisq = ssbg * 12./(n*k*(k+1)) * 1./tie_correction return FriedmanchisquareResult(chisq, distributions.chi2.sf(chisq, k-1)) BrunnerMunzelResult = namedtuple('BrunnerMunzelResult', ('statistic', 'pvalue')) def brunnermunzel(x, y, alternative="two-sided", distribution="t"): """ Compute the Brunner-Munzel test on samples x and y. Any missing values in `x` and/or `y` are discarded. The Brunner-Munzel test is a nonparametric test of the null hypothesis that when values are taken one by one from each group, the probabilities of getting large values in both groups are equal. Unlike the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney's U test, this does not require the assumption of equivariance of two groups. Note that this does not assume the distributions are same. This test works on two independent samples, which may have different sizes. Parameters ---------- x, y : array_like Array of samples, should be one-dimensional. alternative : 'less', 'two-sided', or 'greater', optional Whether to get the p-value for the one-sided hypothesis ('less' or 'greater') or for the two-sided hypothesis ('two-sided'). Defaults value is 'two-sided' . distribution : 't' or 'normal', optional Whether to get the p-value by t-distribution or by standard normal distribution. Defaults value is 't' . Returns ------- statistic : float The Brunner-Munzer W statistic. pvalue : float p-value assuming an t distribution. One-sided or two-sided, depending on the choice of `alternative` and `distribution`. See Also -------- mannwhitneyu : Mann-Whitney rank test on two samples. Notes ----- For more details on `brunnermunzel`, see `scipy.stats.brunnermunzel`. Examples -------- >>> from scipy.stats.mstats import brunnermunzel >>> import numpy as np >>> x1 = [1, 2, np.nan, np.nan, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 4, 1, 1] >>> x2 = [3, 3, 4, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 1, 5, 4] >>> brunnermunzel(x1, x2) BrunnerMunzelResult(statistic=1.4723186918922935, pvalue=0.15479415300426624) # may vary """ # noqa: E501 x = ma.asarray(x).compressed().view(ndarray) y = ma.asarray(y).compressed().view(ndarray) nx = len(x) ny = len(y) if nx == 0 or ny == 0: return BrunnerMunzelResult(np.nan, np.nan) rankc = rankdata(np.concatenate((x,y))) rankcx = rankc[0:nx] rankcy = rankc[nx:nx+ny] rankcx_mean = np.mean(rankcx) rankcy_mean = np.mean(rankcy) rankx = rankdata(x) ranky = rankdata(y) rankx_mean = np.mean(rankx) ranky_mean = np.mean(ranky) Sx = np.sum(np.power(rankcx - rankx - rankcx_mean + rankx_mean, 2.0)) Sx /= nx - 1 Sy = np.sum(np.power(rankcy - ranky - rankcy_mean + ranky_mean, 2.0)) Sy /= ny - 1 wbfn = nx * ny * (rankcy_mean - rankcx_mean) wbfn /= (nx + ny) * np.sqrt(nx * Sx + ny * Sy) if distribution == "t": df_numer = np.power(nx * Sx + ny * Sy, 2.0) df_denom = np.power(nx * Sx, 2.0) / (nx - 1) df_denom += np.power(ny * Sy, 2.0) / (ny - 1) df = df_numer / df_denom p = distributions.t.cdf(wbfn, df) elif distribution == "normal": p = distributions.norm.cdf(wbfn) else: raise ValueError( "distribution should be 't' or 'normal'") if alternative == "greater": pass elif alternative == "less": p = 1 - p elif alternative == "two-sided": p = 2 * np.min([p, 1-p]) else: raise ValueError( "alternative should be 'less', 'greater' or 'two-sided'") return BrunnerMunzelResult(wbfn, p)