package scipy

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val get_py : string -> Py.Object.t

Get an attribute of this module as a Py.Object.t. This is useful to pass a Python function to another function.

val chi2_contingency : ?correction:bool -> ?lambda_:[ `F of float | `S of string ] -> observed:[> `Ndarray ] Np.Obj.t -> unit -> float * float * int * Py.Object.t

Chi-square test of independence of variables in a contingency table.

This function computes the chi-square statistic and p-value for the hypothesis test of independence of the observed frequencies in the contingency table 1_ `observed`. The expected frequencies are computed based on the marginal sums under the assumption of independence; see `scipy.stats.contingency.expected_freq`. The number of degrees of freedom is (expressed using numpy functions and attributes)::

dof = observed.size - sum(observed.shape) + observed.ndim - 1

Parameters ---------- observed : array_like The contingency table. The table contains the observed frequencies (i.e. number of occurrences) in each category. In the two-dimensional case, the table is often described as an 'R x C table'. correction : bool, optional If True, *and* the degrees of freedom is 1, apply Yates' correction for continuity. The effect of the correction is to adjust each observed value by 0.5 towards the corresponding expected value. lambda_ : float or str, optional. By default, the statistic computed in this test is Pearson's chi-squared statistic 2_. `lambda_` allows a statistic from the Cressie-Read power divergence family 3_ to be used instead. See `power_divergence` for details.

Returns ------- chi2 : float The test statistic. p : float The p-value of the test dof : int Degrees of freedom expected : ndarray, same shape as `observed` The expected frequencies, based on the marginal sums of the table.

See Also -------- contingency.expected_freq fisher_exact chisquare power_divergence

Notes ----- An often quoted guideline for the validity of this calculation is that the test should be used only if the observed and expected frequencies in each cell are at least 5.

This is a test for the independence of different categories of a population. The test is only meaningful when the dimension of `observed` is two or more. Applying the test to a one-dimensional table will always result in `expected` equal to `observed` and a chi-square statistic equal to 0.

This function does not handle masked arrays, because the calculation does not make sense with missing values.

Like stats.chisquare, this function computes a chi-square statistic; the convenience this function provides is to figure out the expected frequencies and degrees of freedom from the given contingency table. If these were already known, and if the Yates' correction was not required, one could use stats.chisquare. That is, if one calls::

chi2, p, dof, ex = chi2_contingency(obs, correction=False)

then the following is true::

(chi2, p) == stats.chisquare(obs.ravel(), f_exp=ex.ravel(), ddof=obs.size - 1 - dof)

The `lambda_` argument was added in version 0.13.0 of scipy.

References ---------- .. 1 'Contingency table', https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contingency_table .. 2 'Pearson's chi-squared test', https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearson%27s_chi-squared_test .. 3 Cressie, N. and Read, T. R. C., 'Multinomial Goodness-of-Fit Tests', J. Royal Stat. Soc. Series B, Vol. 46, No. 3 (1984), pp. 440-464.

Examples -------- A two-way example (2 x 3):

>>> from scipy.stats import chi2_contingency >>> obs = np.array([10, 10, 20], [20, 20, 20]) >>> chi2_contingency(obs) (2.7777777777777777, 0.24935220877729619, 2, array([ 12., 12., 16.], [ 18., 18., 24.]))

Perform the test using the log-likelihood ratio (i.e. the 'G-test') instead of Pearson's chi-squared statistic.

>>> g, p, dof, expctd = chi2_contingency(obs, lambda_='log-likelihood') >>> g, p (2.7688587616781319, 0.25046668010954165)

A four-way example (2 x 2 x 2 x 2):

>>> obs = np.array( ... [[[12, 17], ... [11, 16]], ... [[11, 12], ... [15, 16]]], ... [[[23, 15], ... [30, 22]], ... [[14, 17], ... [15, 16]]]) >>> chi2_contingency(obs) (8.7584514426741897, 0.64417725029295503, 11, array([[[ 14.15462386, 14.15462386], [ 16.49423111, 16.49423111]], [[ 11.2461395 , 11.2461395 ], [ 13.10500554, 13.10500554]]], [[[ 19.5591166 , 19.5591166 ], [ 22.79202844, 22.79202844]], [[ 15.54012004, 15.54012004], [ 18.10873492, 18.10873492]]]))

val expected_freq : [> `Ndarray ] Np.Obj.t -> Py.Object.t

Compute the expected frequencies from a contingency table.

Given an n-dimensional contingency table of observed frequencies, compute the expected frequencies for the table based on the marginal sums under the assumption that the groups associated with each dimension are independent.

Parameters ---------- observed : array_like The table of observed frequencies. (While this function can handle a 1-D array, that case is trivial. Generally `observed` is at least 2-D.)

Returns ------- expected : ndarray of float64 The expected frequencies, based on the marginal sums of the table. Same shape as `observed`.

Examples -------- >>> observed = np.array([10, 10, 20],[20, 20, 20]) >>> from scipy.stats.contingency import expected_freq >>> expected_freq(observed) array([ 12., 12., 16.], [ 18., 18., 24.])

val margins : [> `Ndarray ] Np.Obj.t -> Py.Object.t

Return a list of the marginal sums of the array `a`.

Parameters ---------- a : ndarray The array for which to compute the marginal sums.

Returns ------- margsums : list of ndarrays A list of length `a.ndim`. `margsumsk` is the result of summing `a` over all axes except `k`; it has the same number of dimensions as `a`, but the length of each axis except axis `k` will be 1.

Examples -------- >>> a = np.arange(12).reshape(2, 6) >>> a array([ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5], [ 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]) >>> from scipy.stats.contingency import margins >>> m0, m1 = margins(a) >>> m0 array([15], [51]) >>> m1 array([ 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16])

>>> b = np.arange(24).reshape(2,3,4) >>> m0, m1, m2 = margins(b) >>> m0 array([[ 66]], [[210]]) >>> m1 array([[ 60], [ 92], [124]]) >>> m2 array([[60, 66, 72, 78]])

val power_divergence : ?f_exp:[> `Ndarray ] Np.Obj.t -> ?ddof:int -> ?axis:[ `I of int | `None ] -> ?lambda_:[ `F of float | `S of string ] -> f_obs:[> `Ndarray ] Np.Obj.t -> unit -> Py.Object.t * Py.Object.t

Cressie-Read power divergence statistic and goodness of fit test.

This function tests the null hypothesis that the categorical data has the given frequencies, using the Cressie-Read power divergence statistic.

Parameters ---------- f_obs : array_like Observed frequencies in each category. f_exp : array_like, optional Expected frequencies in each category. By default the categories are assumed to be equally likely. ddof : int, optional 'Delta degrees of freedom': adjustment to the degrees of freedom for the p-value. The p-value is computed using a chi-squared distribution with ``k - 1 - ddof`` degrees of freedom, where `k` is the number of observed frequencies. The default value of `ddof` is 0. axis : int or None, optional The axis of the broadcast result of `f_obs` and `f_exp` along which to apply the test. If axis is None, all values in `f_obs` are treated as a single data set. Default is 0. lambda_ : float or str, optional The power in the Cressie-Read power divergence statistic. The default is 1. For convenience, `lambda_` may be assigned one of the following strings, in which case the corresponding numerical value is used::

String Value Description 'pearson' 1 Pearson's chi-squared statistic. In this case, the function is equivalent to `stats.chisquare`. 'log-likelihood' 0 Log-likelihood ratio. Also known as the G-test 3_. 'freeman-tukey' -1/2 Freeman-Tukey statistic. 'mod-log-likelihood' -1 Modified log-likelihood ratio. 'neyman' -2 Neyman's statistic. 'cressie-read' 2/3 The power recommended in 5_.

Returns ------- statistic : float or ndarray The Cressie-Read power divergence test statistic. The value is a float if `axis` is None or if` `f_obs` and `f_exp` are 1-D. pvalue : float or ndarray The p-value of the test. The value is a float if `ddof` and the return value `stat` are scalars.

See Also -------- chisquare

Notes ----- This test is invalid when the observed or expected frequencies in each category are too small. A typical rule is that all of the observed and expected frequencies should be at least 5.

When `lambda_` is less than zero, the formula for the statistic involves dividing by `f_obs`, so a warning or error may be generated if any value in `f_obs` is 0.

Similarly, a warning or error may be generated if any value in `f_exp` is zero when `lambda_` >= 0.

The default degrees of freedom, k-1, are for the case when no parameters of the distribution are estimated. If p parameters are estimated by efficient maximum likelihood then the correct degrees of freedom are k-1-p. If the parameters are estimated in a different way, then the dof can be between k-1-p and k-1. However, it is also possible that the asymptotic distribution is not a chisquare, in which case this test is not appropriate.

This function handles masked arrays. If an element of `f_obs` or `f_exp` is masked, then data at that position is ignored, and does not count towards the size of the data set.

.. versionadded:: 0.13.0

References ---------- .. 1 Lowry, Richard. 'Concepts and Applications of Inferential Statistics'. Chapter 8. https://web.archive.org/web/20171015035606/http://faculty.vassar.edu/lowry/ch8pt1.html .. 2 'Chi-squared test', https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chi-squared_test .. 3 'G-test', https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G-test .. 4 Sokal, R. R. and Rohlf, F. J. 'Biometry: the principles and practice of statistics in biological research', New York: Freeman (1981) .. 5 Cressie, N. and Read, T. R. C., 'Multinomial Goodness-of-Fit Tests', J. Royal Stat. Soc. Series B, Vol. 46, No. 3 (1984), pp. 440-464.

Examples -------- (See `chisquare` for more examples.)

When just `f_obs` is given, it is assumed that the expected frequencies are uniform and given by the mean of the observed frequencies. Here we perform a G-test (i.e. use the log-likelihood ratio statistic):

>>> from scipy.stats import power_divergence >>> power_divergence(16, 18, 16, 14, 12, 12, lambda_='log-likelihood') (2.006573162632538, 0.84823476779463769)

The expected frequencies can be given with the `f_exp` argument:

>>> power_divergence(16, 18, 16, 14, 12, 12, ... f_exp=16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 8, ... lambda_='log-likelihood') (3.3281031458963746, 0.6495419288047497)

When `f_obs` is 2-D, by default the test is applied to each column.

>>> obs = np.array([16, 18, 16, 14, 12, 12], [32, 24, 16, 28, 20, 24]).T >>> obs.shape (6, 2) >>> power_divergence(obs, lambda_='log-likelihood') (array( 2.00657316, 6.77634498), array( 0.84823477, 0.23781225))

By setting ``axis=None``, the test is applied to all data in the array, which is equivalent to applying the test to the flattened array.

>>> power_divergence(obs, axis=None) (23.31034482758621, 0.015975692534127565) >>> power_divergence(obs.ravel()) (23.31034482758621, 0.015975692534127565)

`ddof` is the change to make to the default degrees of freedom.

>>> power_divergence(16, 18, 16, 14, 12, 12, ddof=1) (2.0, 0.73575888234288467)

The calculation of the p-values is done by broadcasting the test statistic with `ddof`.

>>> power_divergence(16, 18, 16, 14, 12, 12, ddof=0,1,2) (2.0, array( 0.84914504, 0.73575888, 0.5724067 ))

`f_obs` and `f_exp` are also broadcast. In the following, `f_obs` has shape (6,) and `f_exp` has shape (2, 6), so the result of broadcasting `f_obs` and `f_exp` has shape (2, 6). To compute the desired chi-squared statistics, we must use ``axis=1``:

>>> power_divergence(16, 18, 16, 14, 12, 12, ... f_exp=[16, 16, 16, 16, 16, 8], ... [8, 20, 20, 16, 12, 12], ... axis=1) (array( 3.5 , 9.25), array( 0.62338763, 0.09949846))

val reduce : ?initial:Py.Object.t -> function_:Py.Object.t -> sequence:Py.Object.t -> unit -> Py.Object.t

reduce(function, sequence, initial) -> value

Apply a function of two arguments cumulatively to the items of a sequence, from left to right, so as to reduce the sequence to a single value. For example, reduce(lambda x, y: x+y, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) calculates ((((1+2)+3)+4)+5). If initial is present, it is placed before the items of the sequence in the calculation, and serves as a default when the sequence is empty.

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