When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. UpSet plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UpSet_plot

    UpSet plots became popular as they became available as an R-library based on ggplot2, [3] and were subsequently re-implemented in various programming languages, such as Python, and others. [4] As of January 2024, UpSetR has been downloaded from CRAN more than 1.5 million times, although it was last updated 5 years ago. [ 5 ]

  3. ggplot2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ggplot2

    ggplot2 is an open-source data visualization package for the statistical programming language R.Created by Hadley Wickham in 2005, ggplot2 is an implementation of Leland Wilkinson's Grammar of Graphics—a general scheme for data visualization which breaks up graphs into semantic components such as scales and layers. ggplot2 can serve as a replacement for the base graphics in R and contains a ...

  4. Box plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box_plot

    Figure 2. Box-plot with whiskers from minimum to maximum Figure 3. Same box-plot with whiskers drawn within the 1.5 IQR value. A boxplot is a standardized way of displaying the dataset based on the five-number summary: the minimum, the maximum, the sample median, and the first and third quartiles.

  5. Plotly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plotly

    Plotly was founded by Alex Johnson, Jack Parmer, Chris Parmer, and Matthew Sundquist. [2]The founders' backgrounds are in science, energy, and data analysis and visualization. [2]

  6. Functional boxplot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_boxplot

    In statistical graphics, the functional boxplot is an informative exploratory tool that has been proposed for visualizing functional data. [1] [2] Analogous to the classical boxplot, the descriptive statistics of a functional boxplot are: the envelope of the 50% central region, the median curve and the maximum non-outlying envelope.

  7. Contour boxplot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contour_boxplot

    Analogous to the classical boxplot and considered an expansion of the concepts defining functional boxplot, [2] [3] the descriptive statistics of a contour boxplot are: the envelope of the 50% central region, the median curve and the maximum non-outlying envelope. To construct a contour boxplot, data ordering is the first step.

  8. Box counting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box_counting

    Figure 1. A 32-segment quadric fractal viewed through "boxes" of different sizes. The pattern illustrates self similarity.. Box counting is a method of gathering data for analyzing complex patterns by breaking a dataset, object, image, etc. into smaller and smaller pieces, typically "box"-shaped, and analyzing the pieces at each smaller scale.

  9. Estimation statistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estimation_statistics

    While historical data-group plots (bar charts, box plots, and violin plots) do not display the comparison, estimation plots add a second axis to explicitly visualize the effect size. [28] The Gardner–Altman plot. Left: A conventional bar chart, using asterisks to show that the difference is 'statistically significant.'