1

I created the plot below using:

ggplot(data_all, aes(x = data_all$Speed, fill = data_all$Season)) + 
  theme_bw() +
  geom_histogram(position = "identity", alpha = 0.2, binwidth=0.1)

As you can see, the difference in the amount of data available is very large. Is there a way to look only at the distribution and not at the total data amount?

enter image description here

1 Answer 1

3

You can reference some of the other calculated values from stat functions using a notation that you may have seen before: ..value... I'm not sure the proper name for these or where you can find a list documented, but sometimes these are called "special variables" or "calculated aesthetics".

In this case, the default calculated aesthetic on the y axis for geom_histogram() is ..count... When comparing distributions of different total N size, it's useful to use ..density... You can access ..density.. by passing it to the y aesthetic directly in the geom_histogram() function.

First, here's an example of two histograms with vastly different sizes (similar to OP's question):

library(ggplot2)

set.seed(8675309)
df <- data.frame(
 x = c(rnorm(1000, -1, 0.5), rnorm(100000, 3, 1)),
 group = c(rep("A", 1000), rep("B", 100000))
)

ggplot(df, aes(x, fill=group)) + theme_classic() +
  geom_histogram(
    alpha=0.2, color='gray80',
    position="identity", bins=80)

enter image description here

And here's the same plot using ..density..:

ggplot(df, aes(x, fill=group)) + theme_classic() +
  geom_histogram(
    aes(y=..density..), alpha=0.2, color='gray80',
    position="identity", bins=80)

enter image description here

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.