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In R, how to use ellipses to represent error bars (standard deviation) for x and y variables if only summary data, i.e. mean and SD for different data sets, are available. Any feedback is appreciated.

3 Answers 3

2

You can write your own function like this one:

draw_ellipse = function (mean_x, mean_y, sd_x, sd_y)
{
    ellipse <- function (x) { sin(acos(x)) }
    t = seq(-1, 1, length.out = 100)
    el_y = sd_y*ellipse(t)
    newx = mean_x + sd_x * t
    polygon(c(newx, rev(newx)), c(mean_y + el_y, rev(mean_y - el_y)), col = "grey", border = NA)
}

You can use it very easily using apply():

x = runif(10)
y = runif(10)
sd_x = abs(rnorm(10, 0.1, 0.02))
sd_y = abs(rnorm(10, 0.05, 0.01))
plot(x, y)
df = data.frame(x, y, sd_x, sd_y)
apply(df, 1, function (x) { draw_ellipse(x[1], x[2], x[3], x[4]) })
points(x, y, pch = 3)

Solution for plotting ellipses with different colors:

draw_ellipse = function (mean_x, mean_y, sd_x, sd_y, colidx)
{
    ellipse <- function (x) { sin(acos(x)) }
    t = seq(-1, 1, length.out = 100)
    el_y = sd_y*ellipse(t)
    newx = mean_x + sd_x * t
    polygon(c(newx, rev(newx)), c(mean_y + el_y, rev(mean_y - el_y)), col = as.character(colors[colidx]), border = NA)
}

x = runif(10)
y = runif(10)
sd_x = abs(rnorm(10, 0.1, 0.02))
sd_y = abs(rnorm(10, 0.05, 0.01))
plot(x, y)
colors = rainbow(length(x))
df = data.frame(x, y, sd_x, sd_y, colidx = 1:length(x))
apply(df, 1, function (x) { draw_ellipse(x[1], x[2], x[3], x["sd_y"], x["colidx"]) })
points(x, y, pch = 3)
4
  • Tomas, thanks for your quick response. Great. I applied the code to my data, which worked fine. However, data ellipses are partially overlapping. As data represented different resources, is it possible to use a different colour coding for the ellipses? Ta very much. This is how my data looks like... x <- c(0.42, 1.25, 0.02, 0.47, 3.78, -0.0288, 0.41, 6.33, -0.2888) y <- c(3.3, 4.7, 1.6, 3.4, 6.7, 2.6, 3.8, 5.9, 0.2) sd_x <- c(0.16, 0.25, 0.02, 0.32, 1.35, 0.0264, 0.18, 3.78, 0.64) sd_y <- c(0.4, 0.5, 2.6, 1.9, 1.55, 2.9, 1, 2, 0.2) plot(x, y, xlim=c(-2,12), ylim=c(-2,9))
    – peanut
    Sep 22, 2011 at 10:14
  • @peanut, welcome, it's great that it helped. You have two possibilities - either try to remove the border = NA which will print you border around each ellipse, or try to change the col argument to change along some pallete (see ?palette). You would then need to add additional argument col to the draw_ellipse function and supply it in the apply call.
    – Tomas
    Sep 22, 2011 at 10:25
  • Tomas, one last question. I go with the the boarder now, but would like to stay with coloured ellipses. How to a supply a "col" argument to they "apply" call?
    – peanut
    Sep 22, 2011 at 11:01
  • @peanut, just add a new column to data frame, e.g. df = data.frame(x, y, sd_x, sd_y, col = 1:length(x)), and then use it in the apply call. See my updated answer.
    – Tomas
    Sep 22, 2011 at 11:22
1

You might like the function car::ellipse , i.e., the ellipse() function in the car package.

0

The ellipse function in the ellipse package will take summary information (including correlation) and provide the ellipse representing the confidence region.

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