\name{massart97ex3} \docType{data} \alias{massart97ex3} \title{Calibration data from Massart et al. (1997), example 3} \description{ Sample dataset to test the package. } \usage{data(massart97ex3)} \format{ A dataframe containing 6 levels of x values with 5 observations of y for each level. } \examples{ data(massart97ex3) attach(massart97ex3) yx <- split(y,x) ybar <- sapply(yx,mean) s <- round(sapply(yx,sd),digits=2) w <- round(1/(s^2),digits=3) weights <- w[factor(x)] m <- lm(y ~ x,w=weights) # The following concords with the book inverse.predict(m, 15, ws = 1.67) inverse.predict(m, 90, ws = 0.145) calplot(m) m0 <- lm(y ~ x) lod(m0) lod(m) # Now we want to take advantage of the lower weights at lower y values m2 <- lm(y ~ x, w = 1/y) # To get a reasonable weight for the lod, we need to estimate it and predict # a y value for it yhat.lod <- predict(m,data.frame(x = lod(m2))) lod(m2,w=1/yhat.lod,k=3) } \source{ Massart, L.M, Vandenginste, B.G.M., Buydens, L.M.C., De Jong, S., Lewi, P.J., Smeyers-Verbeke, J. (1997) Handbook of Chemometrics and Qualimetrics: Part A, p. 188 } \keyword{datasets}