How can I plot a linear regression line on a loglog scatter plot in MATLAB?
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Samaneh Arzpeima
le 8 Fév 2019
Commenté : Samaneh Arzpeima
le 14 Fév 2019
I have a dataset of 168rows & 2colmns, plot them with a loglog scale.Now I have to plot the regression line on it,I have no special matlab tools to use "lsline" or ...
How can we draw the regression line on a loglog plot?
I find some rows of code and tried them but didn't work.
Any help will be appreciated.
clear
clc
numdata = xlsread('Hayes2017_datasheet.xlsx');
moment = numdata(:,6);
average_slip = numdata(:,13);
% M0=log10(moment);
% av_slip=log10(average_slip);
%
% xd=M0(:)-mean(M0);
% yd=av_slip(:)-mean(av_slip);
%
% squre_xd=xd.^2;
% squre_yd=yd.^2;
%
% xy_d=xd.*yd;
%
% Sxy=sum(xy_d);
% Sxx=sum(squre_xd);
% a=Sxy./Sxx;
% ave_point=[mean(M0);mean(av_slip)];
% b=ave_point(2)-(a*ave_point(1))
% y_hat=(b*(M0.^a))
loglog(moment,average_slip,'o')
% hold on
% % lsline
% plot(moment,y_hat)
X = [ones(length(moment),1) moment];
b = X\average_slip;
yCalc2=b(1)+moment*b(2)
loglog(moment,yCalc2,'--')
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David Goodmanson
le 12 Fév 2019
Hi Samaneh,
I will abbreviate moment and average_slip as x and y here. Since log log space is evidently the most meaningful representation, the fit should take place using the logs of the y and x variables. You end up with a fit log(y) = a + b*log(x). However, you want to insert this into a loglog plot which is effectively going to take the logs of whatever you input, and then plot. Therefore you have to exponentiate the fit equation. So for the fit line to plot,
yplot = exp(a+b*log(x)) = exp(a)*x^b
This says that a straight line on a loglog plot always has the form y = A*x^b.
The data is pretty scattered so the quality of the fit line is dubious, but there it is.
Going back to the linear fit for the moment, with
b = X\average_slip;
you found the fit parameters in the two-component column vector b. To create the best fit line, you don"t have to use b(1) and b(2) as you did. You can just 'undo the backslash', and find the fit line with
average_slip (fit line) = X*b
code
numdata = xlsread('Hayes2017_datasheet.xlsx');
moment = numdata(:,6);
average_slip = numdata(:,13);
X = [ones(length(moment),1) log(moment)];
b = X\log(average_slip);
yCalc2 = X*b;
yCalc2plot = exp(yCalc2);
figure(1)
loglog(moment,average_slip,'o',moment,yCalc2plot,'+-')
3 commentaires
David Goodmanson
le 13 Fév 2019
Hi Samaneh,
Again, you have to be working in log land. yCalc2 is already there, so
logy = log(average_slip);
Rsq = 1 - sum((logy - yCalc2).^2)/sum((logy - mean(logy)).^2)
cc = corrcoef(log(moment),logy)
Rsq is .29. The correlation coefficent is +.539 which is larger than I thought, so I have to withdraw the label 'dubious'. Let's say, adequate.
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