The hardware and bandwidth for this mirror is donated by dogado GmbH, the Webhosting and Full Service-Cloud Provider. Check out our Wordpress Tutorial.
If you wish to report a bug, or if you are interested in having us mirror your free-software or open-source project, please feel free to contact us at mirror[@]dogado.de.

revengc: Reverse Engineering Summarized Data

Decoupled (e.g. separate averages) and censored (e.g. > 100 species) variables are continually reported by many well-established organizations (e.g. World Health Organization (WHO), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), World Bank, and various national censuses). The challenge therefore is to infer what the original data could have been given summarized information. We present an R package that reverse engineers decoupled and/or censored count data with two main functions. The cnbinom.pars function estimates the average and dispersion parameter of a censored univariate frequency table. The rec function reverse engineers summarized data into an uncensored bivariate table of probabilities.

Version: 1.0.4
Depends: R (≥ 3.5.0)
Imports: stringr, mipfp, dplyr, truncdist
Suggests: R.rsp
Published: 2019-01-08
Author: Samantha Duchscherer [aut, cre], UT-Battelle, LLC [cph]
Maintainer: Samantha Duchscherer <sam.duchscherer at gmail.com>
License: MIT + file LICENSE
URL: https://github.com/GIST-ORNL/revengc
NeedsCompilation: no
Materials: README
CRAN checks: revengc results

Documentation:

Reference manual: revengc.pdf
Vignettes: R packages: LaTeX vignettes

Downloads:

Package source: revengc_1.0.4.tar.gz
Windows binaries: r-devel: revengc_1.0.4.zip, r-release: revengc_1.0.4.zip, r-oldrel: revengc_1.0.4.zip
macOS binaries: r-release (arm64): revengc_1.0.4.tgz, r-oldrel (arm64): revengc_1.0.4.tgz, r-release (x86_64): revengc_1.0.4.tgz, r-oldrel (x86_64): revengc_1.0.4.tgz
Old sources: revengc archive

Linking:

Please use the canonical form https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=revengc to link to this page.

These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
Health stats visible at Monitor.