Getting Things in Order: An Introduction to the R Package seriation
Seriation, i.e., finding a suitable linear order for a set of objects given data and a loss or merit function, is a basic problem in data analysis. Caused by the problem's combinatorial nature, it is hard to solve for all but very small sets. Nevertheless, both exact solution methods and heuristics are available. In this paper we present the package seriation which provides an infrastructure for seriation with R. The infrastructure comprises data structures to represent linear orders as permutation vectors, a wide array of seriation methods using a consistent interface, a method to calculate the value of various loss and merit functions, and several visualization techniques which build on seriation. To illustrate how easily the package can be applied for a variety of applications, a comprehensive collection of examples is presented.
Year of publication: |
2008-03-18
|
---|---|
Authors: | Hahsler, Michael ; Hornik, Kurt ; Buchta, Christian |
Published in: |
Journal of Statistical Software. - American Statistical Association. - Vol. 25.2008, i03
|
Publisher: |
American Statistical Association |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Selective association rule generation
Hahsler, Michael, (2008)
-
arules - A Computational Environment for Mining Association Rules and Frequent Item Sets
Hahsler, Michael, (2005)
-
TSP--Infrastructure for the Traveling Salesperson Problem
Hahsler, Michael, (2007)
- More ...