plotResiduals
Syntax
Description
plotResiduals(
creates a histogram plot
of the censored linear regression model (mdl
)mdl
) residuals.
plotResiduals(
specifies additional options using one or more name-value arguments. For example, you can
specify the residual type and the graphical properties of residual data points.mdl
,plottype
,Name=Value
)
plotResiduals(
creates
the plot in the axes specified by ax
,___)ax
instead of the current axes,
using any of the input argument combinations in the previous syntaxes.
returns
graphics objects for the lines or patch in the plot. Use h
= plotResiduals(___)h
to modify
the properties of a specific line or patch after you create the plot. For a list of
properties, see Line Properties and Patch Properties.
Examples
Load the readmissiontimes
data set, and fit a censored linear regression model of the readmission time as a function of patient age, weight, and smoking status.
load readmissiontimes tbl = table(Age,Weight,Smoker,Censored,ReadmissionTime); mdl = fitlmcens(tbl,Censoring="Censored",CategoricalVars="Smoker");
Create a histogram of the raw residuals.
plotResiduals(mdl)
The area of each bar is the relative number of observations. The sum of the bar areas is equal to 1
. The histogram indicates that the residuals are approximately normally distributed.
Load the censoreddata
sample data.
load censoreddata.mat
The matrix X
contains data for three predictors, and the matrix yint
contains bounds for a censored response variable.
Fit a linear regression model to the censored data in X
and yint
.
mdl = fitlmcens(X,yint);
Display a probability plot of the standardized residuals.
plotResiduals(mdl,"probability",ResidualType="standardized")
The plot shows that the standardized residuals have a normal distribution (approximately).
Input Arguments
Censored linear regression model, specified as a CensoredLinearModel
object created using fitlmcens
.
Plot type, specified as one of the values in this table.
Value | Description |
---|---|
"caseorder" | Residuals vs. case order (row number) |
"fitted" | Residuals vs. fitted values |
"histogram" | Histogram of residuals using probability density function scaling. The area
of each bar is the relative number of observations. The sum of the bar areas is
equal to 1 . |
"lagged" | Residuals vs. lagged residuals (r(t) vs. r(t – 1)) |
"probability" | Normal probability plot of residuals. For details, see probplot . |
"observed" | Observed vs. fitted values. This plot includes a dotted reference line of y = x. Each residual is represented by the vertical distance from the corresponding observed value to the reference line. |
"symmetry" | Symmetry plot of residuals around their median.
plotResiduals calculates the distance of each residual from
the median. The smallest distance corresponding to a residual in the lower tail
is then plotted against the smallest distance corresponding to a residual in the
upper tail, and so on. This plot includes a dotted reference line of
y = x to examine the symmetry of
residuals. |
Name-Value Arguments
Specify optional pairs of arguments as
Name1=Value1,...,NameN=ValueN
, where Name
is
the argument name and Value
is the corresponding value.
Name-value arguments must appear after other arguments, but the order of the
pairs does not matter.
Example: plotResiduals(mdl,"probability",Residuals="standardized",Color="m")
specifies magenta markers and standardized residuals for a probability plot of the residuals
in mdl
.
Note
The graphical properties listed here are only a subset. For a complete list, see Line Properties for lines and Patch Properties for histograms. The specified properties apply to the appearance of residual data points or the appearance of the histogram.
Type of residual used in the plot, specified as "raw"
or
"standardized"
.
"raw"
— Observed minus fitted values"standardized"
— Raw residuals divided by their estimated standard deviation
The Residuals
property of mdl
contains the
residual values used by plotResiduals
to create plots.
For details, see Residuals.
Example: ResidualType="standardized"
Data Types: string
| char
Line color, specified an RGB triplet, hexadecimal color code, color name, or short name for one of the color options listed in the following table.
The Color
name-value argument also determines marker outline color and
marker fill color if MarkerEdgeColor
is
"auto"
(default) and MarkerFaceColor
is
"auto"
.
For a custom color, specify an RGB triplet or a hexadecimal color code.
An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of the color. The intensities must be in the range
[0,1]
, for example,[0.4 0.6 0.7]
.A hexadecimal color code is a string scalar or character vector that starts with a hash symbol (
#
) followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range from0
toF
. The values are not case sensitive. Therefore, the color codes"#FF8800"
,"#ff8800"
,"#F80"
, and"#f80"
are equivalent.
Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and the hexadecimal color codes.
Color Name | Short Name | RGB Triplet | Hexadecimal Color Code | Appearance |
---|---|---|---|---|
"red" | "r" | [1 0 0] | "#FF0000" | |
"green" | "g" | [0 1 0] | "#00FF00" | |
"blue" | "b" | [0 0 1] | "#0000FF" | |
"cyan"
| "c" | [0 1 1] | "#00FFFF" | |
"magenta" | "m" | [1 0 1] | "#FF00FF" | |
"yellow" | "y" | [1 1 0] | "#FFFF00" | |
"black" | "k" | [0 0 0] | "#000000" | |
"white" | "w" | [1 1 1] | "#FFFFFF" | |
"none" | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | No color |
This table lists the default color palettes for plots in the light and dark themes.
Palette | Palette Colors |
---|---|
Before R2025a: Most plots use these colors by default. |
|
|
|
You can get the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for these palettes using the orderedcolors
and rgb2hex
functions. For example, get the RGB triplets for the "gem"
palette and convert them to hexadecimal color codes.
RGB = orderedcolors("gem");
H = rgb2hex(RGB);
Before R2023b: Get the RGB triplets using RGB =
get(groot,"FactoryAxesColorOrder")
.
Before R2024a: Get the hexadecimal color codes using H =
compose("#%02X%02X%02X",round(RGB*255))
.
Example: Color="blue"
Data Types: single
| double
| string
| char
Line width, specified as a positive value in points. If the line has markers, then the line width also affects the marker edges.
Example: LineWidth=0.75
Data Types: single
| double
Marker symbol, specified as one of the values in this table.
Marker | Description | Resulting Marker |
---|---|---|
"o" | Circle |
|
"+" | Plus sign |
|
"*" | Asterisk |
|
"." | Point |
|
"x" | Cross |
|
"_" | Horizontal line |
|
"|" | Vertical line |
|
"square" | Square |
|
"diamond" | Diamond |
|
"^" | Upward-pointing triangle |
|
"v" | Downward-pointing triangle |
|
">" | Right-pointing triangle |
|
"<" | Left-pointing triangle |
|
"pentagram" | Pentagram |
|
"hexagram" | Hexagram |
|
"none" | No markers | Not applicable |
Example: Marker="+"
Data Types: string
| char
Marker outline color, specified an RGB triplet, hexadecimal color code, color
name, or short name for one of the color options listed in the
Color
name-value argument.
The default value "auto"
uses the same color specified by using
the Color
name-value argument. You can also specify
"none"
for no color.
Example: MarkerEdgeColor="blue"
Data Types: single
| double
| string
| char
Marker fill color, specified as an RGB triplet, hexadecimal color code, color name, or short
name for one of the color options listed in the Color
name-value argument. The default value "none"
specifies no
color.
The "auto"
value uses the same color specified by using the
Color
name-value argument.
Example: MarkerFaceColor="blue"
Data Types: single
| double
| string
| char
Marker size, specified as a positive value in points.
Example: MarkerSize=2
Data Types: single
| double
Output Arguments
Graphics objects corresponding to the lines or patch in the plot, returned as a graphics array. Use dot notation to query and set properties of the graphics objects. For details, see Line Properties and Patch Properties.
You can use name-value arguments to specify the appearance of residual data points or the
appearance of the histogram, corresponding to the first graphics object
h(1)
.
Alternative Functionality
A CensoredLinearModel
object provides multiple plotting functions. After fitting a model, use plotPartialDependence
to understand the effect of a particular predictor. Use
plotSlice
to plot
slices through the prediction surface.
Version History
Introduced in R2025a
See Also
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