Systematic Screening of Study Data for Subgroup Effects
Function to create the subgroup filter table
Function to create the subgroup parent table
Function to create a data set with complement information based on sel...
shiny widgets of display option panel
Creates an interaction plot used in Explorer and ASMUS-tab in Subgroup...
Returns all 'parent'-subgroups of a specific subgroup
Function for adding the status of a factorial context ("complete"/"inc...
Generate variables for complete/incomplete/pseudo complete factorial c...
Creates an mosaic plot used in Mosaic-tab in Subgroup Explorer
(i) Calculation of the results for the subgroups
(ii) Visualization
(iii) Determine variable importance
shiny widgets of variable option panel
Identifying outcome relevant subgroups has now become as simple as possible! The formerly lengthy and tedious search for the needle in a haystack will be replaced by a single, comprehensive and coherent presentation. The central result of a subgroup screening is a diagram in which each single dot stands for a subgroup. The diagram may show thousands of them. The position of the dot in the diagram is determined by the sample size of the subgroup and the statistical measure of the treatment effect in that subgroup. The sample size is shown on the horizontal axis while the treatment effect is displayed on the vertical axis. Furthermore, the diagram shows the line of no effect and the overall study results. For small subgroups, which are found on the left side of the plot, larger random deviations from the mean study effect are expected, while for larger subgroups only small deviations from the study mean can be expected to be chance findings. So for a study with no conspicuous subgroup effects, the dots in the figure are expected to form a kind of funnel. Any deviations from this funnel shape hint to conspicuous subgroups.