iic function

Index of ideality of correlation

Index of ideality of correlation

Calculate the index of ideality of correlation. This metric has been studied in QSPR/QSAR models as a good criterion for the predictive potential of these models. It is highly dependent on the correlation coefficient as well as the mean absolute error.

Note the application of IIC is useless under two conditions:

  • When the negative mean absolute error and positive mean absolute error are both zero.
  • When the outliers are symmetric. Since outliers are context dependent, please use your own checks to validate whether this restriction holds and whether the resulting IIC has interpretative value.

The IIC is seen as an alternative to the traditional correlation coefficient and is in the same units as the original data.

iic(data, ...) ## S3 method for class 'data.frame' iic(data, truth, estimate, na_rm = TRUE, case_weights = NULL, ...) iic_vec(truth, estimate, na_rm = TRUE, case_weights = NULL, ...)

Arguments

  • data: A data.frame containing the columns specified by the truth

    and estimate arguments.

  • ...: Not currently used.

  • truth: The column identifier for the true results (that is numeric). This should be an unquoted column name although this argument is passed by expression and supports quasiquotation (you can unquote column names). For _vec() functions, a numeric vector.

  • estimate: The column identifier for the predicted results (that is also numeric). As with truth this can be specified different ways but the primary method is to use an unquoted variable name. For _vec() functions, a numeric vector.

  • na_rm: A logical value indicating whether NA

    values should be stripped before the computation proceeds.

  • case_weights: The optional column identifier for case weights. This should be an unquoted column name that evaluates to a numeric column in data. For _vec() functions, a numeric vector, hardhat::importance_weights(), or hardhat::frequency_weights().

Returns

A tibble with columns .metric, .estimator, and .estimate and 1 row of values.

For grouped data frames, the number of rows returned will be the same as the number of groups.

For iic_vec(), a single numeric value (or NA).

Examples

# Supply truth and predictions as bare column names iic(solubility_test, solubility, prediction) library(dplyr) set.seed(1234) size <- 100 times <- 10 # create 10 resamples solubility_resampled <- bind_rows( replicate( n = times, expr = sample_n(solubility_test, size, replace = TRUE), simplify = FALSE ), .id = "resample" ) # Compute the metric by group metric_results <- solubility_resampled %>% group_by(resample) %>% iic(solubility, prediction) metric_results # Resampled mean estimate metric_results %>% summarise(avg_estimate = mean(.estimate))

References

Toropova, A. and Toropov, A. (2017). "The index of ideality of correlation. A criterion of predictability of QSAR models for skin permeability?" Science of the Total Environment. 586: 466-472.

See Also

Other numeric metrics: ccc(), huber_loss(), huber_loss_pseudo(), mae(), mape(), mase(), mpe(), msd(), poisson_log_loss(), rmse(), rpd(), rpiq(), rsq(), rsq_trad(), smape()

Other accuracy metrics: ccc(), huber_loss(), huber_loss_pseudo(), mae(), mape(), mase(), mpe(), msd(), poisson_log_loss(), rmse(), smape()

Author(s)

Joyce Cahoon