predict
Model Predictions
Description
predict
is a generic function for predictions from the results of various model fitting functions. The function invokes particular methods which depend on the class
of the first argument.
Usage
predict (object, ...)
Arguments
object | a model object for which prediction is desired. |
... | additional arguments affecting the predictions produced. |
Details
Most prediction methods which are similar to those for linear models have an argument newdata
specifying the first place to look for explanatory variables to be used for prediction. Some considerable attempts are made to match up the columns in newdata
to those used for fitting, for example that they are of comparable types and that any factors have the same level set in the same order (or can be transformed to be so).
Time series prediction methods in package stats have an argument n.ahead
specifying how many time steps ahead to predict.
Many methods have a logical argument se.fit
saying if standard errors are to returned.
Value
The form of the value returned by predict
depends on the class of its argument. See the documentation of the particular methods for details of what is produced by that method.
References
Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. (1992) Statistical Models in S. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
See Also
predict.glm
, predict.lm
, predict.loess
, predict.nls
, predict.poly
, predict.princomp
, predict.smooth.spline
.
SafePrediction for prediction from (univariable) polynomial and spline fits.
For time-series prediction, predict.ar
, predict.Arima
, predict.arima0
, predict.HoltWinters
, predict.StructTS
.
Examples
require(utils) ## All the "predict" methods found ## NB most of the methods in the standard packages are hidden. ## Output will depend on what namespaces are (or have been) loaded. ## IGNORE_RDIFF_BEGIN for(fn in methods("predict")) try({ f <- eval(substitute(getAnywhere(fn)$objs[[1]], list(fn = fn))) cat(fn, ":\n\t", deparse(args(f)), "\n") }, silent = TRUE) ## IGNORE_RDIFF_END
Copyright (©) 1999–2012 R Foundation for Statistical Computing.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License.