linregress#
- scipy.stats.mstats.linregress(x, y=None)[source]#
- Calculate a linear least-squares regression for two sets of measurements. - Parameters:
- x, yarray_like
- Two sets of measurements. Both arrays should have the same length N. If only x is given (and - y=None), then it must be a two-dimensional array where one dimension has length 2. The two sets of measurements are then found by splitting the array along the length-2 dimension. In the case where- y=Noneand x is a 2xN array,- linregress(x)is equivalent to- linregress(x[0], x[1]).
 
- Returns:
- resultLinregressResultinstance
- The return value is an object with the following attributes: - slopefloat
- Slope of the regression line. 
- interceptfloat
- Intercept of the regression line. 
- rvaluefloat
- The Pearson correlation coefficient. The square of - rvalueis equal to the coefficient of determination.
- pvaluefloat
- The p-value for a hypothesis test whose null hypothesis is that the slope is zero, using Wald Test with t-distribution of the test statistic. See alternative above for alternative hypotheses. 
- stderrfloat
- Standard error of the estimated slope (gradient), under the assumption of residual normality. 
- intercept_stderrfloat
- Standard error of the estimated intercept, under the assumption of residual normality. 
 
 
- result
 - See also - scipy.optimize.curve_fit
- Use non-linear least squares to fit a function to data. 
- scipy.optimize.leastsq
- Minimize the sum of squares of a set of equations. 
 - Notes - Missing values are considered pair-wise: if a value is missing in x, the corresponding value in y is masked. - For compatibility with older versions of SciPy, the return value acts like a - namedtupleof length 5, with fields- slope,- intercept,- rvalue,- pvalueand- stderr, so one can continue to write:- slope, intercept, r, p, se = linregress(x, y) - With that style, however, the standard error of the intercept is not available. To have access to all the computed values, including the standard error of the intercept, use the return value as an object with attributes, e.g.: - result = linregress(x, y) print(result.intercept, result.intercept_stderr) - Examples - >>> import numpy as np >>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> from scipy import stats >>> rng = np.random.default_rng() - Generate some data: - >>> x = rng.random(10) >>> y = 1.6*x + rng.random(10) - Perform the linear regression: - >>> res = stats.mstats.linregress(x, y) - Coefficient of determination (R-squared): - >>> print(f"R-squared: {res.rvalue**2:.6f}") R-squared: 0.717533 - Plot the data along with the fitted line: - >>> plt.plot(x, y, 'o', label='original data') >>> plt.plot(x, res.intercept + res.slope*x, 'r', label='fitted line') >>> plt.legend() >>> plt.show()   - Calculate 95% confidence interval on slope and intercept: - >>> # Two-sided inverse Students t-distribution >>> # p - probability, df - degrees of freedom >>> from scipy.stats import t >>> tinv = lambda p, df: abs(t.ppf(p/2, df)) - >>> ts = tinv(0.05, len(x)-2) >>> print(f"slope (95%): {res.slope:.6f} +/- {ts*res.stderr:.6f}") slope (95%): 1.453392 +/- 0.743465 >>> print(f"intercept (95%): {res.intercept:.6f}" ... f" +/- {ts*res.intercept_stderr:.6f}") intercept (95%): 0.616950 +/- 0.544475