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https://rvlenth.github.io/emmeans/
Estimated marginal means (EMMs, also known as least-squares means in the context of traditional regression models) are derived by using a model to make predictions over a regular grid of predictor combinations (called a reference grid). These predictions may possibly be averaged (typically with equal weights) over one or more of the predictors. Such marginally-averaged predictions are useful for describing the results of fitting a model, particularly in presenting the effects of factors. The emmeans package can easily produce these results, as well as various graphs of them (interaction-style plots and side-by-side intervals).
Estimation and testing of pairwise comparisons of EMMs, and several other types of contrasts, are provided.
In rank-deficient models, the estimability of predictions is checked, to avoid outputting results that are not uniquely defined.
For models where continuous predictors interact with factors, the
package’s emtrends
function works in terms of a reference
grid of predicted slopes of trend lines for each factor
combination.
Vignettes are provided on various aspects of EMMs and using the package. See the CRAN page.
We try to provide flexible (but pretty basic) graphics support
for the emmGrid
objects produced by the package. Also,
support is provided for nested fixed effects.
Response transformations and link functions are supported via a
type
argument in many functions (e.g.,
type = "response"
to back-transform results to the response
scale). Also, a regrid()
function is provided to
reconstruct the object on any transformed scale that the user
wishes.
Two-way support of the glht
function in the
multcomp package.
The package incorporates support for many types of models,
including standard models fitted using lm
,
glm
, and relatives, various mixed models, GEEs, survival
models, count models, ordinal responses, zero-inflated models, and
others. Provisions for some models include special modes for accessing
different types of predictions; for example, with zero-inflated models,
one may opt for the estimated response including zeros, just the linear
predictor, or the zero model. For details, see vignette("models", package = "emmeans")
Various Bayesian models (carBayes, MCMCglmm, MCMCpack) are supported by way of creating a posterior sample of least-squares means or contrasts thereof, which may then be examined using tools such as in the coda package.
Package developers are encouraged to incorporate
emmeans support for their models by writing
recover_data
and emm_basis
methods. See vignette("extending", package = "emmeans")
CRAN The latest CRAN version may be found at https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=emmeans. Also at that site, formatted versions of this package’s vignettes may be viewed.
GitHub To install the latest development version
from GitHub, install the newest version of the remotes
package. If you are a Windows user, you should also first download and
install the latest version of Rtools
.
Then run
::install_github("rvlenth/emmeans", dependencies = TRUE, build_vignettes = TRUE) remotes
Omitting the build_vignettes
argument can save some time
if you don’t want the vignettes. They can always be found for the latest CRAN
version or – perhaps more up-to-date – the emmeans site.
Note:
For the latest release notes on this development version, see the NEWS file
For its summary output, emmeans uses an
optimal-digits algorithm that rounds results to about the number of
digits that are useful, relative to estimates’ confidence limits. This
avoids cluttering the output, but it is unlike other R results, which
are typically less round. If this is annoying to you, there is an option
(opt.digits = FALSE
) that disables the optimal-digits
routine.
I see more and more users who are in a terrible hurry to get results. They develop a “workflow” where they plan-out several steps at once and pipe them together. That’s useful when you don’t have to think about what happens in those steps; but when you’re doing statistics, you should be thinking! Most functions in the emmeans package yield results that are accompanied by annotations such as transformations involved, P-value adjustments made, the families for those adjustments, etc. If you just pipe the results into some more code, you never see those annotations.
Please slow down! Look at the actual results from each emmeans package function without any post-processing – None. That way, you’ll see the annotated summaries. Statistics is pretty hard stuff. Don’t make it harder by blindfolding yourself.
The developer of emmeans continues to maintain and occasionally add new features. However, none of us is immortal; and neither is software. I have thought of trying to find a co-maintainer who could carry the ball once I am gone or lose interest, but the flip side of that is that the codebase is not getting less messy as time goes on – why impose that on someone else? So my thought now is that if at some point, enough active R developers want the capabilities of emmeans but I am no longer in the picture, they should feel free to supersede it with some other package that does it better. All of the code is publicly available on GitHub, so just take what is useful and replace what is not.
lsmeans()
function itself is part of emmeans.These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.