NAME

dbcolstatscores - compute z-scores or t-scores for each value in a population

SYNOPSIS

dbcolstatscores [-t] [--tmean=MEAN] [--tstddev=STDDEV] column

DESCRIPTION

Compute statistics (z-score and optionally t-score) over a COLUMN of numbers. Creates new columns called "zscore", "tscore". T-scores are only computed if requested with the -t option, or if --tmean or --tstddev are explicitly specified (defaults are mean of 50, standard deviation of 10).

You may recall from your statistics class that a z-score is simply the value normalized by mean and standard deviation, so that 0.0 is the mean and positive or negative values are multiples of the standard deviation. It assumes data follows a normal (Gaussian) distribution.

T-score scales the z-score to match a mean of 50 and a standard deviation of 10. This program allows generalized t-scores that use any mean and standard deviation.

Other scales are sometimes used as well. The Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (one type of IQ test) is adjusted to a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15. Other tests scale to other standard deviations.

This program requires two passes over the data, and consumes O(1) memory and O(number of rows) disk space.

OPTIONS

-a or --include-non-numeric

Compute stats over all records (treat non-numeric records as zero rather than just ignoring them).

-t

Compute t-scores in addition to z-scores.

--tmean MEAN

Use the given MEAN for t-scores.

--tstddev STDDEV or --tsd STDDEV

Use the given STDDEV for the standard deviation of the t-scores.

-f FORMAT or --format FORMAT

Specify a printf(3)-style format for output statistics. Defaults to %.5g.

-T TmpDir

where to put tmp files. Also uses environment variable TMPDIR, if -T is not specified. Default is /tmp.

This module also supports the standard fsdb options:

-d

Enable debugging output.

-i or --input InputSource

Read from InputSource, typically a file name, or - for standard input, or (if in Perl) a IO::Handle, Fsdb::IO or Fsdb::BoundedQueue objects.

-o or --output OutputDestination

Write to OutputDestination, typically a file name, or - for standard output, or (if in Perl) a IO::Handle, Fsdb::IO or Fsdb::BoundedQueue objects.

--autorun or --noautorun

By default, programs process automatically, but Fsdb::Filter objects in Perl do not run until you invoke the run() method. The --(no)autorun option controls that behavior within Perl.

--help

Show help.

--man

Show full manual.

SAMPLE USAGE

Input:

#fsdb name id test1
a 1 80
b 2 70
c 3 65
d 4 90
e 5 70
f 6 90

Command:

cat DATA/grades.fsdb | dbcolstatscores --tmean 50 --tstddev 10 test1 | dbcolneaten

Output:

#fsdb name id test1 zscore:d   tscore:d 
a       1  80    0.23063  52.306 
b       2  70    -0.69188 43.081 
c       3  65    -1.1531  38.469 
d       4  90    1.1531   61.531 
e       5  70    -0.69188 43.081 
f       6  90    1.1531   61.531 
#  | dbcolstatscores --tmean 50 --tstddev 10 test1
#  | dbcolneaten 

SEE ALSO

dbcolpercentile(1), dbcolstats(1), Fsdb, dbcolscorrelate

CLASS FUNCTIONS

new

$filter = new Fsdb::Filter::dbcolstatscores(@arguments);

Create a new dbcolstatscores object, taking command-line arguments.

set_defaults

$filter->set_defaults();

Internal: set up defaults.

parse_options

$filter->parse_options(@ARGV);

Internal: parse command-line arguments.

setup

$filter->setup();

Internal: setup, parse headers.

run

$filter->run();

Internal: run over each rows.

AUTHOR and COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 1991-2022 by John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu>

This program is distributed under terms of the GNU general public license, version 2. See the file COPYING with the distribution for details.