Class ImpliedOrientationRatioEst
java.lang.Object
edu.cmu.tetrad.algcomparison.statistic.ImpliedOrientationRatioEst
- All Implemented Interfaces:
- Statistic,- Serializable
The Implied Arrow Orientation Ratio Est statistic calculates the ratio of the number of implied arrows to the number of arrows in unshielded colliders in the estimated graph.
 Implied Arrow Orientation Ratio in the Estimated Graph = (numImpliedArrows - numArrowsInUnshieldedColliders) / numArrowsInUnshieldedColliders.
 It implements the Statistic interface.
- See Also:
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Constructor SummaryConstructors
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Method SummaryModifier and TypeMethodDescriptionThe abbreviation for the statistic.A Returns a short one-line description of this statistic.doublegetNormValue(double value) Returns a mapping of the statistic to the interval [0, 1], with higher being better.doublegetValue(Graph trueGraph, Graph estGraph, DataModel dataModel, Parameters parameters) Returns the value of this statistic, given the true graph and the estimated graph.
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Constructor Details- 
ImpliedOrientationRatioEstpublic ImpliedOrientationRatioEst()Constructs the statistic.
 
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Method Details- 
getAbbreviationThe abbreviation for the statistic. This will be printed at the top of each column.- Specified by:
- getAbbreviationin interface- Statistic
- Returns:
- This abbreviation.
 
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getDescriptionA Returns a short one-line description of this statistic. This will be printed at the beginning of the report.- Specified by:
- getDescriptionin interface- Statistic
- Returns:
- This description.
 
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getValueReturns the value of this statistic, given the true graph and the estimated graph.
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getNormValuepublic double getNormValue(double value) Returns a mapping of the statistic to the interval [0, 1], with higher being better. This is used for a calculation of a utility for an algorithm. If the statistic is already between 0 and 1, you can just return the statistic.- Specified by:
- getNormValuein interface- Statistic
- Parameters:
- value- The value of the statistic.
- Returns:
- The weight of the statistic, 0 to 1, higher is better.
 
 
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