The following single- and two-block methods are available in the multiblock package (function names in parentheses):
The following sections will describe how to format your data for analysis and invoke all methods from the list above.
We use a selection of extracts from the potato data included in the package for the basic data analyses. The data set is stored as a named list of nine matrices with chemical, rheological, spectral and sensory measurements with measurements from 26 raw and cooked potatoes.
Since the basic methods cover both single block analysis, supervised and unsupervised analysis, the interfaces for the basic methods vary a bit. Supervised methods use the formula interface and the remaining methods take input as a single matrix or list of matrices. See vignettes for supervised and unsupervised analysis for details.
Output from all methods include matrices called loadings, scores, blockLoadings and blockScores, or a suitable subset of these according the method used. An info list describes which types of (block) loadings/scores are in the output. There may be various extra elements in addition to the common elements, e.g. coefficients, weights etc. The names() and summary() functions below show all elements of the object and a summary based on the info list, respectively.
# PCA returns loadings and scores:
names(pot.pca)
#> [1] "loadings" "scores" "Xmeans" "explvar" "PCA" "info" "call"
summary(pot.pca)
#> Principal Component Analysis
#> ============================
#>
#> $scores: Scores (26x2)
#> $loadings: Loadings (14x2)
# GSVD returns block scores and common loadings:
names(pot.gsvd)
#> [1] "loadings" "blockScores" "GSVD" "info" "call"
summary(pot.gsvd)
#> Generalized Singular Value Decomposition
#> ========================================
#>
#> $loadings: Loadings (26x26)
#> $blockScores: Block scores:
#> - NIRraw (1050x1050), NIRcooked (1050x1050)
Functions for accessing scores and loadings are based on functions from the pls package, but extended with a block parameter to allow extraction of common/global scores/loadings and their block counterparts. The default value for block is 0, corresponding to the common/global block. Block scores/loadings can be accessed by setting block to a number or name.