=head1 NAME
Text::NSP::Measures::2D::Fisher::right - Perl module implementation of the right sided
Fisher's exact test.
=head1 SYNOPSIS
=head3 Basic Usage
use Text::NSP::Measures::2D::Fisher::right;
my $npp = 60; my $n1p = 20; my $np1 = 20; my $n11 = 10;
$right_value = calculateStatistic( n11=>$n11,
n1p=>$n1p,
np1=>$np1,
npp=>$npp);
if( ($errorCode = getErrorCode()))
{
print STDERR $errorCode." - ".getErrorMessage();
}
else
{
print getStatisticName."value for bigram is ".$right_value;
}
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Assume that the frequency count data associated with a bigram
<word1><word2> is stored in a 2x2 contingency table:
word2 ~word2
word1 n11 n12 | n1p
~word1 n21 n22 | n2p
--------------
np1 np2 npp
where n11 is the number of times <word1><word2> occur together, and
n12 is the number of times <word1> occurs with some word other than
word2, and n1p is the number of times in total that word1 occurs as
the first word in a bigram.
The fishers exact tests are calculated by fixing the marginal totals
and computing the hypergeometric probabilities for all the possible
contingency tables,
A right sided test is calculated by adding the probabilities of all
the possible two by two contingency tables formed by fixing the
marginal totals and changing the value of n11 to greater than or
equal to the given value. A right sided Fisher's Exact Test tells us
how likely it is to randomly sample a table where n11 is greater
than observed. In other words, it tells us how likely it is to sample
an observation where the two words are more dependent than currently
observed.
=head2 Methods
=over
=cut
package Text::NSP::Measures::2D::Fisher::right;
use Text::NSP::Measures::2D::Fisher;
use strict;
use Carp;
use warnings;
no warnings 'redefine';
require Exporter;
our ($VERSION, @EXPORT, @ISA);
@ISA = qw(Exporter);
@EXPORT = qw(initializeStatistic calculateStatistic
getErrorCode getErrorMessage getStatisticName);
$VERSION = '0.97';
=item calculateStatistic() - This method calculates the right Fisher value
INPUT PARAMS : $count_values .. Reference of an hash containing
the count values computed by the
count.pl program.
RETURN VALUES : $right .. Right Fisher value.
=cut
sub calculateStatistic
{
my %values = @_;
my $probabilities;
my $left_flag = 0;
# computes and returns the observed and marginal values from
# the frequency combination values. returns 0 if there is an
# error in the computation or the values are inconsistent.
if( !(Text::NSP::Measures::2D::Fisher::getValues(\%values)) )
{
return;
}
my $final_limit = ($n1p < $np1) ? $n1p : $np1;
my $n11_org = $n11;
my $n11_start = $n1p + $np1 - $npp;
if($n11_start < $n11)
{
$n11_start = $n11;
}
# to make the computations faster, we check which would require less computations
# computing the leftfisher value and subtracting it from 1 or directly computing
# the right fisher value. We do this since, generally for bigrams n11 is quite small
# so its much faster to compute the left Fisher value.
my $left_final_limit = $n11-1;
my $left_n11 = $n1p + $np1 - $npp;
if($left_n11<0)
{
$left_n11 = 0;
}
# if computing the left fisher values first will take lesser amount of time them
# we set a flag for later reference and then compute the leftfisher score for
# n11-1 and then subtract the total score from one to get the right fisher value.
if(($left_final_limit - $left_n11) < ($final_limit - $n11_start))
{
$left_flag = 1;
if( !($probabilities = Text::NSP::Measures::2D::Fisher::computeDistribution($left_n11, $left_final_limit)))
{
return;
}
}
#else we compute the value normally and simply sum to get the rightfisher value.
else
{
if( !($probabilities = Text::NSP::Measures::2D::Fisher::computeDistribution($n11_start, $final_limit)))
{
return;
}
}
my $key_n11;
my $rightfisher=0;
foreach $key_n11 (sort { $b <=> $a } keys %$probabilities)
{
if($left_flag)
{
if($key_n11 >= $n11_org)
{
last;
}
}
else
{
if($key_n11 < $n11_org)
{
last;
}
}
$rightfisher += exp($probabilities->{$key_n11});
}
# if we computed the leftfisher value to get the right fisher value, we subtract
# the sum of the probabilities for the tables from one to get the right fisher score.
if($left_flag)
{
if ($rightfisher > 1)
{
$rightfisher = 0;
}
else
{
$rightfisher = 1 - $rightfisher;
}
}
return $rightfisher;
}
=item getStatisticName() - Returns the name of this statistic
INPUT PARAMS : none
RETURN VALUES : $name .. Name of the measure.
=cut
sub getStatisticName
{
return "Right Fisher";
}
1;
__END__
=back
=head1 AUTHOR
Ted Pedersen, University of Minnesota Duluth
E<lt>tpederse@d.umn.eduE<gt>
Satanjeev Banerjee, Carnegie Mellon University
E<lt>satanjeev@cmu.eduE<gt>
Amruta Purandare, University of Pittsburgh
E<lt>amruta@cs.pitt.eduE<gt>
Bridget Thomson-McInnes, University of Minnesota Twin Cities
E<lt>bthompson@d.umn.eduE<gt>
Saiyam Kohli, University of Minnesota Duluth
E<lt>kohli003@d.umn.eduE<gt>
=head1 HISTORY
Last updated: $Id: right.pm,v 1.12 2006/06/21 11:10:52 saiyam_kohli Exp $
=head1 BUGS
=head1 SEE ALSO
@inproceedings{Pedersen96,
author = {Pedersen, T.},
title = {Fishing For Exactness},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the South Central SAS User's
Group (SCSUG-96) Conference},
year = {1996},
pages = {188--200},
month ={October},
address = {Austin, TX}
url = L<http://www.d.umn.edu/~tpederse/pubs.html>}
L<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ngram/>
L<http://www.d.umn.edu/~tpederse/nsp.html>
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2000-2006, Ted Pedersen, Satanjeev Banerjee, Amruta
Purandare, Bridget Thomson-McInnes and Saiyam Kohli
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY
or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
with this program; if not, write to
The Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
Note: a copy of the GNU General Public License is available on the web
at L<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.txt> and is included in this
distribution as GPL.txt.
=cut