PRE is called partial R-squared in regression, and partial
Eta-squared in ANOVA. This vignette will examine their equivalence using
the internal data depress.
depress collected depression,
gender, and class at Time 1. Traditionally, we
examine the effect of gender and class using
anova. We firstly let R know gender and class
are factors (i.e., categorical variables). Then we conduct anova using
car::Anova() and compute partial Eta-squared using
effectsize::eta_squared().
# factor gender and class
depress_factor <- depress
depress_factor$class <- factor(depress_factor$class, labels = c(3,5,9,12))
depress_factor$gender <- factor(depress_factor$gender, labels = c(0,1))
anova.fit <- lm(dm1 ~ gender + class, depress_factor)
Anova(anova.fit, type = 3)
#> Anova Table (Type III tests)
#> 
#> Response: dm1
#>             Sum Sq Df  F value Pr(>F)    
#> (Intercept) 67.166  1 464.5565 <2e-16 ***
#> gender       0.025  1   0.1758 0.6760    
#> class        0.729  3   1.6808 0.1768    
#> Residuals   12.868 89                    
#> ---
#> Signif. codes:  0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
cat("\n\n")
print(eta_squared(Anova(anova.fit, type = 3), partial = TRUE), digits = 6)
#> # Effect Size for ANOVA (Type III)
#> 
#> Parameter | Eta2 (partial) |               95% CI
#> -------------------------------------------------
#> gender    |       0.001972 | [0.000000, 1.000000]
#> class     |       0.053619 | [0.000000, 1.000000]
#> 
#> - One-sided CIs: upper bound fixed at [1.000000].Then we conduct regression analysis and compute PRE. For
class with four levels: 3, 5, 9, and 12, we dummy-code it
using ifelse() with the class12 as the reference group.
# class3 indicates whether the class is class3 
depress$class3 <- ifelse(depress$class == 3, 1, 0)
# class5 indicates whether the class is class5 
depress$class5 <- ifelse(depress$class == 5, 1, 0)
# class9 indicates whether the class is class9 
depress$class9 <- ifelse(depress$class == 9, 1, 0)We compute the PRE of gender though comparing
Model A with gender against Model C without
gender.
fitC <- lm(dm1 ~ class3 + class5 + class9, depress)
fitA <- lm(dm1 ~ class3 + class5 + class9 + gender, depress)
print(compare_lm(fitC, fitA), digits = 3)
#>                      Baseline       C       A  A vs. C
#> SSE                      13.6 12.8932 12.8678  0.02542
#> n                        94.0 94.0000 94.0000 94.00000
#> Number of parameters      1.0  4.0000  5.0000  1.00000
#> df                       93.0 90.0000 89.0000  1.00000
#> R_squared                  NA  0.0530  0.0549  0.00187
#> f_squared                  NA  0.0560  0.0581  0.00198
#> R_squared_adj              NA  0.0214  0.0124       NA
#> PRE                        NA  0.0530  0.0549  0.00197
#> F(PA-PC,n-PA)              NA  1.6791  1.2917  0.17583
#> p                          NA  0.1771  0.2794  0.67599
#> PRE_adj                    NA  0.0214  0.0124 -0.00924
#> power_post                 NA  0.4263  0.3887  0.06993Compare gender’s PRE and partial Eta-squared. They should be equal.
We compute the PRE of class. Note that in
regression, the PRE of class is the PRE
of all class’s dummy codes: class3,
class5, and class9.
fitC <- lm(dm1 ~ gender, depress)
fitA <- lm(dm1 ~ class3 + class5 + class9 + gender, depress)
print(compare_lm(fitC, fitA), digits = 3)
#>                      Baseline        C       A A vs. C
#> SSE                      13.6 13.59681 12.8678  0.7291
#> n                        94.0 94.00000 94.0000 94.0000
#> Number of parameters      1.0  2.00000  5.0000  3.0000
#> df                       93.0 92.00000 89.0000  3.0000
#> R_squared                  NA  0.00132  0.0549  0.0535
#> f_squared                  NA  0.00132  0.0581  0.0567
#> R_squared_adj              NA -0.00953  0.0124      NA
#> PRE                        NA  0.00132  0.0549  0.0536
#> F(PA-PC,n-PA)              NA  0.12165  1.2917  1.6808
#> p                          NA  0.72805  0.2794  0.1768
#> PRE_adj                    NA -0.00953  0.0124  0.0217
#> power_post                 NA  0.06376  0.3887  0.4266Compare class’s PRE and partial Eta-squared. They should be equal.
We compute the PRE of the full model(Model A). The PRE (partial R-squared or partial Eta-squared) of the full model is commonly known as the R-squared or Eta-squared of the full model.
fitC <- lm(dm1 ~ 1, depress)
fitA <- lm(dm1 ~ class3 + class5 + class9 + gender, depress)
print(compare_lm(fitC, fitA), digits = 3)
#>                      Baseline        C       A A vs. C
#> SSE                      13.6 1.36e+01 12.8678  0.7470
#> n                        94.0 9.40e+01 94.0000 94.0000
#> Number of parameters      1.0 1.00e+00  5.0000  4.0000
#> df                       93.0 9.30e+01 89.0000  4.0000
#> R_squared                  NA 6.52e-16  0.0549  0.0549
#> f_squared                  NA 6.66e-16  0.0581  0.0581
#> R_squared_adj              NA 7.77e-16  0.0124      NA
#> PRE                        NA 6.66e-16  0.0549  0.0549
#> F(PA-PC,n-PA)              NA       NA  1.2917  1.2917
#> p                          NA       NA  0.2794  0.2794
#> PRE_adj                    NA 6.66e-16  0.0124  0.0124
#> power_post                 NA       NA  0.3887  0.3887As shown, the PRE of Model A against Model C is equal to Model A’s R_squared. Taken the loss of precision into consideration, Model C’s R_squared is zero.