What is your definition of a 'linear plateau'?
Assuming you mean where does the curve flatten, do you remember the first derivatives concepts from calculus?
Where the first derivate is close to zero is likely what you're trying to calculate?
From the data shown what would you expect as output? What would you like to get back if that was your input exactly?
@Trwhite wrote:
I have been instructed to use a linear plateau for the data below. I am confused with the overall coding linear plateaus that I have found here and other sources online. I hope if I see it used with some of my own data, I will be able to make better sense of the code and apply it to my remaining data sets. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
The data is looking at relative crop yields after four levels of crop destruction were applied.
Data:
X= Severity
Y= RelYield
X |
Y |
0 |
84.364 |
0 |
107.463 |
0 |
90.044 |
0 |
118.130 |
25 |
80.726 |
25 |
100.291 |
25 |
88.546 |
25 |
87.870 |
50 |
76.977 |
50 |
76.065 |
50 |
82.529 |
50 |
67.358 |
75 |
76.575 |
75 |
82.847 |
75 |
103.377 |
75 |
81.920 |
0 |
92.807 |
0 |
133.470 |
0 |
94.579 |
0 |
79.145 |
25 |
109.281 |
25 |
98.694 |
25 |
140.440 |
25 |
110.404 |
50 |
94.516 |
50 |
93.878 |
50 |
90.349 |
50 |
92.902 |
75 |
66.631 |
75 |
82.134 |
75 |
94.602 |
75 |
64.348 |
0 |
105.355 |
0 |
104.519 |
0 |
98.055 |
0 |
92.071 |
25 |
98.167 |
25 |
142.057 |
25 |
121.168 |
25 |
94.243 |
50 |
89.909 |
50 |
99.378 |
50 |
140.359 |
50 |
106.142 |
75 |
71.665 |
75 |
86.498 |
75 |
80.806 |
75 |
99.886 |