The Distribution Fitter app provides a visual, interactive approach to fitting univariate distributions to data.
You can use the Distribution Fitter app to interactively fit probability distributions to data imported from the MATLAB® workspace. You can choose from 22 built-in probability distributions, or create your own custom distribution. The app displays the fitted distribution over plots of the empirical distributions, including pdf, cdf, probability plots, and survivor functions. You can export the fit data, including fitted parameter values, to the workspace for further analysis.
To fit a probability distribution to your sample data:
On the MATLAB Toolstrip, click the Apps tab.
In the Math, Statistics and Optimization group, open the Distribution
Fitter app. Alternatively, at the command prompt, enter distributionFitter
.
Import your sample data, or create a data vector directly in the app. You can also manage your data sets and choose which one to fit. See Create and Manage Data Sets.
Create a new fit for your data. See Create a New Fit.
Display the results of the fit. You can choose to display the density (pdf), cumulative probability (cdf), quantile (inverse cdf), probability plot (choose one of several distributions), survivor function, and cumulative hazard. See Display Results.
You can create additional fits, and manage multiple fits from within the app. See Manage Fits.
Evaluate probability functions for the fit. You can choose to evaluate the density (pdf), cumulative probability (cdf), quantile (inverse cdf), survivor function, and cumulative hazard. See Evaluate Fits.
Improve the fit by excluding certain data. You can specify bounds for the data to exclude, or you can exclude data graphically using a plot of the values in the sample data. See Exclude Data.
Save your current Distribution Fitter app session so you can open it later. See Save and Load Sessions.
To open the Data dialog box, click the Data button in the Distribution Fitter app.
Create a data set by importing a vector from the MATLAB workspace using the Import workspace vectors pane.
Data — In the Data field, the drop-down list contains the names of all matrices and vectors, other than 1-by-1 matrices (scalars) in the MATLAB workspace. Select the array containing the data that you want to fit. The actual data you import must be a vector. If you select a matrix in the Data field, the first column of the matrix is imported by default. To select a different column or row of the matrix, click Select Column or Row. The matrix displays in the Variables editor. You can select a row or column by highlighting it.
Alternatively, you can enter any valid MATLAB expression in the Data field.
When you select a vector in the Data field, a histogram of the data appears in the Data preview pane.
Censoring — If some
of the points in the data set are censored, enter a Boolean vector
of the same size as the data vector, specifying the censored entries
of the data. A 1
in the censoring vector specifies
that the corresponding entry of the data vector is censored. A 0
specifies
that the entry is not censored. If you enter a matrix, you can select
a column or row by clicking Select Column or Row.
If you do not have censored data, leave the Censoring field
blank.
Frequency — Enter
a vector of positive integers of the same size as the data vector
to specify the frequency of the corresponding entries of the data
vector. For example, a value of 7
in the 15th entry
of frequency vector specifies that there are 7 data points corresponding
to the value in the 15th entry of the data vector. If all entries
of the data vector have frequency 1, leave the Frequency field
blank.
Data set name —
Enter a name for the data set that you import from the workspace,
such as My data
.
After you have entered the information in the preceding fields,
click Create Data Set to create the data set My
data
.
View and manage the data sets that you create using the Manage
data sets pane. When you create a data set, its name
appears in the Data sets list. The following
figure shows the Manage data sets pane
after creating the data set My data
.
For each data set in the Data sets list, you can:
Select the Plot check box to display a plot of the data in the main Distribution Fitter app window. When you create a new data set, Plot is selected by default. Clearing the Plot check box removes the data from the plot in the main window. You can specify the type of plot displayed in the Display type field in the main window.
If Plot is selected, you can also select Bounds to display confidence interval bounds for the plot in the main window. These bounds are pointwise confidence bounds around the empirical estimates of these functions. The bounds are displayed only when you set Display Type in the main window to one of the following:
Cumulative probability (CDF)
Survivor function
Cumulative hazard
The Distribution Fitter app cannot display confidence bounds
on density (PDF
), quantile (inverse
CDF
), or probability plots. Clearing the Bounds check
box removes the confidence bounds from the plot in the main window.
When you select a data set from the list, you can access the following buttons:
View — Display the data in a table in a new window.
Set Bin Rules — Defines the histogram bins used in a density (PDF) plot.
Rename — Rename the data set.
Delete — Delete the data set.
To set bin rules for the histogram of a data set, click Set Bin Rules to open the Set Bin Width Rules dialog box.
You can select from the following rules:
Freedman-Diaconis rule — Algorithm that chooses bin widths and locations automatically, based on the sample size and the spread of the data. This rule, which is the default, is suitable for many kinds of data.
Scott rule — Algorithm intended for data that are approximately normal. The algorithm chooses bin widths and locations automatically.
Number of bins — Enter the number of bins. All bins have equal widths.
Bins centered on integers — Specifies bins centered on integers.
Bin width — Enter the width of each bin. If you select this option, you can also select:
Automatic bin placement — Place the edges of the bins at integer multiples of the Bin width.
Bin boundary at — Enter a scalar to specify the boundaries of the bins. The boundary of each bin is equal to this scalar plus an integer multiple of the Bin width.
You can also:
Apply to all existing data sets — Apply the rule to all data sets. Otherwise, the rule is applied only to the data set currently selected in the Data dialog box.
Save as default — Apply the current rule to any new data sets that you create. You can set default bin width rules by selecting Set Default Bin Rules from the Tools menu in the main window.
Click the New Fit button at the top of
the main window to open the New Fit dialog box. If you created the
data set My data
, it appears in the Data field.
Field Name | Description |
---|---|
Fit Name | Enter a name for the fit. |
Data | Select the data set to which you want to fit a distribution from the drop-down list. |
Distribution | Select the type of distribution to fit from the Distribution drop-down list. Only the distributions that apply to the values of the selected data set appear in the Distribution field. For example, when the data include values that are zero or negative, positive distributions are not displayed . You can specify either a parametric or a nonparametric distribution. When you select a parametric distribution from the drop-down list, a description of its parameters appears. Distribution Fitter estimates these parameters to fit the distribution to the data set. If you select the binomial distribution or the generalized extreme value distribution, you must specify a fixed value for one of the parameters. The pane contains a text field into which you can specify that parameter. When
you select |
Exclusion rule | Specify a rule to exclude some data. Create an exclusion rule by clicking Exclude in the Distribution Fitter app. For more information, see Exclude Data. |
Click Apply to fit the distribution. For a parametric fit, the Results pane displays the values of the estimated parameters. For a nonparametric fit, the Results pane displays information about the fit.
When you click Apply, the Distribution Fitter app displays a plot of the distribution and the corresponding data.
Note
When you click Apply, the title of the dialog box changes to Edit Fit. You can now make changes to the fit you just created and click Apply again to save them. After closing the Edit Fit dialog box, you can reopen it from the Fit Manager dialog box at any time to edit the fit.
After applying the fit, you can save the information to the workspace using probability distribution objects by clicking Save to workspace.
All of the distributions available in the Distribution Fitter
app are supported elsewhere in Statistics and Machine Learning Toolbox™ software. You
can use the fitdist
function
to fit any of the distributions supported by the app. Many distributions
also have dedicated fitting functions. These functions compute the
majority of the fits in the Distribution Fitter app, and are referenced
in the following list. Other fits are computed using functions internal
to the Distribution Fitter app.
Not all of the distributions listed are available for all data sets. The Distribution Fitter app determines the extent of the data (nonnegative, unit interval, etc.) and displays appropriate distributions in the Distribution drop-down list. Distribution data ranges are given parenthetically in the following list.
Beta (unit
interval values) distribution, fit using the function betafit
.
Binomial (nonnegative
integer values) distribution, fit using the function binopdf
.
Birnbaum-Saunders (positive values) distribution.
Burr Type XII (positive values) distribution.
Exponential (nonnegative values)
distribution, fit using the function expfit
.
Extreme value (all values)
distribution, fit using the function evfit
.
Gamma (positive
values) distribution, fit using the function gamfit
.
Generalized extreme
value (all values) distribution, fit using the function gevfit
.
Generalized Pareto (all
values) distribution, fit using the function gpfit
.
Inverse Gaussian (positive values) distribution.
Logistic (all values) distribution.
Loglogistic (positive values) distribution.
Lognormal (positive
values) distribution, fit using the function lognfit
.
Nakagami (positive values) distribution.
Negative binomial (nonnegative
integer values) distribution, fit using the function nbinpdf
.
Nonparametric (all values)
distribution, fit using the function ksdensity
.
Normal (all
values) distribution, fit using the function normfit
.
Poisson (nonnegative
integer values) distribution, fit using the function poisspdf
.
Rayleigh (positive
values) distribution using the function raylfit
.
Rician (positive values) distribution.
t location-scale (all values) distribution.
Weibull (positive
values) distribution using the function wblfit
.
When you select Non-parametric
in
the Distribution field, a set of options
appears in the Non-parametric pane, as shown
in the following figure.
The options for nonparametric distributions are:
Kernel — Type of kernel function to use.
Normal
Box
Triangle
Epanechnikov
Bandwidth — The bandwidth of the kernel smoothing window. Select Auto for a default value that is optimal for estimating normal densities. After you click Apply, this value appears in the Fit results pane. Select Specify and enter a smaller value to reveal features such as multiple modes or a larger value to make the fit smoother.
Domain — The allowed x-values for the density.
Unbounded — The density extends over the whole real line.
Positive — The density is restricted to positive values.
Specify — Enter lower and upper bounds for the domain of the density.
When you select Positive or Specify, the nonparametric fit has zero probability outside the specified domain.
The Distribution Fitter app window displays plots of:
The data sets for which you select Plot in the Data dialog box.
The fits for which you select Plot in the Fit Manager dialog box.
Confidence bounds for:
The data sets for which you select Bounds in the Data dialog box.
The fits for which you select Bounds in the Fit Manager dialog box.
The following fields are available.
Specify the type of plot to display using the Display Type field in the main app window. Each type corresponds to a probability function, for example, a probability density function. You can choose from the following display types:
Density (PDF)
—
Display a probability density function (PDF) plot for the fitted distribution.
The main window displays data sets using a probability histogram,
in which the height of each rectangle is the fraction of data points
that lie in the bin divided by the width of the bin. This makes the
sum of the areas of the rectangles equal to 1.
Cumulative probability (CDF)
—
Display a cumulative probability plot of the data. The main window
displays data sets using a cumulative probability step function. The
height of each step is the cumulative sum of the heights of the rectangles
in the probability histogram.
Quantile (inverse CDF)
—
Display a quantile (inverse CDF) plot.
Probability plot
—
Display a probability plot of the data. Specify the type of distribution
used to construct the probability plot in the Distribution field.
This field is only available when you select Probability
plot
. The choices for the distribution are:
Exponential
Extreme value
Logistic
Log-Logistic
Lognormal
Normal
Rayleigh
Weibull
You can also create a probability plot against a parametric fit that you create in the New Fit pane. When you create these fits, they are added at the bottom of the Distribution drop-down list.
Survivor function
—
Display survivor function plot of the data.
Cumulative hazard
—
Display cumulative hazard plot of the data.
Note
If the plotted data includes 0
or negative
values, some distributions are unavailable.
You can display confidence bounds for data sets and fits when
you set Display Type to Cumulative
probability (CDF)
, Survivor function
, Cumulative
hazard
, or, for fits only, Quantile (inverse
CDF)
.
To display bounds for a data set, select Bounds next to the data set in the Data sets pane of the Data dialog box.
To display bounds for a fit, select Bounds next to the fit in the Fit Manager dialog box. Confidence bounds are not available for all fit types.
To set the confidence level for the bounds, select Confidence
Level
from the View menu
in the main window and choose from the options.
Click the Manage Fits button to open the Fit Manager dialog box.
The Table of fits displays a list of the fits that you create, with the following options:
Plot — Displays a plot of the fit in the main window of the Distribution Fitter app. When you create a new fit, Plot is selected by default. Clearing the Plot check box removes the fit from the plot in the main window.
Bounds — If you select Plot, you can also select Bounds to display confidence bounds in the plot. The bounds are displayed when you set Display Type in the main window to one of the following:
Cumulative probability (CDF)
Quantile (inverse CDF)
Survivor function
Cumulative hazard
The Distribution Fitter app cannot display confidence
bounds on density (PDF
) or probability
plots. Bounds are not supported for nonparametric fits and some parametric
fits.
Clearing the Bounds check box removes the confidence intervals from the plot in the main window.
When you select a fit in the Table of fits, the following buttons are enabled below the table:
New Fit — Open a New Fit window.
Copy — Create a copy of the selected fit.
Edit — Open an Edit Fit dialog box, to edit the fit.
Note
You can edit only the currently selected fit in the Edit Fit dialog box. To edit a different fit, select it in the Table of fits and click Edit to open another Edit Fit dialog box.
Save to workspace — Save the selected fit as a distribution object.
Delete — Delete the selected fit.
Use the Evaluate dialog box to evaluate your fitted distribution at any data points you choose. To open the dialog box, click the Evaluate button.
In the Evaluate dialog box, choose from the following items:
Fit pane — Display the names of existing fits. Select one or more fits that you want to evaluate. Using your platform specific functionality, you can select multiple fits.
Function — Select the type of probability function that you want to evaluate for the fit. The available functions are:
Density (PDF)
—
Computes a probability density function.
Cumulative probability (CDF)
—
Computes a cumulative probability function.
Quantile (inverse CDF)
—
Computes a quantile (inverse CDF) function.
Survivor function
—
Computes a survivor function.
Cumulative hazard
—
Computes a cumulative hazard function.
Hazard rate
— Computes
the hazard rate.
At x = —
Enter a vector of points or the name of a workspace variable containing
a vector of points at which you want to evaluate the distribution
function. If you change Function to Quantile
(inverse CDF)
, the field name changes to At
p =, and you enter a vector of probability values.
Compute confidence bounds — Select this box to compute confidence bounds for the selected fits. The check box is enabled only if you set Function to one of the following:
Cumulative probability (CDF)
Quantile (inverse CDF)
Survivor function
Cumulative hazard
The Distribution Fitter app cannot compute confidence bounds
for nonparametric fits and for some parametric fits. In these cases,
it returns NaN
for the bounds.
Level — Set the level for the confidence bounds.
Plot function — Select this box to display a plot of the distribution function, evaluated at the points you enter in the At x = field, in a new window.
Note
The settings for Compute confidence bounds, Level, and Plot function do not affect the plots that are displayed in the main window of the Distribution Fitter app. The settings apply only to plots you create by clicking Plot function in the Evaluate window.
To apply these evaluation settings to the selected fit, click Apply.
The following figure shows the results of evaluating the cumulative density function
for the fit My fit, at the points in the vector
5:4:45
.
The columns of the table to the right of the Fit pane display the following values:
X — The entries of the vector that you enter in At x = field.
F(X)— The corresponding values of the CDF at the entries of X.
LB — The lower bounds for the confidence interval, if you select Compute confidence bounds.
UB — The upper bounds for the confidence interval, if you select Compute confidence bounds.
To save the data displayed in the table to a matrix in the MATLAB workspace, click Export to Workspace.
To exclude values from fit, open the Exclude window by clicking the Exclude button. In the Exclude window, you can create rules for excluding specified data values. When you create a new fit in the New Fit window, you can use these rules to exclude data from the fit.
To create an exclusion rule:
Exclusion Rule Name— Enter a name for the exclusion rule.
Exclude Sections— Specify bounds for the excluded data:
In the Lower limit: exclude data drop-down
list, select <=
or <
and
enter a scalar value in the field to the right. Depending on which
operator you select, the app excludes from the fit any data values
that are less than or equal to the scalar value, or less than the
scalar value, respectively.
In the Upper limit: exclude data drop-down
list, select >=
or >
and
enter a scalar value in the field to the right. Depending on which
operator you select, the app excludes from the fit any data values
that are greater than or equal to the scalar value, or greater than
the scalar value, respectively.
OR
Click the Exclude Graphically button
to define the exclusion rule by displaying a plot of the values in
a data set and selecting the bounds for the excluded data. For example,
if you created the data set My data
as described
in Create and Manage Data Sets, select it from the drop-down list
next to Exclude graphically, and then click
the Exclude graphically button. The app displays
the values in My data
in a new window.
To set a lower limit for the boundary of the excluded region, click Add Lower Limit. The app displays a vertical line on the left side of the plot window. Move the line to the point you where you want the lower limit, as shown in the following figure.
Move the vertical line to change the value displayed in the Lower limit: exclude data field in the Exclude window.
The value displayed corresponds to the x-coordinate of the vertical line.
Similarly, you can set the upper limit for the boundary of the excluded region by clicking Add Upper Limit, and then moving the vertical line that appears at the right side of the plot window. After setting the lower and upper limits, click Close and return to the Exclude window.
Create Exclusion Rule—Once you have set the lower and upper limits for the boundary of the excluded data, click Create Exclusion Rule to create the new rule. The name of the new rule appears in the Existing exclusion rules pane.
Selecting an exclusion rule in the Existing exclusion rules pane enables the following buttons:
Copy — Creates a copy of the rule, which you can then modify. To save the modified rule under a different name, click Create Exclusion Rule.
View — Opens a new window in which you can see the data points excluded by the rule. The following figure shows a typical example.
The shaded areas in the plot graphically display which data points are excluded. The table to the right lists all data points. The shaded rows indicate excluded points.
Rename — Rename the rule.
Delete — Delete the rule.
After you define an exclusion rule, you can use it when you fit a distribution to your data. The rule does not exclude points from the display of the data set.
Save your work in the current session, and then load it in a subsequent session, so that you can continue working where you left off.
To save the current session, from the File menu
in the main window, select Save Session
.
A dialog box opens and prompts you to enter a file name, for examplemy_session.dfit
.
Click Save to save the following items created
in the current session:
Data sets
Fits
Exclusion rules
Plot settings
Bin width rules
To load a previously saved session, from the File menu
in the main window, select Load Session
.
Enter the name of a previously saved session. Click Open to
restore the information from the saved session to the current session.
Use the Generate Code
option in the File to
create a file that:
Fits the distributions in the current session to any data vector in the MATLAB workspace.
Plots the data and the fits.
After you end the current session, you can use the file to create plots in a standard MATLAB figure window, without reopening the Distribution Fitter app.
As an example, if you created the fit described in Create a New Fit, do the following steps:
From the File menu,
select Generate Code
.
In the MATLAB Editor window, choose File
> Save as. Save the file as normal_fit.m
in
a folder on the MATLAB path.
You can then apply the function normal_fit
to
any vector of data in the MATLAB workspace. For example, the
following commands:
new_data = normrnd(4.1, 12.5, 100, 1); newfit = normal_fit(new_data) legend('New Data', 'My fit')
generate newfit
, a fitted normal distribution
of the data. The commands also generate a plot of the data and the
fit.
newfit = NormalDistribution Normal distribution mu = 5.63857 [2.7555, 8.52163] sigma = 14.53 [12.7574, 16.8791]
Note
By default, the file labels the data in the legend using the
same name as the data set in the Distribution Fitter app. You can
change the label using the legend
command, as illustrated
by the preceding example.