Use table
to store tabular data that you can use
later in fitting and analysis at the command line. Use readtable
to import data without NONMEM® interpretation of column headers. The readtable
function
lets you use name-value pair arguments in which you can specify options such as the type of
delimiter and whether the first row contains header names. If you want to use the data for
fitting using sbiofit
or sbiofitmixed
, convert it
to a groupedData
format using groupedData
.
To prepare the data file for import, remove any comments that are present at the beginning of the file.
For example:
% Text files data = readtable('tobramycin.txt'); % Text files with . in place of missing values data = readtable('tobramycin.txt', 'TreatAsEmpty', '.');
Use the sbionmimport
function to import data
from NONMEM formatted files. To import the data without NONMEM interpretation
of column headers, see Import Data from Files.
To prepare the data file for import, remove any comments that are present at the beginning of the file and select one of the following methods to import your data:
If the data file contains only the column header values shown in Support for Importing NONMEM Formatted Files, use the syntax shown in the following example:
filename = 'C:\work\datafiles\dose.xls'; ds = sbionmimport(filename);
If the data file has column header labels different from the table shown in Support for Importing NONMEM Formatted Files and you want to apply NONMEM interpretation of headers:
Create a NONMEM file definition object. This
object lets you define what the column headers in the data file mean
in SimBiology®. In the following example, the column containing
response values is CP
, whereas in NONMEM formatted
files the column is labelled DV
.
To use the tobramycin data set [1], create a NONMEM file definition object and define the following:
def = sbionmfiledef; def.DoseLabel = 'DOSE'; def.GroupLabel = 'ID'; def.TimeLabel = 'TIME'; def.DependentVariableLabel = 'CP'; def.MissingDependentVariableLabel = 'MDV'; def.EventIDLabel = 'EVID'; def.ContinuousCovariateLabels = {'WT', 'HT', 'AGE', 'SEX', 'CLCR'};
Your file can contain any name for column headings. See sbionmfiledef
for the list of properties
you can configure in the NONMEM file definition object.
Use the sbionmimport
function to
import your data file with the column header definitions as specified
in the NONMEM file definition object. For example, browse to
(where matlabroot
/toolbox/simbio/simbiodemos/matlabroot
is
the folder where MATLAB® is installed).
[data, pkDataObject] = sbionmimport('tobramycin.txt', def, ... 'TreatAsEmpty', '.');
This example shows you how to obtain the PKData object, PKDataObj
,
while importing, since you will use the PKData object in fitting the
model later.
The sbionmimport
function accepts property-name-value
pairs accepted by dataset
. For example, if the
data set does not contain column headers, use 'ReadVarNames',
false
to specify that sbionmimport
should
read values from the first row of the file.
For information about creating a model to fit the data, see Create a Pharmacokinetic Model Using the Command Line.
For detailed information about supported data formats and the functions for importing data into the MATLAB Workspace, see the Methods for Importing Data.
You also can import data using the MATLAB Import Wizard (see Import Images, Audio, and Video Interactively.
Use the Import Wizard, to import data as text files (such as .txt
and .dat
),
MAT-files, and spreadsheet files, (such as .xls
).
The MATLAB Import Wizard processes the data source. The wizard recognizes data delimiters, as well as row or column headers, to facilitate the process of data selection and importation into the MATLAB Workspace. You can import the data to the SimBiology Model Analyzer app from the MATLAB Workspace.