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LOESS (locally optimized enhanced sum of squares aka locally weighted enh....)

The idea is as follows.  A bit intricate, but GENERALLY applicable.  Your measuring device ALLEGEDLY only measures property A (magnetic field, pH, doesn't matter).  It responds, ALLEGEDLY to ONLY property A.  However, you, the keen metrologist, realize this is a fallacy.  Actually your measuring device, unfortunately, also is affected by property T (typically temperature).  Allegedly not.  But your RESEARCH shows that your device TRULY is a function of both property A  AND  property T.  You've done research to establish the T effect -- quantitatively.  That's all been done and is the background history that is required.  Now, HENCEFORTH & FOREVERMORE Thou Shalt measure property T whenever using the device to measure property A.  The measuring of property T can be considered a "subsidiary measurement".  Now you have yourself some 20 or so samples -- each one needing measurement of their property A's value.  You do so, but either for every single one of the 20 sample or perhaps every 2 or every 4 you MEASURE AS WELL PROPERTY T.  From your research on the very topic you know how to correct the systematic error in the measurement's report of property A values for each sample given the subsidiary measurement of property T and THEIR values.  EVEN IF you have a T measurement (think temperature) for each sample do you REALLY THINK the "BOUNCY" T values are as close to the truth as you can get.  They could be closer to the truth than the alternative I'm about to present, but NOT likely.  Just as measurement #2 MIGHT be closer to the truth than an average of 6 true replicate measurements -- but is NOT LIKELY.  What's the alternative to the "BOUNCY" T values?  Time-trended or smoothed T values.  Especially for temperature.  We don't expect a time trend of temperature to bounce up and down.  So the smoothed trend is LIKELIER closer to the truth than the OBSERVED BOUNCY T values.  Yes, that does mean that you have also elapsed time to measure to smooth the T observed values.  Time is usually unproblematic.  But even merely smoothing by "sequence number" probably gets you closer to the truth about T (think temperature) than taking as-is bouncy values.  And it's NOT an issue of "make pretty":  The issue is using AS CLOSE TO THE TRUTH T VALUES to EFFECT A MOST ACCURATE SYSTEMATIC ERROR COMPENSATION/CORRECTION AS POSSIBLE.  You need that historical research to know how T affects the instrument report of property A -- allegedly, but NOT actually, "all the instrument cares about".  But once that research is done, you ALSO need the best T values you can get.  Those are obtained with SMOOTHING.  Smoothing is BEST DONE, NOT with spline (too wiggly) or the horrendously bad moving average, but with LOESS.  Locally Enhanced Sum of Squares (or Locally Weighted Enhanced Sum of Squares).  It's only real rival is Distance-Weighted Least Squares (offered in Statistica).  LOESS is in S+ (and probably the freeware version R).  MOREOVER, if you didn't get a T value for EACH AND EVERY SAMPLE, you'll need to LOESS-Interpolate (that is, use the LOESS regression to estimate T values for sample for which [for whatever reason] you didn't measure T) BECAUSE EACH AND EVERY MEASUREMENT FOR PROPERTY A, IN TRUTH, REQUIRES A T VALUE TO FIX THE SYSTEMATIC ERROR (based on that research).  Sorry about a couple things:  my inductive writing -- proceeding step by itty bitty step all leading to the punchline (so, if you've made it, go back to the top and see the indefatigable logic)  and  secondly, the somewhat lack of concreteness.  The latter is not really too bad, but I didn't want to get very very specific because you'd get the wrong notion.  TRENDING (SMOOTHING & INTERPOLATING [if need be]) OF SUBSIDIARY MEASUREMENT VALUES TO GET CLOSER TO THE TRUTH FOR THOSE VALUES FOR THE SAKE OF FIXING SYSTEMATIC ERROR TO AN ENTIRELY DIFFERENT MEASUREMENT IS A GENERALLY APPLICABLE METROLOGICAL STASTICS PRINCIPLE -- yet it's one I've seen discussed precisely NOWHERE other than my own writings.  LOESS is the way to do the trending/smoothing/interploation; runner up is DWLS (distance-weighted least squares [in Statistica]).  Finally, LOESS, as S+ -implemented is VERY robust against outliers and you indeed get closest to the truth via LOESS.  So you'd make the most ACCURATE compensation/correction to property A reportings.

4 Comments
MarkAldonWeiss
Level II

I don't know how to EDIT a posting.  So there are a few typos in the description.  Please don't let them bother your

XanGregg
Staff

Hi Mark,

 

Recent versions of JMP have both LOESS and distance-weighted least squares.

In Bivariate, the Flexible submenu has LOESS as "Kernel Smoother," and the Robust submenu includes a couple methods for automatic outlier re-weighting.

MarkAldonWeiss
Level II
Thanks. It was nice of you to reply. Good details too.

Yes, I'm an older-version JMP user. Glad to hear how new versions have LOESS and DWLS.

Is there any provision for interpolating response estimates from the LOESS or DWLS fit based on a column of X values for which you want estimated-from-fit response values. My other item asked about that. The Spline Interpolation White Paper (from way long ago) procedure works fine, but is a lot of rigamaroll to do every time as routine processing. Yes, it does help to have example JMP data tables with the formulas to copy, but it is just a lot of creations of stuff. Can there be a JMP "red triangle" saying interpolate per the LOESS or per the SPLINE fit based on ____ column as the X's I'm interested in? Or maybe is there ALREADY such a "red triangle"?
Ryan_Gilmore
Community Manager
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