Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-25wd4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T21:32:59.062Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Agridat

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2014

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Viewpoint
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

R (R Core Team 2013) is an open-source statistics software environment that can be downloaded from the R project website at http://www.r-project.org/ to provide a free resource for modern statistics computing. The basic R download includes a range of core tools but the real strength of R is in the contributed packages that extend and generalize the core language. A recent contributed package that should be of interest to agricultural statisticians and research workers is the ‘agridat’ package (Wright Reference Wright2013), which provides access to real datasets from a large number of published agricultural research papers. Currently, the package contains more than 140 datasets covering field and horticultural data, uniformity data, animal data, tree data, time series data and a few sets of disease, soil and economics data. The data sets include, for example, the classical Mercer & Hall uniformity trial on wheat (Mercer & Hall Reference Mercer and Hall1911) and the classical Yates (Reference Yates1935) split-plot experiment on oats as well as many other data sets both old and new.

The ‘agridat’ datasets are formatted as data frames and each dataset has example code which can be input directly into R to provide an example analysis of the formatted dataset. For example, the Mercer & Hall dataset has code that provides graphical displays of the uniformity data, whereas the Yates (Reference Yates1935) oats dataset has code that provides a mixed model analysis of the split-plot oats data. Other datasets include a wide range of statistical methods and provide a wealth of interesting examples.

Access to real research data is important for the development and testing of new statistical methods and the ‘agridat’ datasets should be a boon to methodological research in agriculture. Installation of the ‘agridat’ package is fairly straightforward but does require some basic knowledge and experience of the R environment. As R is now such a widely used and well-established statistics language, time spent learning about packages such as ‘agridat’ should be time well spent.

References

REFERENCES

Mercer, W. B. & Hall, A. D. (1911). The experimental error of field trials. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 4, 107132. Table 5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
R Core Team (2013). R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. Vienna, Austria: R Foundation for Statistical Computing. Available from: http://www.R-project.org/ (accessed 18 October 2013).Google Scholar
Wright, K. (2013). Agridat: Agricultural Datasets. R Package Version 1.8. Vienna, Austria: R Foundation for Statistical Computing. Available from: http://CRAN.R-project.org/package=agridat (accessed 18 October 2013).Google Scholar
Yates, F. (1935) Complex experiments. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society 2 (Suppl. 2), 181247.Google Scholar