scipy.stats.boxcox#

scipy.stats.boxcox(x, lmbda=None, alpha=None, optimizer=None)[source]#

Return a dataset transformed by a Box-Cox power transformation.

Parameters
xndarray

Input array to be transformed.

If lmbda is not None, this is an alias of scipy.special.boxcox. Returns nan if x < 0; returns -inf if x == 0 and lmbda < 0.

If lmbda is None, array must be positive, 1-dimensional, and non-constant.

lmbdascalar, optional

If lmbda is None (default), find the value of lmbda that maximizes the log-likelihood function and return it as the second output argument.

If lmbda is not None, do the transformation for that value.

alphafloat, optional

If lmbda is None and alpha is not None (default), return the 100 * (1-alpha)% confidence interval for lmbda as the third output argument. Must be between 0.0 and 1.0.

If lmbda is not None, alpha is ignored.

optimizercallable, optional

If lmbda is None, optimizer is the scalar optimizer used to find the value of lmbda that minimizes the negative log-likelihood function. optimizer is a callable that accepts one argument:

funcallable

The objective function, which evaluates the negative log-likelihood function at a provided value of lmbda

and returns an object, such as an instance of scipy.optimize.OptimizeResult, which holds the optimal value of lmbda in an attribute x.

See the example in boxcox_normmax or the documentation of scipy.optimize.minimize_scalar for more information.

If lmbda is not None, optimizer is ignored.

Returns
boxcoxndarray

Box-Cox power transformed array.

maxlogfloat, optional

If the lmbda parameter is None, the second returned argument is the lmbda that maximizes the log-likelihood function.

(min_ci, max_ci)tuple of float, optional

If lmbda parameter is None and alpha is not None, this returned tuple of floats represents the minimum and maximum confidence limits given alpha.

Notes

The Box-Cox transform is given by:

y = (x**lmbda - 1) / lmbda,  for lmbda != 0
    log(x),                  for lmbda = 0

boxcox requires the input data to be positive. Sometimes a Box-Cox transformation provides a shift parameter to achieve this; boxcox does not. Such a shift parameter is equivalent to adding a positive constant to x before calling boxcox.

The confidence limits returned when alpha is provided give the interval where:

\[llf(\hat{\lambda}) - llf(\lambda) < \frac{1}{2}\chi^2(1 - \alpha, 1),\]

with llf the log-likelihood function and \(\chi^2\) the chi-squared function.

References

G.E.P. Box and D.R. Cox, “An Analysis of Transformations”, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society B, 26, 211-252 (1964).

Examples

>>> from scipy import stats
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

We generate some random variates from a non-normal distribution and make a probability plot for it, to show it is non-normal in the tails:

>>> fig = plt.figure()
>>> ax1 = fig.add_subplot(211)
>>> x = stats.loggamma.rvs(5, size=500) + 5
>>> prob = stats.probplot(x, dist=stats.norm, plot=ax1)
>>> ax1.set_xlabel('')
>>> ax1.set_title('Probplot against normal distribution')

We now use boxcox to transform the data so it’s closest to normal:

>>> ax2 = fig.add_subplot(212)
>>> xt, _ = stats.boxcox(x)
>>> prob = stats.probplot(xt, dist=stats.norm, plot=ax2)
>>> ax2.set_title('Probplot after Box-Cox transformation')
>>> plt.show()
../../_images/scipy-stats-boxcox-1.png