polyfit and R^2 value

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Rick
Rick on 20 Oct 2014
Edited: Bruno Luong on 27 Jul 2023
Hello,
Is there a way to show the R^2 value when fitting a curve to data with polyfit? I know if I have two outputs, I get a structure
P =
R: [2x2 double]
df: 3
normr: 0.1782
EDU>> P.R
ans =
-4.3248 -2.1613
0 0.5734
but I don't know how to interpret this. I just want to know what the R^2 value is from a least squares fit. What are the numbers in the array of P.R? Thanks!

Answers (3)

Sarah
Sarah on 29 Nov 2018
Hello ,
can someone confirm, is R here (if squared) the regression coefficient of the fit polynomial?
  5 Comments
Edmund Wascher
Edmund Wascher on 27 Jul 2023
Does this approach also holds for higher order fits or only for linear ones?
Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong on 27 Jul 2023
Edited: Bruno Luong on 27 Jul 2023
@Edmund Wascher "Does this approach also holds for higher order fits or only for linear ones?"
Yes the formula
[P, S] = polyfit(x, y, n)
R_squared = 1 - (S.normr/norm(y - mean(y)))^2
returns R^2 for any order polyfit n.

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Orion
Orion on 20 Oct 2014
Hi,
Did you read the help of polyfit ?
[p,S] = polyfit(x,y,n) returns the polynomial coefficients p and a structure S for use with polyval to obtain error estimates or predictions. Structure S contains fields R, df, and normr, for the triangular factor from a QR decomposition of the Vandermonde matrix of x, the degrees of freedom, and the norm of the residuals, respectively. If the data y are random, an estimate of the covariance matrix of p is (Rinv*Rinv')*normr^2/df, where Rinv is the inverse of R. If the errors in the data y are independent normal with constant variance, polyval produces error bounds that contain at least 50% of the predictions.
in your case, P must be the 2nd output argument.
  1 Comment
Igor
Igor on 25 Oct 2022
Edited: Igor on 25 Oct 2022
The help is written is an overcomplicated way and the parameters are not explained at all for somebody starting with matlab trying to do some simple linear fit. Why does the polyfit do not calculate the regular R correlation coeficient right away it would be much more simple than some S matrix of values

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Star Strider
Star Strider on 20 Oct 2014
The ‘R’ returned in the ‘S’ structure is the covariance matrix of the parameters. If you want the correlation coefficients and the related statistics on your data, use the coorrcoef function.
  1 Comment
hoppingbuffalo
hoppingbuffalo on 7 Nov 2018
Good answer except it's the corrcoef function. I just want to add if your data is two column vectors then the off-diagonal elements of the 2x2 matrix corrcoef returns is what we conventionally think of as the correlation coefficient. That off-diagonal element squared is R^2.
Both polyfit and corrcoef are order N algorithms so both run very fast. Legendre and Gauss performed fitting by hand circa 1800. You can run polyfit and corrcoef one right after the other. If you don't want to use corrcoef you have to do a little extra work to get the output structure of polyfit to a correlation coefficient. The corrcoef documentation shows how to connect the covariance matrix to the correlation coefficients.
I'm a bit surprised that Mathworks doesn't have polyfit output the correlation coefficient matrix. Most people want the correlation coefficient and not the QR decomposition of the Vandermonde matrix of x.

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