finding turning points of a dataset
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Dear all, I hope somebody can help me with the following problem: I have a vector of x. The numbers within this vector (1-n) change at a very slow rate (the difference between data points is too small). So you can not say when numbers really increase or decrease. However I can see that at some points the rate of change is getting faster which is in my case a real turning point. How can I check when changes between data points start accelerating? I hope I am clear enough. I really appreciate your help. Sobhan
2 Comments
Image Analyst
on 3 May 2012
Please upload a plot diagram of your data somewhere so we can see what it looks like.
Sobhan
on 4 May 2012
Accepted Answer
More Answers (4)
Richard Brown
on 3 May 2012
Edited: Richard Brown
on 3 Nov 2012
Why don't you look for local maxima of curvature? This way you don't have to define any subjective tolerances. You may need to smooth your data first to make sure the finite difference derivative approximations work cleanly though.
To keep it simple, I'll assume your independent variable is evenly spaced and use a simple example (decaying exponential). We want to find the "knee"
dt = 0.01;
t = 0:dt:1;
y = exp(-10*t);
Compute first and second derivatives by finite differencing (centred)
yp = nan(size(y));
ypp = nan(size(y));
yp(2:end-1) = (y(3:end) - y(1:end-2))/(2*dt);
ypp(2:end-1) = (y(3:end) + y(1:end-2) - 2*y(2:end-1)) / (dt^2);
Compute the curvature
k = abs(ypp) ./ (1 + yp.^2).^1.5
Find the maximum and plot it on the curve. You could easily adapt this to find local maxima of k, etc.
[kmax, idx] = max(k);
plot(t, y, 'b', t(idx), y(idx), 'ro')
Also of interest to plot the curvature
figure()
plot(t, k)
edit: fixed wrong indices in plot command
2 Comments
Nick
on 30 Oct 2012
The first plot statement uses the wrong indices for t and y. It should be:
plot(t, y, 'b', t(idx), y(idx), 'ro')
Richard Brown
on 3 Nov 2012
@Nick, thanks. fixed now
Sargondjani
on 1 May 2012
0 votes
take the difference between each two points in the vector (use 'diff')
evaluate if these numbers 'grow faster'. Im not sure what your criterium is here. If you specify that, somebody might be able to help you further
2 Comments
Sobhan
on 2 May 2012
Sargondjani
on 2 May 2012
my problem was that i dont know what your definition of acceleration is...
i mean, you say that the differences between points is too small to directly tell when there is change. this implies that some points are numerically EXACTLY the same and some are not. that means there is some sort of acceleration before your turning point as well
so you need to be more specific about what acceleration is...
Sobhan
on 4 May 2012
0 votes
Masoud Hosseiny
on 29 Jun 2018
0 votes
Hi. you can calculate the differential of data set and plot it at the same time.
1 Comment
Kriti Modi
on 3 Jul 2018
Even I have similar kind of data set and wondering I need to do complex stuff or if i can find it with simple maths. Explaining it here. I have a data set about part number and I want to divide the data set in three category low , medium and high or may be one more. I could see it visually in the graph but this data set is always changing. I want to automate the process mathematically to find these points every time data is changing. I think I need to see maximum rate of change? Is there any way to find it?
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