Yeast | R Documentation |
Counts of the number of yeast cells were made each of 400 regions in a 20 x 20 grid on a microscope slide, comprising a 1 sq. mm. area. This experiment was repeated four times, giving samples A, B, C and D.
Student (1906) used these data to investigate the errors in random sampling. He says "there are two sources of error: (a) the drop taken may not be representative of the bulk of the liquid; (b) the distribution of the cells over the area which is examined is never exactly uniform, so that there is an 'error of random sampling.'"
The data in the paper are provided in the form of discrete frequency distributions
for the four samples. Each shows the frequency distribution squares containing
a count
of 0, 1, 2, ... yeast cells. These are combined here in Yeast
.
In addition, he gives a table
(Table I) showing the actual number of yeast cells counted in the 20 x 20
grid for sample D, given here as YeastD.mat
.
data(Yeast) data(YeastD.mat)
Yeast
: A frequency data frame with 36 observations on the following 3 variables,
giving the frequencies of
sample
Sample identifier, a factor with levels A
B
C
D
count
The number of yeast cells counted in a square
freq
The number of squares with the given count
YeastD.mat
: A 20 x 20 matrix containing the count of yeast cells in each square for
sample D.
Student considers the distribution of a total of Nm particles distributed over N unit areas with an average of m particles per unit area. With uniform mixing, for a given particle, the probability of it falling on any one area is p = 1/N, and not falling on that area is q = 1 - 1/N. He derives the probability distribution of 0, 1, 2, 3, ... particles on a single unit area from the binomial expansion of (p + q)^{mN}.
D. J. Hand, F. Daly, D. Lunn, K. McConway and E. Ostrowski (1994). A Handbook of Small Data Sets. London: Chapman \& Hall. The data may be found at http://www.stat.duke.edu/courses/Spring98/sta113/Data/Hand/yeast.dat
"Student" (1906) On the error of counting with a haemocytometer. Biometrika, 5, 351-360. http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdfplus/2331633.pdf
data(Yeast) require(lattice) # basic bar charts # TODO: frequencies should start at 0, not 1. barchart(count~freq|sample, data=Yeast, ylab="Number of Cells", xlab="Frequency") barchart(freq~count|sample, data=Yeast, xlab="Number of Cells", ylab="Frequency", horizontal=FALSE, origin=0) # same, using xyplot xyplot(freq~count|sample, data=Yeast, xlab="Number of Cells", ylab="Frequency", horizontal=FALSE, origin=0, type="h", lwd=10)