Abstract
Psycho is an R package that aims at providing tools for psychologists, neuropsychologists and neuroscientists, to transform statistical outputs into something readable that can be, almost directly, copied and pasted into a report. It also implements various functions useful in psychological science, such as correlation matrices, assessment plot creation or normalization. The package revolves around the psychobject. Main functions from the package return this type, and the analyze()
function transforms other R objects into psychobjects. Four functions can then be applied on a psychobject: summary()
, print()
, plot()
and values()
. Contrary to many other packages which goal is to produce statistical analyzes, psycho
aims at filling the gap between statistical R outputs and statistical report writing, with a focus on APA formatting guidelines, to enhance the standardization of results reporting. Complex outputs, such as those of Bayesian and frequentist mixed models, are automatically transformed into readable text, tables, and plots that illustrate the effects. Thus, the results can easily be incorporated into shareable reports and publications, promoting data exploration, saving time and preventing errors for better, reproducible, science.
The package mainly revolves around the psychobject
. Main functions from the package return this type, and the analyze()
function transforms other R objects into psychobjects. 4 functions can be then applied on a psychobject: summary()
, print()
, plot()
and values()
.
If you’ve never used psycho
, enter one of the following in the console and press enter:
# This for the stable version:
install.packages("psycho")
# Or this for the dev version:
install.packages("devtools")
library(devtools)
::install_github("neuropsychology/psycho.R") devtools
In case of error: Sometimes the installation fails, and you might find in the red output the following lines:
**thenameofapackage**’
there is no package called ‘: lazy loading failed for package ‘psycho’ ERROR
Try installing the missing packages (install.packages("thenameofapackage")
) and then, install psycho again (sometimes this can be done several times).
Anyway, once you have psycho
, just put this at the beginning of every script:
library(psycho)
This package helped you? Don’t forget to cite the various packages you used :)
You can cite psycho
as follows:
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