Augmented Dickey-Fuller Test in R

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The post Augmented Dickey-Fuller Test in R appeared first on Data Science Tutorials

Augmented Dickey-Fuller Test in R, If a time series has no trend, constant variance over time, and a consistent autocorrelation structure across time, it is considered to be “stationary.”

An augmented Dickey-Fuller test, which uses the following null and alternative hypotheses to determine whether a time series is stationary, is one technique to do so.

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H0: The time series is non-stationary.

To put it another way, it has some time-dependent structure and does not exhibit constant variance over time.

HA: The time series is stationary.

We can reject the null hypothesis and infer that the time series is stationary if the p-value from the test is less than some significance level (e.g. =0.05).

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For a given time series, the following step-by-step example explains how to run an enhanced Dickey-Fuller test in R.

In R, an Augmented Dickey-Fuller test is an example.

Let’s pretend we have the following data in R:

data <- c(13, 54, 54, 65, 66, 71, 67, 67, 79, 88, 59, 52, 60)

We can make a fast plot to visualize the data before performing an augmented Dickey-Fuller test on it.

plot(data, type='l')

The adf.test() function from the tseries package can be used to run an augmented Dickey-Fuller test.

The code below demonstrates how to use this function.

library(tseries)

perform augmented Dickey-Fuller test

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adf.test(data)
Augmented Dickey-Fuller Test
data:  data
Dickey-Fuller = -1.6549, Lag order = 2, p-value = 0.7039
alternative hypothesis: stationary

Here’s how to interpret the most important p-value in the output.

We cannot reject the null hypothesis because the p-value is not smaller than 0.05.

This indicates that the time series is non-stationary. To put it another way, it has some time-dependent structure and does not exhibit constant variance over time.

The post Augmented Dickey-Fuller Test in R appeared first on Data Science Tutorials

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