how to plot roc curve.....
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Srinidhi Gorityala
el 1 de Feb. de 2020
Comentada: Rik
el 1 de Feb. de 2020
TPR = [0.86666666667 0.79333333333 0.71333333333];
FPR = [0.06666666667 0.00000000000 0.00000000000];
figure('Name','ROC','NumberTitle','off'),plot(FPR,TPR);
xlabel('FP Fraction');
ylabel('TP Fraction');
grid
Helo every one...above is the code i have been used for plotting roc curve. TPR and FPR are the values obtained at 3 thresholds respectively. The plot which i have attached is obtained from the code. The curve looks strange..could anyone help me in justifying that it is a correct plot or not for the respective parameters?
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Rik
el 1 de Feb. de 2020
Given your data, this is the ROC curve. In general the code below is added, but that is optional.
hold on, plot([0 1],[0 1],'--'), hold off
axis([0 1 0 1])
Generally, data points are added in the two corners, but that might not make sense for you.
In terms of Matlab this code is correct. It is not possible for us to tell if made a mistake somewhere else.
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Rik
el 1 de Feb. de 2020
You can add the two corners without having to run any experiment:
- For the [0 0] position: if you call all cases healthy, your FPR is 0 and your TPR is 0 as well
- For the [1 1] position: if you call all cases diseased, you don't miss any diseased cases (TPR=1) at the cost of calling all healthy cases diseased as well (FPR=1)
Whether or not running more expirements than just the 3 you did makes sense is for you to decide, but to get the full line you can add the corners without needing to do any expirements. That is the whole point of the diagonal.
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