--- title: "Maraca Plots - Animation" author: "Kevin Anderson, Monika Huhn" date: "`r Sys.Date()`" output: rmarkdown::html_vignette vignette: > %\VignetteIndexEntry{Maraca Plots - Animation} %\VignetteEngine{knitr::rmarkdown} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} --- ```{r setup, include = FALSE} knitr::opts_chunk$set(echo = TRUE, collapse = TRUE) library(dplyr) library(ggplot2) library(maraca) ``` The maraca package now supports built-in plot animations. This feature is useful for sprucing up presentations or highlighting the temporal nature of step-wise outcomes. This is an experimental feature, so despite doing some testing during development there might be some problems or unexpected behavior during usage. Please take a minute to report any wrong behavior to allow us to improve the functionality. Note that in order to create an animation, the `gganimate` package needs to be installed. Furthermore, if the output should be as a gif, the `gifski` package is required. Alternatively, if either the `av` or `ffmpeg` package is installed, a video file is created. As a final alternative, if no dependency is installed, a list of image files is returned. In this vignette, we will show you how to easily animate a figure by calling the `animate_plot()` function. # Usage ## Basic Static Maraca Plot First we have to create a maraca object. ```{r maraca1, eval = TRUE, fig.width = 7, fig.height = 6} library(maraca) data(hce_scenario_a, package = "maraca") data <- hce_scenario_a column_names <- c( outcome = "GROUP", arm = "TRTP", value = "AVAL0" ) step_outcomes <- c( "Outcome I", "Outcome II", "Outcome III", "Outcome IV" ) last_outcome <- "Continuous outcome" arm_levels = c(active = "Active", control = "Control") mar <- maraca( data, step_outcomes, last_outcome, arm_levels, column_names, fixed_followup_days = 3*365, compute_win_odds = TRUE ) ## Static plot plot(mar) ``` ## Animate Basic Maraca Plot We create an animation by simply calling the `animate_plot()` function. ```{r out.width=700, out.height=500, message=FALSE} animate_plot(mar) ``` The `animate_plot()` function takes the same plotting parameters as the standard maraca `plot()` function. ```{r out.width=700, out.height=500, message=FALSE} animate_plot(mar, continuous_grid_spacing_x = 20, density_plot_type = "scatter", vline_type = "mean", remove_outliers = TRUE, theme = "color1") ``` ## Animation plot options ### Controlling Animation Speed and Duration There are additional input parameters to control the speed and duration of the animation: - __frames_per_step__: `int` - The frame rate of the animation in frames/sec. By default, the rate is 10 frames/sec. - __gif_duration__: `int` or `float` - This defines how long the animation should be in seconds. By default, the animation is 10 seconds long. - __end_duration__: `int` or `float` - This defines how many frames the animation should pause on the last frame before re-starting. By default, it pauses for 20 frames. - __speed_factor__: `int` or `float` - This factor tries to balance the times that it takes to animate the step outcomes towards the last outcome. If not provided (NULL), the function tries to estimate a number that approximately leads to a similar speed between them. The user can try to experiment with manually setting the number to get the best speed. ### Sequential Animation of Each Group/Arm Another way of adapting the animation is by deciding in which order the treatment arms should be displayed. `anim_order` sets which of the treatment arms should be animated first - "active", "control" or "both" (at the same time, default). ### Size of animation output The `anim_width` and `anim_height` parameters can be used to change how big the animation should be. ### Example gif The below example shows how to modify those parameters. ```{r out.width=800, out.height=600, message=FALSE} animate_plot(mar, frames_per_step = 12, gif_duration = 20, end_duration = 40, speed_factor = 8, anim_order = "control", anim_width = 800, anim_height = 600, continuous_grid_spacing_x = 20) ``` ## Animating Alternative Maraca Plots The animation utility can handle any permutation of maraca plot you would like. For instance, it is possible to animate binary endpoints (either for the final or any step outcomes). ```{r} data("hce_scenario_a") # Create data with binary version of 2 step outcomes and # continuous final endpoint bin_data <- hce_scenario_a idx_bin <- bin_data$GROUP %in% c("Outcome III", "Outcome IV") # Binary version (>= 0/< 0), coded as 1 bin_data[idx_bin,"AVAL0"] <- bin_data[idx_bin,"AVAL0"] >= 500 bin_data[idx_bin,"AVAL"] <- bin_data[idx_bin,"AVAL0"] + bin_data[idx_bin,"GROUPN"] # Remove 0 rows (only include patients that had the outcome) bin_data <- bin_data[bin_data$AVAL0 != 0,] # Index of all continuous outcome rows idx_cont <- bin_data$GROUP == "Continuous outcome" # Rename outcome bin_data[idx_cont,"GROUP"] <- "Binary outcome" # Binary version (>= 0/< 0) bin_data[idx_cont,"AVAL0"] <- bin_data[idx_cont,"AVAL0"] >= 0 bin_data[idx_cont,"AVAL"] <- bin_data[idx_cont,"AVAL0"] + bin_data[idx_cont,"GROUPN"] last_outcome_binary <- "Binary outcome" mar_binary <- maraca( bin_data, step_outcomes, last_outcome_binary, arm_levels, column_names, fixed_followup_days = 3*365, compute_win_odds = TRUE, # Important change: Add information that last endpoint is # not continuous (the default) step_types = c("tte","tte","binary","binary"), last_type = "binary" ) ``` ```{r out.width=700, out.height=500, message=FALSE} animate_plot(mar_binary, anim_order = "control") ``` The `animate_plot()` function can also be used directly for a `adhce` object (output from `hce` package). ```{r fig.width = 7, fig.height = 6} Rates_A <- c(1.72, 1.74, 0.58, 1.5, 1) Rates_P <- c(2.47, 2.24, 2.9, 4, 6) hce_dat <- hce::simHCE(n = 2500, TTE_A = Rates_A, TTE_P = Rates_P, CM_A = -6, CM_P = 3, CSD_A = 15, CSD_P = 16, fixedfy = 3, seed = 31337) ``` ```{r out.width=700, out.height=500, message=FALSE} animate_plot(hce_dat, compute_win_odds = TRUE, lowerBetter = TRUE, trans = "reverse") ``` For boxplots, the animation just displays the entire boxplots at once, rather than gradually building them up. ```{r out.width=700, out.height=500, message=FALSE} animate_plot(mar, density_plot_type = "box", anim_order = "control", continuous_grid_spacing_x = 20) ``` ## Saving the Animation If the `gifski` package is used and a gif output is created (`gif_output = TRUE`), the animation can be saved directly from the `animate_plot()` function. By default, the gif gets saved to a tmp folder and displayed in the Viewer window. In order to save it to a file for later re-use instead, a file name needs to be provided to the `gif_file_name` parameter. ```{r} # Example - do not run # animate_plot(mar, gif_file_name = "tmp/maraca_anim.gif") ```