Package: fSRM 0.6.5

fSRM: Social Relations Analyses with Roles ("Family SRM")

Social Relations Analysis with roles ("Family SRM") are computed, using a structural equation modeling approach. Groups ranging from three members up to an unlimited number of members are supported and the mean structure can be computed. Means and variances can be compared between different groups of families and between roles.

Authors:Felix Schönbrodt, Lara Stas, Tom Loeys

fSRM_0.6.5.tar.gz
fSRM_0.6.5.zip(r-4.5)fSRM_0.6.5.zip(r-4.4)fSRM_0.6.5.zip(r-4.3)
fSRM_0.6.5.tgz(r-4.4-any)fSRM_0.6.5.tgz(r-4.3-any)
fSRM_0.6.5.tar.gz(r-4.5-noble)fSRM_0.6.5.tar.gz(r-4.4-noble)
fSRM_0.6.5.tgz(r-4.4-emscripten)fSRM_0.6.5.tgz(r-4.3-emscripten)
fSRM.pdf |fSRM.html
fSRM/json (API)
NEWS

# Install 'fSRM' in R:
install.packages('fSRM', repos = c('https://nicebread.r-universe.dev', 'https://cloud.r-project.org'))

Peer review:

Datasets:
  • clinical - Data set on negativity in problematic and nonproblematic families A simulated dataset, mimicking the study performed by Eichelsheim et al. (2011) who investigated whether there are differences in patterns of negativity between families with and without an adolescent with externalizing problem behavior. In the study of Eichelsheim et al. (2011), four members of the same family (mother, father, target adolescent and sibling) reported on the amount of negativity they experienced in relation to each other. In total, these authors studied 120 Dutch four-person families with a target adolescent scoring above the externalizing behavior clinical norm scores on either the Child Behavior Check List (N = 47; CBCL; Achenbach, 1991) or the Youth Self Report (N = 73; YSR; Achenbach, 1991). Because of confidentiality reasons, not the original data but mimicked data are used here, so results of social relations analyses will deviate from the original paper.
  • clinical.wide - Data set on negativity in problematic and nonproblematic families A simulated dataset, mimicking the study performed by Eichelsheim et al. (2011) who investigated whether there are differences in patterns of negativity between families with and without an adolescent with externalizing problem behavior. In the study of Eichelsheim et al. (2011), four members of the same family (mother, father, target adolescent and sibling) reported on the amount of negativity they experienced in relation to each other. In total, these authors studied 120 Dutch four-person families with a target adolescent scoring above the externalizing behavior clinical norm scores on either the Child Behavior Check List (N = 47; CBCL; Achenbach, 1991) or the Youth Self Report (N = 73; YSR; Achenbach, 1991). Because of confidentiality reasons, not the original data but mimicked data are used here, so results of social relations analyses will deviate from the original paper.
  • four.person - Data set on attachment anxiety in four person families
  • three.person - Data set on attachment anxiety in 3-person families
  • two.groups - Data set on negative interactions A simulated dataset, mimicking the study performed by Eichelsheim et al. (2011) who investigated whether there are differences in patterns of negativity between families with and without an adolescent with externalizing problem behavior. The problematic and nonproblematic group consist of 120 and 153 four-person families, respectively. This dataset contains a measures of negativity for each of the 12 relationships. Four roles are present: Mothers "M", fathers "F", the asolescent with externalizing problem behavior "T", and the adolescent sibling without problem behavior "S". A wide version of the same data set is in 'two.groups.wide'.
  • two.groups.wide - Data set on negative interactions A simulated dataset, mimicking the study performed by Eichelsheim et al. (2011) who investigated whether there are differences in patterns of negativity between families with and without an adolescent with externalizing problem behavior. The problematic and nonproblematic group consist of 120 and 153 four-person families, respectively. This dataset contains a measures of negativity for each of the 12 relationships. Four roles are present: Mothers "M", fathers "F", the asolescent with externalizing problem behavior "T", and the adolescent sibling without problem behavior "S". A wide version of the same data set is in 'two.groups.wide'.
  • two.indicators - Data set on attachment dependency (Cook, 2000) The classic Cook (2000) dataset consists of measurements on security of attachment within families. Only the variable measuring attachment dependency in family relationships is included in this dataset. Four roles are present (i.e. two parents and two children): mothers "m", fathers "f", the older child as "c", and the younger child "y".

On CRAN:

This package does not link to any Github/Gitlab/R-forge repository. No issue tracker or development information is available.

1.04 score 11 scripts 248 downloads 6 exports 41 dependencies

Last updated 4 years agofrom:f11d395a3f. Checks:OK: 7. Indexed: yes.

TargetResultDate
Doc / VignettesOKNov 21 2024
R-4.5-winOKNov 21 2024
R-4.5-linuxOKNov 21 2024
R-4.4-winOKNov 21 2024
R-4.4-macOKNov 21 2024
R-4.3-winOKNov 21 2024
R-4.3-macOKNov 21 2024

Exports:buildSRMSyntaxequalMeansfSRMgetImportimportmod

Dependencies:clicolorspacefansifarverforeignggplot2gluegridExtragtableisobandlabelinglatticelavaanlifecyclemagrittrMASSMatrixmgcvmnormtmunsellnlmenumDerivpbivnormpillarpkgconfigplyrquadprogR6RColorBrewerRcppreshape2rlangscalesstringistringrtcltk2tibbleutf8vctrsviridisLitewithr

Readme and manuals

Help Manual

Help pageTopics
Build lavaan syntax for a Social Relations Model with roles ("Family SRM")buildSRMSyntax
Data set on negativity in problematic and nonproblematic families A simulated dataset, mimicking the study performed by Eichelsheim et al. (2011) who investigated whether there are differences in patterns of negativity between families with and without an adolescent with externalizing problem behavior. In the study of Eichelsheim et al. (2011), four members of the same family (mother, father, target adolescent and sibling) reported on the amount of negativity they experienced in relation to each other. In total, these authors studied 120 Dutch four-person families with a target adolescent scoring above the externalizing behavior clinical norm scores on either the Child Behavior Check List (N = 47; CBCL; Achenbach, 1991) or the Youth Self Report (N = 73; YSR; Achenbach, 1991). Because of confidentiality reasons, not the original data but mimicked data are used here, so results of social relations analyses will deviate from the original paper.clinical clinical.wide
Test actor and partner means for equalityequalMeans
Data set on attachment anxiety in four person families (Cook, 2000)four.person
Run a Social Relations Model with roles ("Family SRM")fSRM print.fSRM
Import and transform a dataset into long formatgetImport import import,
Get modification indices for a fSRM objectmod
Plot an fSRM-object, two typesplot.fSRM
Predict new cases based on a fitted fSRM modelpredict.fSRM
Data set on attachment anxiety in 3-person families (based on Cook, 2000)three.person
Data set on negative interactions A simulated dataset, mimicking the study performed by Eichelsheim et al. (2011) who investigated whether there are differences in patterns of negativity between families with and without an adolescent with externalizing problem behavior. The problematic and nonproblematic group consist of 120 and 153 four-person families, respectively. This dataset contains a measures of negativity for each of the 12 relationships. Four roles are present: Mothers "M", fathers "F", the asolescent with externalizing problem behavior "T", and the adolescent sibling without problem behavior "S". A wide version of the same data set is in 'two.groups.wide'.two.groups two.groups.wide
Data set on attachment dependency (Cook, 2000) The classic Cook (2000) dataset consists of measurements on security of attachment within families. Only the variable measuring attachment dependency in family relationships is included in this dataset. Four roles are present (i.e. two parents and two children): mothers "m", fathers "f", the older child as "c", and the younger child "y".two.indicators
Rerun a fSRM model with new parametersupdate.fSRM