% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/cr_naiveConcordance.R \name{naiveConcordance} \alias{naiveConcordance} \title{Naive Concordance} \usage{ naiveConcordance(responses, predictedMortalities) } \arguments{ \item{responses}{A list of responses corresponding to the provided mortalities; use \code{\link{CR_Response}}.} \item{predictedMortalities}{A list of mortality vectors; each element of the list should correspond to one of the events in the order of event 1 to J, and should be a vector of the same length as responses.} } \value{ A vector of 1 minus the concordance scores, with each element corresponding to one of the events. To be clear, the lower the score the more accurate the model was. } \description{ Used to calculate a concordance index error. The user needs to supply a list of mortalities, with each item in the list being a vector for the corresponding event. To calculate mortalities a user should look to \code{\link{extractMortalities}}. } \examples{ data <- data.frame(delta=c(1,1,0,0,2,2), T=1:6, x=1:6) model <- train(CR_Response(delta, T) ~ x, data, ntree=100, numberOfSplits=0, mtry=1, nodeSize=1) newData <- data.frame(delta=c(1,0,2,1,0,2), T=1:6, x=1:6) predictions <- predict(model, newData) mortalities <- list( extractMortalities(predictions, 1, 6), extractMortalities(predictions, 2, 6) ) naiveConcordance(CR_Response(newData$delta, newData$T), mortalities) } \references{ Section 3.2 of Wolbers, Marcel, Paul Blanche, Michael T. Koller, Jacqueline C M Witteman, and Thomas A Gerds. 2014. “Concordance for Prognostic Models with Competing Risks.” Biostatistics 15 (3): 526–39. https://doi.org/10.1093/biostatistics/kxt059. }