curve fitting exponential function with two terms
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Update: I need help curve fitting this set of points with an exponential function with two terms nicely.
% Curve Fit
x = [6500 6350 6000 5400 4500];
y = [0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1.0];
theFit=fit(x' , y', 'exp2')
10 Kommentare
Image Analyst
am 12 Nov. 2023
Sorry, but I don't believe you. When I swap x and y, the fit looks great.
% Curve Fit
y = [6500 6350 6000 5400 4500];
x = [0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1.0];
theFit=fit(x' , y', 'exp2')
plot(theFit , x , y)
Antworten (3)
Matt J
am 11 Nov. 2023
Bearbeitet: Matt J
am 11 Nov. 2023
You should normalize your x data
% Curve Fit
x = [6500 6350 6000 5400 4500];
x=(x-mean(x))/std(x);
y = [0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1.0];
Also, I would recommend downloading fminspleas from the File Exchange
and using it to generate an initial guess for fit():
e=@(a,xd)exp(a*xd);
flist={@(p,xd) e(p(1),xd) , @(p,xd) e(p(2),xd)};
[bd,ac]=fminspleas(flist,[-1,1],x, y);
theFit=fit(x',y','exp2','StartPoint',[ac(1),bd(1),ac(2), bd(2) ])
plot(theFit,x,y)
5 Kommentare
Torsten
am 12 Nov. 2023
Bearbeitet: Torsten
am 12 Nov. 2023
x = [6500 6350 6000 5400 4500];
xt = (x-mean(x))/std(x);
y = [0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1.0];
theFit=fit(xt',y','exp2')
theFit.b = theFit.b/std(x);
theFit.a = theFit.a*exp(-theFit.b*mean(x));
theFit.d = theFit.d/std(x);
theFit.c = theFit.c*exp(-theFit.d*mean(x));
theFit
plot(theFit,x,y)
Matt J
am 12 Nov. 2023
I mentioned in the comments that I needed to change my points (noticed an error in my work).
All answers in this thread have been demonstrated using your new points.
Matt J
am 12 Nov. 2023
Bearbeitet: Matt J
am 12 Nov. 2023
You can also use fit()'s normalizer,
x = [6500 6350 6000 5400 4500];
y = [0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1.0];
theFit=fit(x',y','exp2','Normalize','on')
plot(theFit,x,y)
2 Kommentare
Briana Canet
am 12 Nov. 2023
Bearbeitet: Briana Canet
am 12 Nov. 2023
Matt J
am 12 Nov. 2023
Bearbeitet: Matt J
am 12 Nov. 2023
If you need to explicitly manipulate the coefficients and fit function, you'll have to do the normalization manually:
% Curve Fit
x = [6500 6350 6000 5400 4500];
xmu=mean(x);
xstd=std(x);
y = [0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1.0];
theFit=fit((x-xmu)'/xstd,y','exp2');
% Monthly Cost
cost = x;
costUtility = y;
% Plot Utility Points
figure;
plot(cost,costUtility,'*');
xlim([4500 6500]);ylim([0 1.25]);
yticks([costUtility 1.25]);
grid on;
xlabel('Monthly Cost ($)');
ylabel('Utility');
legend('Utility Points');
% Add utility curve fit
coeff=num2cell(coeffvalues(theFit));
[a,b,c,d]=deal(coeff{:});
curveX = linspace(4500,6500);
X=(curveX-xmu)/xstd;
curveY = a*exp(b*X) + c*exp(d*X);
hold on;
plot(curveX,curveY,'Color','b');
legend('Utility Points','Utility Curve Fit');
Alex Sha
am 12 Nov. 2023
Bearbeitet: Alex Sha
am 12 Nov. 2023
If taking the fitting function as: y=a*exp(b*x) + c*exp(d*x);
and also taking the data like below directly;
x = [6500 6350 5800 4900 4500];
y = [0 0.25 0.5 0.75 1.0];
The unique stable result should be:
Sum Squared Error (SSE): 0.00221359211819696
Root of Mean Square Error (RMSE): 0.0210408750682901
Correlation Coef. (R): 0.998229714370904
R-Square: 0.996462562653016
Parameter Best Estimate
--------- -------------
a 11.4185972844776
b -0.000545792212445247
c -1.22298024843855E-22
d 0.00759142468815435
![](https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/uploaded_files/1536875/image.jpeg)
If add one more parameter, that is the fitting function become: y=a*exp(b*x)+c*exp(d*x)+e; the result will be perfect:
Sum Squared Error (SSE): 4.41584921368883E-29
Root of Mean Square Error (RMSE): 2.97181736103982E-15
Correlation Coef. (R): 1
R-Square: 1
Parameter Best Estimate
--------- -------------
a -2.47788945923639E-15
b 0.00505297753885221
c 332.002937639918
d -0.00141137023194644
e 0.420769231934917
![](https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/uploaded_files/1536880/image.jpeg)
11 Kommentare
Alex Sha
am 13 Nov. 2023
It would be a good suggestion for Mathwork, although not claer how 1stOpt process such problem internally.
Matt J
am 13 Nov. 2023
MathWorks' fit() routine does have an internal normalization step which can be enabled,
However, if 1stOpt does something similar, it appears to be smart enough to post-transform the parameters and undo the effect of the data normalization. fit() does not do that.
Siehe auch
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