Using the “cars” dataset in R, build a linear model for stopping distance as a function of speed and replicate the analysis of your textbook chapter 3 (visualization, quality evaluation of the model, and residual analysis.)

Answer:

#since the dataset is inbuilt, we can see the summary of the dataset cars
summary(cars)
##      speed           dist       
##  Min.   : 4.0   Min.   :  2.00  
##  1st Qu.:12.0   1st Qu.: 26.00  
##  Median :15.0   Median : 36.00  
##  Mean   :15.4   Mean   : 42.98  
##  3rd Qu.:19.0   3rd Qu.: 56.00  
##  Max.   :25.0   Max.   :120.00
names(cars)
## [1] "speed" "dist"
# lets see the relationship between the cars speed and distance travelled
rel_cars <- lm(cars$dist ~ cars$speed)

summary(rel_cars)
## 
## Call:
## lm(formula = cars$dist ~ cars$speed)
## 
## Residuals:
##     Min      1Q  Median      3Q     Max 
## -29.069  -9.525  -2.272   9.215  43.201 
## 
## Coefficients:
##             Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)    
## (Intercept) -17.5791     6.7584  -2.601   0.0123 *  
## cars$speed    3.9324     0.4155   9.464 1.49e-12 ***
## ---
## Signif. codes:  0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
## 
## Residual standard error: 15.38 on 48 degrees of freedom
## Multiple R-squared:  0.6511, Adjusted R-squared:  0.6438 
## F-statistic: 89.57 on 1 and 48 DF,  p-value: 1.49e-12
# now lets present the relationship in a plot

plot(cars$speed, cars$dist, xlab = "Speed - mph", ylab = "Distance travelled")

abline(rel_cars, col = "green")

qqnorm(rel_cars$residuals)
qqline(rel_cars$residuals)

By looking at the Q-Q plot we can say that their is normal spread of the data in the middle but at the either end we have some outliers which is slightly off the straight line.