semptools

Helper functions for modifying (postprocessing) plots generated by semPlot::semPaths() from the semPlot package.

Installation

The latest version can be installed by remotes::install_github():

remotes::install_github("sfcheung/semptools")

To read the guides (vignettes) on how to use the functions, you can build the vignettes locally when installing the package:

remotes::install_github("sfcheung/semptools", build_vignettes = TRUE)

You can also find the guides under Articles of the Github page of this package.

Background

semPlot::semPaths() is a very useful function for visualizing structural equation models. We use it a lot. The output is a qgraph object which is highly customizable. Our area is in psychology and some users in this area may not know how to customize the graphs in aspects relevant to psychology. Therefore, we think it would be useful for users in psychology, including us, to have some functions for customizing the graphs from semPlot::semPaths(), without knowing the technical details of qgraph.

Philosophy

We think about the tasks we usually want to do with an semPlot::semPaths() graph, and write one function for each task. We write the functions such that all of them work by postprocessing a semPlot::semPaths() graph: receive an semPlot::semPaths() graph, modify it, and return a modified semPlot::semPaths() graph. This also allows users to use the %>% (pipe) operator from the magrittr package or the native pipe operator |> available since R 4.1.x to chain together modifications. For example:

modified_graph <- original_graph %>%
                    task_1() %>%
                    task_2(other_arguments) %>%
                    task_3

In psychology, two typical models are confirmatory factor analysis model and structural models with latent factors. Therefore, we also wrote two functions, one for each model, that can combine several common tasks together, such as specifying the positions of the latent factors and adjusting the positions of the indicators.

We also write the functions in a way that users do not need to know the technical detail (e.g., the position of the path in the list of all paths). For example, if a user wants to move the path coefficient of the path from x to y closer to y, the user only needs to tell the function that it is the path from x to y. The function will find which path it is in the qgraph object.

What we have so far

Status

This package is still under development. There will be bugs, and there are limitations. Comments and suggestions are welcomed.