How to lag?
Possibly, customers do not immediately react to price reductions of Hoppiness. Therefore, it is important to check if the effect of price promotion might extend to the next week. You can do this by adding lags into your model.
Lagging a variable means shifting the time base back by a given number of observations. This can be done by using the function lag(). The lag() function takes only one argument; n = 1, by default for defining the number of periods to be shifted.
You apply lag() on PRICE and compare the result to the original PRICE by using the function cbind(). To display only the first six elements of the data columns, you can use the function head().
Cet exercice fait partie du cours
Building Response Models in R
Instructions
- Calculate a lagged
PRICEvariable by using the functionlag(). - Compare the lagged
PRICEvariable to the originalPRICEvariable by using the functionscbind()andhead().
Exercice interactif pratique
Essayez cet exercice en complétant cet exemple de code.
# Compare lagged PRICE to original PRICE
___(___(sales.data$PRICE, ___(sales.data$PRICE)))