Isolate the linear segment of data/graph

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Luis Martin Romero
Luis Martin Romero el 30 de Ag. de 2021
Comentada: Adam Danz el 30 de Ag. de 2021
I am trying to create a script where I plot data and I need to find the slope of the most linear segment of the data/graph. Any ideas on how I can do that for a script whose data will vary for each trial.
  3 comentarios
Luis Martin Romero
Luis Martin Romero el 30 de Ag. de 2021
When I say "most linear" I mean the initial segment that appears to be vertical but in reality just has a tiny slope. After the value "60" on the y-axis you can see how the line changes from "linear" to more parabolic, that's what I mean by "most linear". I'd like to find the range of points that have a constant slope.
Thanks
Adam Danz
Adam Danz el 30 de Ag. de 2021
I'd compute the slope using gradient as Star Strider recommended. If you plot the results you'll see a relatively straight line at some high value and will be precipitously fall off at the point where the original data starts to call off. To quantitatively determine the endpoint of the 'straight' line, you could take the 2nd derivative (gradient of the gradient) to locate the first spike that crosses a threhold you set.

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Star Strider
Star Strider el 30 de Ag. de 2021
One reasonably straightforward way to determine the slope of a curve is to use the gradient function.
For example, the gradient of the hyperbolic tangent function:
x = linspace(-4, 4, 500);
f = tanh(x);
dfdx = gradient(f) ./ gradient(x);
figure
plot(x, f)
hold on
plot(x, dfdx)
hold off
grid
legend('Function','Derivative', 'Location','best')
Then use the gradient result to determine what parts of the curve have the characteristics you’re interested in.
.

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