stressaddition 3.1.0
- Improved the documentation of the 
which argument in
plot_survival() and plot_stress(). 
- Changed the default value of the 
which argument in the
plot functions. Now it contains the proper default curve names. If it is
NA only the axes and labels will get drawn. 
stressaddition 3.0.3
- Added references to the journal article about the Multi-Tox model
which was recently published.
 
stressaddition 3.0.2
- Fixed a bug where the plotting functions printed 
NULL
to the console. 
- Changed maintainer e-mail address to ensure long-term
maintainability.
 
- Internal improvements related to package testing.
 
stressaddition 3.0.1
- Added missing return values in documentation to comply with CRAN
repository policy.
 
- Added a link to the paper in the description file.
 
stressaddition 3.0.0
Breaking changes
- Renamed all instances of “effect” to “survival”.
 
- Renamed all instances of “ec” to “lc”.
 
- Renamed 
predict_mixture(), which was a temporary
development name, to multi_tox(). 
- The argument 
proportion_ca in the mixture model
multi_tox() was renamed and its value reversed. It is now
called sa_contribution and specifies the proportion of
stress addition in the calculation of toxicant stress. To convert your
code from the old version use this equation:
sa_contribution = 1 - proportion_ca. 
- Renamed 
stress_tox_sam to stress_tox_sa in
the output of multi_tox(). 
Bugfixes
- Fixed a bug where 
plot_stress() with argument
which = NULL would result in an error. Now it correctly
draws the axes without data. 
- Fixed some errors in the documentation and improved the
examples.
 
New
- Exported function 
log10_ticks() for calculating tick
mark labels and positions on a base 10 logarithmic axis. 
- Added example data set 
multiple_stress for use with
multi_tox(). 
- Various minor changes to prepare for CRAN submission.
 
stressaddition 2.7.0
- Fixed some spelling mistakes.
 
predict_mixture() now also returns the various
stresses. 
stressaddition 2.6.0
- The 
curves data frame in the output of
ecxsys() now contains a column with the concentrations
which are used for the plot functions in this package. This is useful
for generating a nicer concentration axis. 
- Changes to 
ec():
- Renamed 
response_value to effect in the
output list. 
response_level of 0 or 100 is now allowed. 0 returns
the concentration 0 and 100 returns the concentration Inf.
Previously this resulted in an error. 
- It is now possible to set the reference to a custom value, for
example 100.
 
 
stressaddition 2.5.0
- Fixed unintended behaviour in 
plot_effect() and
plot_stress() where supplying an empty vector caused the
four standard curves to show. Now setting which to an empty
vector or NULL shows just the axes. The default value is
NA. 
- Renamed the 
mixture_effect column in the
predict_mixture output data frame to
effect. 
- Remove the restriction that the concentration vectors in
predict_mixture() must be the same length. The longer
length must be a multiple of the shorter length because the shorter
vector gets recycled to the longer length. 
stressaddition 2.4.0
- Improved 
plot_effect() and plot_stress().
You can now control whether the observed values (the points) should be
plotted using the which argument. 
- Renamed 
sys_tox_not_fitted and
sys_tox_env_not_fitted to sys_tox_observed and
sys_tox_env_observed in the output of
ecxsys(). 
stressaddition 2.3.0
predict_mixture() now accepts multiple values for the
concentration of the second toxicant. Both concentration vectors must be
the same length. 
predict_mixture() now returns a data frame with the
concentrations and effects. Previously it was only a vector of
effects. 
predict_mixture() received a new argument “effect_max”
which scales the returned effect values. 
- Renamed the arguments of 
predict_mixture() to use
underscore letters a and b instad of 1 and 2. For example model_1 is now
model_a. 
stressaddition 2.2.1
- Improved documentation of 
predict_mixture() and
included example of symmetry. 
stressaddition 2.2.0
ec() now raises an error if the curve does not cross
the desired response level. 
ecxsys() gained a new argument
curves_concentration_max which allows setting the maximum
concentration of the predicted curves. 
stressaddition 2.1.1
- Restore the default behaviour of 
plot_effect() to also
show effect_tox and effect_tox_env. 
stressaddition 2.1.0
- The functions 
plot_effect() and
plot_stress() gained a which argument that
controls which curves are plotted. Consequently, the
show_LL5_model argument of plot_effect() was
removed. 
- Added arguments 
xlab and ylab to
plot_stress. 
- Added argument 
main to both plot functions. 
- Changed some colors of the stress curves so they better match with
the colors of related effect curves.
 
- Added 
predict_mixture() for the prediction of the
effects of mixtures of two toxicants. 
- Fixed documentation of 
ecxsys() and
predict_ecxsys(). 
stressaddition 2.0.0
- Changed the order of arguments in 
ecxsys(). 
- Removed 
hormesis_index argument from
ecxsys(). Use hormesis_concentration
instead. 
- New function 
predict_ecxsys() replaces
fn() from the ecxsys() output. 
- Renamed the arguments in 
ec(). 
- Made 
ec() more flexible. It now also accepts a
data.frame with a concentration column and a column of response
values. 
- Added LL5 curves to the legend of 
plot_effect(). 
- Replaced every occurrence of “simple” in variable names with
“LL5”.
 
- Replaced every occurrence of “sys_stress” in variable names with
“sys” because the extra “stress” was redundant.
 
- Renamed 
plot_system_stress() to
plot_stress() because it is planned to plot more stresses
with this function in a future update. 
- Changed the order of the columns in the output of
predict_ecxsys(). 
- Improved the internal structure of the package.
 
- Improved the tests.
 
- Improved the documentation.
 
stressaddition 1.11.1
- First public version.
 
- Added a 
NEWS.md file to track changes to the
package.