finding unknown values in a column by using the indices (indexes) of known values.

Hello, I'm struggling a lot with some of the indexing methods. Right now I have the next matrix:
1.5000 1.7024
1.5000 1.3119
1.5000 1.3122
0.5000 0.8158
0.5000 1.1760
(it's actually a 200 by 2 matrix, but I have shortened it to make things clearer)
The values in row 1 have been provided by linspace(0.5, 1.5, 5) and the values in row 2 have been entered by the user (they are the user's reaction times, and the latter [the values in col 1] are the stimuli durations).
What I'm trying to do is to find all the user's input when the duration was 1.5000 and find the mean of those values.
So far I used: [r,c]=find(mat==1.5000), and got:
r =
1
2
3
10
17
What I need now is the values next to those rows (that is the ones in col 2) and find their mean.
Hope I was clear and concise. Thanks in advance

 Accepted Answer

mat(r, 2)

3 Comments

It worked but I didn't understand why should I be cautious. Anyways, thank you very much!
He is warning you that find(variable == specific number) may not actually return "true" values (matches) that you're expecting because of the reasons outlined in that Matlab Wikia post. It may not apply here, but it's a good tidbit to know about to save yourself potentially from future headaches.
Interesting, I'll take that into account, thanks

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More Answers (2)

accumarray time! (happy time :) )
x =[1.5000 1.7024
1.5000 1.3119
1.5000 1.3122
0.5000 0.8158
0.5000 1.1760]
[y,~,idxu] = unique(x(:,1)); %indexes of each row into each unique value
y(:,2) = accumarray(idxu,x(:,2),[],@mean) %their mean

7 Comments

>> y(:,2) = accumarray(idxu,x(:,2),[],@mean) Index exceeds matrix dimensions.
But thanks anyway, for your kind support
What do you have defined as x? If you clear you workspace and copy the above in, it works.
This helped me a lot more, wish I knew how to use all those functions!

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Probably not as efficient as those above, but this is the simplest way I always tried to do it.
j= find(row1==1.5);
for k=1:length(j)
d(k)=c(j(k));
end
meanvalues=mean(d)

5 Comments

row1 doesn't seem to be a legal function on version R2011B
row1 = mat(:,1);
It is a column, but Elizabeth has called it a row because you confused rows and columns when you phrased the question.
That is true, thanks for the observation

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