When generating a forecast, sometimes you might be interested in forecasting the historical observations. These predictions, known as fitted values, can help you better understand and evaluate a model’s performance over time.
TimeGPT has a method for generating fitted values, and
users can call it from nixtlar. This vignette will explain
how to do this. It assumes you have already set up your API key. If you
haven’t done this, please read the Get
Started vignette first.
For this vignette, we’ll use the electricity consumption dataset that
is included in nixtlar, which contains the hourly prices of
five different electricity markets.
To generate a forecast for the historical data, use
nixtlar::nixtla_client_historic, which should include the
following parameters:
ds and y. If your column names are
different, specify them with time_col and
target_col, respectively. If you are working with multiple
series, you must also include a column with unique identifiers. The
default name for this column is unique_id; if different,
specify it with id_col.nixtla_client_fitted_values <- nixtla_client_historic(df, level = c(80,95))
#> Frequency chosen: h
head(nixtla_client_fitted_values)
#>                    ds  TimeGPT TimeGPT-lo-80 TimeGPT-lo-95 TimeGPT-hi-80
#> 1 2016-10-27 00:00:00 56.07623      25.27245      8.965920      86.88000
#> 2 2016-10-27 01:00:00 52.41973      21.61596      5.309425      83.22350
#> 3 2016-10-27 02:00:00 52.81474      22.01096      5.704433      83.61852
#> 4 2016-10-27 03:00:00 52.59026      21.78649      5.479953      83.39404
#> 5 2016-10-27 04:00:00 52.67297      21.86920      5.562667      83.47675
#> 6 2016-10-27 05:00:00 54.10659      23.30282      6.996284      84.91036
#>   TimeGPT-hi-95
#> 1     103.18653
#> 2      99.53004
#> 3      99.92505
#> 4      99.70057
#> 5      99.78328
#> 6     101.21690Notice that there are no fitted values for some of the initial
observations. This is because TimeGPT requires a minimum
number of values to generate a forecast for the historical data.
All the fitted values are generated using a rolling window, meaning that the fitted value for observation \(T\) is generated using the first \(T-1\) observations.
nixtlar::nixtla_client_forecastnixtlar::nixtla_client_historic is the dedicated
function that calls TimeGPT’s method for generating fitted
values. However, you can also use
nixtlar::nixtla_client_forecast with
add_history=TRUE. This will generate both a forecast for
the historical data and for the next \(h\) future observations.