I've fitted a logistic regression model that predicts the a binary outcome vs from mpg (mtcars dataset). The plot is shown below. How can I determine the mpg value for any particular vs value? For example, I'm interested in finding out what the mpg value is when the probability of vs is 0.50. Appreciate any help anyone can provide!
model <- glm(vs ~ mpg, data = mtcars, family = binomial)
ggplot(mtcars, aes(mpg, vs)) +
geom_point() +
stat_smooth(method = "glm", method.args = list(family = "binomial"), se = FALSE)

Calculating predictions manually The equation for this model in terms of the log odds was: logit(E(SmokeNow))=2.60651−0.05423×Age. logit(E(SmokeNow))=2.60651−0.05423×30=0.97961. Since the odds are more interpretable than the log odds, we can convert our log odds prediction to the odds scale.
The predict() function can be used to predict the probability that the market will go up, given values of the predictors. The type="response" option tells R to output probabilities of the form P(Y = 1|X) , as opposed to other information such as the logit .
Logistic regression is a classification algorithm. It is used to predict a binary outcome based on a set of independent variables.
The easiest way to calculate predicted values from your model is with the predict() function. Then you can use a numerical solver to find particular intercepts. For example
findInt <- function(model, value) {
function(x) {
predict(model, data.frame(mpg=x), type="response") - value
}
}
uniroot(findInt(model, .5), range(mtcars$mpg))$root
# [1] 20.52229
Here findInt just takes the model and a particular target value and returns a function that uniroot can solve for 0 to find your solution.
You can solve for mpg directly as follows:
mpg = (log(p/(1-p)) - coef(model)[1])/coef(model)[2]
Detailed explanation:
When you fit the regression model, the equation you are fitting is the following:
log(p/(1-p)) = a + b*mpg
Where p is the probability that vs=1, a is the intercept and b is the coefficient of mpg. From the model fit results (just type model or summary(model)) we see that a = -8.8331 and b = 0.4304. We want to find mpg when p=0.5. So, the equation we need to solve is:
log(0.5/(1-0.5)) = -8.331 + 0.4304*mpg
log(1) = 0 = -8.331 + 0.4303*mpg
Rearranging,
mpg = 8.8331/0.4304 = 20.523
In general, to solve for mpg for any value of p:
mpg = (log(p/(1-p)) + 8.8331)/0.4304
Or, to make it more easily reproducible:
mpg = (log(p/(1-p)) - coef(model)[1])/coef(model)[2]
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