The logmult package currently supports these model families via separate functions:
unidiff function.rc function.rcL function.hmskew function.hmskewL
function.yrcskew function.Please refer to the inline documentation for each function
(e.g. ?unidiff) for more details and classic examples.
These functions take as their first argument a table, typically
obtained via the table or xtabs function.
Arrays of counts without row, column and layer names will have letters
attributed automatically; use rownames,
colnames and/or dimnames to change these
names.
Main options common to several models include:
weighting argument.symmetric argument.layer.effect,
layer.effect.symm and layer.effect.skew
arguments.nd, nd.symm and
nd.skew arguments.diagonal argument.se and
nreplicates argument.rowsup and
colsup arguments.start argument.gnm: tolerance
criterion (tolerance), maximum number of iterations
(iterMax), progress output (trace and
verbose), faster fitting by not estimating uninteresting
parameters (elim).Custom models which cannot be obtained via the standard options can
be fitted manually by calling gnm directly. Association
coefficients can then be extracted by calling one of the
assoc.* functions on the model: assoc.rc,
assoc.rcL, assoc.rcL.symm,
assoc.hmskew, assoc.hmskewL,
assoc.rc.symm or assoc.yrcskew. Since these
functions are not exported, you need to fully qualify them to call them,
e.g. logmult:::assoc.rc(model). The resulting objects (of
class assoc) can be passed to plot and support
the same options as models.
Models of the “quasi-” type, i.e. excluding some cells of a table,
can be fitted by setting the corresponding cells of the input table to
NA. Reported degrees of freedom will be correct (contrary
to what often happens when setting zero weights for these cells).
The package supports rich plotting features for each model family.
For the UNIDIFF model the layer coefficient can be plotted by simply
calling plot on the fitted model. See
?plot.unidiff for details and examples.
For association models, one- and multi-dimensional scores plots can
be drawn, again by calling plot on the fitted model. For
models with a layer effect, a given layer can be chosen via the
layer argument, or an average of association coefficients
can be used (for models with homogeneous scores only). Several arguments
allow tweaking the display, including:
dim argument.what argument.what
argument.which
argument.conf.int and
replicates argument.mass argument.luminosity argument.rev.axes argument.main),
axis labels (xlab, ylab), axis limits
(xlim, ylim), symbol size (cex)
and type (pch), draw onto an existing plot
(add).See ?plot.assoc for the full reference.
Results provided by logmult should generally be consistent with LEM, and have been checked against it when possible. Some models are known not to work correctly in LEM, though.
wei commands or diagonal-specific parameters). Row-column
intraction coefficients obtained with weighting="none" or
weighting="uniform" are consistent with LEM (coefficients
reported by LEM exclude the last row and column).Even when models are supposed to be consistent between LEM and logmult, it can happen that different results are obtained. There are several possible reasons to that:
ran at the end of the mod line.cri 0.00000001 line (or use an even lower value if time
permits) to use a stricter criterion. Even then, check that changing the
criterion does not affect too much the estimated coefficients: if that
is the case, they may not be reliable.When unsure whether parameters of a model are identified in LEM, add
ran at the end of the mod line to use random
starting values. Unidentified coefficients will then be different at
every run; only identified coefficients will remain the same. logmult
only reports identifiable parameters. On the other hand, gnm returns
unidentified parameters from coef, but these have
NA standard errors when calling
summary(asGnm(model)); since random starting values are
used by default, unidentified parameters will also be different when
re-fitting a model.
When using null weights, LEM reports incorrect degrees of freedom, as
zero-weight cells are still considered as free. With logmult, instead of
using null weights, set corresponding cells to NA in the
input table; this will report the same results as LEM, but with correct
degrees of freedom.
gnm and logmult do not always work well with effects coding
("contr.sum"). Models may fail to converge and parameters
extraction will not always work. Using dummy coding
("contr.treatment") is recommended, and gives the same
log-multiplicative parameters as when using effects coding (which only
affects linear parameters).