FPTraschpoisson {DPpackage}R Documentation

Bayesian analysis for a Finite Polya Tree Rasch Poisson model

Description

This function generates a posterior density sample for a Rasch Poisson model, using a Finite Polya Tree or a Mixture of Finite Polya Tree prior for the distribution of the random effects.

Usage


FPTraschpoisson(y,prior,mcmc,offset,state,status,
                grid=seq(-10,10,length=1000),data=sys.frame(sys.parent()))
     

Arguments

y a matrix giving the data for which the Rasch Poisson Model is to be fitted.
prior a list giving the prior information. The list includes the following parameter: a0 and b0 giving the hyperparameters for prior distribution of the precision parameter of the Finite Polya tree prior, alpha giving the value of the precision parameter (it must be specified if a0 is missing), mub and Sb giving the hyperparameters of the normal prior distribution for the mean of the normal baseline distribution, mu giving the mean of the normal baseline distribution (is must be specified if mub and Sb are missing), tau1 and tau2 giving the hyperparameters for the prior distribution of variance of the normal baseline distribution, sigma giving the standard deviation of the normal baseline distribution (is must be specified if tau1 and tau2 are missing), beta0 and Sbeta0 giving the hyperparameters of the normal prior distribution for the difficulty parameters, and M giving the finite level to be considered for the Finite Polya tree.
mcmc a list giving the MCMC parameters. The list must include the following integers: nburn giving the number of burn-in scans, nskip giving the thinning interval, nsave giving the total number of scans to be saved, and ndisplay giving the number of saved scans to be displayed on screen (the function reports on the screen when every ndisplay iterations have been carried out), tune1, tune2, and tune3 giving the positive Metropolis tuning baseline mean, baseline variance, and precision parameter, respectively (the default value is 1.1).
offset this can be used to specify an a priori known component to be included in the linear predictor during the fitting.
state a list giving the current value of the parameters. This list is used if the current analysis is the continuation of a previous analysis.
status a logical variable indicating whether this run is new (TRUE) or the continuation of a previous analysis (FALSE). In the latter case the current value of the parameters must be specified in the object state.
grid grid points where the density estimate is evaluated. The default is seq(-10,10,length=1000).
data data frame.

Details

This generic function fits a semiparametric Rasch Poisson model as in San Martin et al. (2006), where the linear predictor is modeled as follows:

etaij = thetai - betaj, i=1,...,n, j=1,...,k

thetai | G ~ G

G | alpha,mu,sigma2 ~ FPT^M(Pi^{mu,sigma2},textit{A})

where, the the PT is centered around a N(mu,sigma2) distribution, by taking each m level of the partition Pi^{mu,sigma2} to coincide with the k/2^m, k=0,...,2^m quantile of the N(mu,sigma2) distribution. The family textit{A}={alphae: e in E^{*}}, where E^{*}=bigcup_{m=0}^{+infty} E^m and E^m is the m-fold product of E={0,1}, was specified as alpha{e1 ... em}=α m^2.

To complete the model specification, independent hyperpriors are assumed,

alpha | a0, b0 ~ Gamma(a0,b0)

beta | beta0, Sbeta0 ~ N(beta0,Sbeta0)

mu | mub, Sb ~ N(mub,Sb)

sigma^-2 | tau1, tau2 ~ Gamma(tau1/2,tau2/2)

Each of the parameters of the baseline distribution, mu and sigma can be considered as random or fixed at some particular value. In the first case, a Mixture of Polya Trees Process is considered as a prior for the distribution of the random effects. To let sigma to be fixed at a particular value, set tau1 to NULL in the prior specification. To let mu to be fixed at a particular value, set mub to NULL in the prior specification.

In the computational implementation of the model, Metropolis-Hastings steps are used to sample the posterior distribution of the regression coefficients and hyperparameters.

Value

An object of class FPTraschpoisson representing the Rasch Poisson model fit. Generic functions such as print, plot, and summary have methods to show the results of the fit. The results include beta, mu, sigma, and the precision parameter alpha.
The function DPrandom can be used to extract the posterior mean of the random effects.
The list state in the output object contains the current value of the parameters necessary to restart the analysis. If you want to specify different starting values to run multiple chains set status=TRUE and create the list state based on this starting values. In this case the list state must include the following objects:

alpha giving the value of the precision parameter.
b a vector of dimension nsubjects giving the value of the random effects for each subject.
beta giving the value of the difficulty parameters.
mu giving the mean of the normal baseline distributions.
sigma giving the std of the normal baseline distributions.

Author(s)

Alejandro Jara <ajarav@udec.cl>

References

Hanson, T., and Johnson, W. (2002) Modeling regression error with a Mixture of Polya Trees. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 97: 1020 - 1033.

Lavine, M. (1992) Some aspects of Polya tree distributions for statistical modelling. The Annals of Statistics, 20: 1222-11235.

Lavine, M. (1994) More aspects of Polya tree distributions for statistical modelling. The Annals of Statistics, 22: 1161-1176.

San Martin, E., Jara, A., Rolin, J.-M., and Mouchart, M. (2006) On the Analysis of Bayesian Semiparametric IRT-type Models. In preparation.

See Also

DPrandom, DPraschpoisson

Examples

## Not run: 
    ####################################
    # A simulated Data Set
    ####################################
      nsubject<-200
      nitem<-10
      
      y<-matrix(0,nrow=nsubject,ncol=nitem)
      
      ind<-rbinom(nsubject,1,0.5)
      theta<-ind*rnorm(nsubject,1,0.25)+(1-ind)*rnorm(nsubject,3,0.25)
      beta<-c(0,seq(-1,1,length=nitem-1))

      for(i in 1:nsubject)
      {
         for(j in 1:nitem)
         {
            eta<-theta[i]-beta[j]         
            mean<-exp(eta)
            y[i,j]<-rpois(1,mean)
         }
      }
 
    # Prior information

      beta0<-rep(0,nitem-1)
      Sbeta0<-diag(1000,nitem-1)

      prior<-list(alpha=1,tau1=0.01,tau2=0.01,mub=0,Sb=1,
                  beta0=beta0,Sbeta0=Sbeta0,M=5)

    # Initial state
      state <- NULL

    # MCMC parameters

      nburn<-5000
      nsave<-5000
      nskip<-50
      ndisplay<-100
      mcmc <- list(nburn=nburn,nsave=nsave,nskip=nskip,
                   ndisplay=ndisplay)

    # Fit the model
      fit1<-FPTraschpoisson(y=y,prior=prior,mcmc=mcmc,
                            state=state,status=TRUE)

    # Summary with HPD and Credibility intervals
      summary(fit1)
      summary(fit1,hpd=FALSE)

    # Plot model parameters 
    # (to see the plots gradually set ask=TRUE)
      plot(fit1,ask=FALSE)
      plot(fit1,ask=FALSE,nfigr=2,nfigc=2)      

    # Extract random effects
    
      DPrandom(fit1)
      plot(DPrandom(fit1))
      DPcaterpillar(DPrandom(fit1))
## End(Not run)

[Package DPpackage version 1.0-7 Index]