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AICcmodavg (version 2.3-3)

modavgPred: Compute Model-averaged Predictions

Description

This function computes the model-averaged predictions, unconditional standard errors, and confidence intervals based on the entire candidate model set. The function is currently implemented for glm, gls, lm, lme, mer, merMod, lmerModLmerTest, negbin, rlm, survreg object classes that are stored in a list as well as various models of unmarkedFit classes.

Usage

modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE,
           nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, ...)

# S3 method for AICaov.lm modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, ...)

# S3 method for AICglm.lm modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, gamdisp = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AIClm modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, ...)

# S3 method for AICgls modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, ...)

# S3 method for AIClme modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, ...)

# S3 method for AICmer modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, ...)

# S3 method for AICglmerMod modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, ...)

# S3 method for AIClmerMod modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, ...)

# S3 method for AIClmerModLmerTest modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, ...)

# S3 method for AICnegbin.glm.lm modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", ...)

# S3 method for AICrlm.lm modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, ...)

# S3 method for AICsurvreg modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitOccu modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitColExt modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitOccuRN modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitPCount modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitPCO modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitDS modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitGDS modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitOccuFP modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitMPois modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitGMM modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitGPC modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitOccuTTD modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitMMO modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitDSO modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitOccuMS modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

# S3 method for AICunmarkedFitOccuMulti modavgPred(cand.set, modnames = NULL, newdata, second.ord = TRUE, nobs = NULL, uncond.se = "revised", conf.level = 0.95, type = "response", c.hat = 1, parm.type = NULL, ...)

Value

modavgPred returns an object of class modavgPred with the following components:

type

the scale of predicted values (response or link) for glm, mer, merMod, or unmarkedFit classes.

mod.avg.pred

the model-averaged prediction over the entire candidate model set.

uncond.se

the unconditional standard error of each model-averaged prediction.

conf.level

the confidence level used to compute the confidence interval.

lower.CL

the lower confidence limit.

upper.CL

the upper confidence limit.

matrix.output

a matrix with rows consisting of the model-averaged predictions, the unconditional standard errors, and the confidence limits.

Arguments

cand.set

a list storing each of the models in the candidate model set.

modnames

a character vector of model names to facilitate the identification of each model in the model selection table. If NULL, the function uses the names in the cand.set list of candidate models. If no names appear in the list, generic names (e.g., Mod1, Mod2) are supplied in the table in the same order as in the list of candidate models.

newdata

a data frame with the same structure as that of the original data frame for which we want to make predictions.

second.ord

logical. If TRUE, the function returns the second-order Akaike information criterion (i.e., AICc).

nobs

this argument allows to specify a numeric value other than total sample size to compute the AICc (i.e., nobs defaults to total number of observations). This is relevant only for mixed models or various models of unmarkedFit classes where sample size is not straightforward. In such cases, one might use total number of observations or number of independent clusters (e.g., sites) as the value of nobs.

uncond.se

either, old, or revised, specifying the equation used to compute the unconditional standard error of a model-averaged estimate. With uncond.se = "old", computations are based on equation 4.9 of Burnham and Anderson (2002), which was the former way to compute unconditional standard errors. With uncond.se = "revised", equation 6.12 of Burnham and Anderson (2002) is used. Anderson (2008, p. 111) recommends use of the revised version for the computation of unconditional standard errors and it is now the default. Note that versions of package AICcmodavg < 1.04 used the old method to compute unconditional standard errors.

conf.level

the confidence level (\(1 - \alpha\)) requested for the computation of unconditional confidence intervals.

type

the scale of prediction requested, one of response or link. The latter is only relevant for glm, mer, and unmarkedFit classes. Note that the value terms is not defined for modavgPred.

c.hat

value of overdispersion parameter (i.e., variance inflation factor) such as that obtained from c_hat. Note that values of c.hat different from 1 are only appropriate for binomial GLM's with trials > 1 (i.e., success/trial or cbind(success, failure) syntax), with Poisson GLM's, single-season and dynamic occupancy models (MacKenzie et al. 2002, 2003), or N-mixture models (Royle 2004, Dail and Madsen 2011). If c.hat > 1, modavgPred will return the quasi-likelihood analogue of the information criteria requested and multiply the variance-covariance matrix of the estimates by this value (i.e., SE's are multiplied by sqrt(c.hat)). This option is not supported for generalized linear mixed models of the mer class.

gamdisp

the value of the gamma dispersion parameter.

parm.type

this argument specifies the parameter type on which the predictions will be computed and is only relevant for models of unmarkedFit classes. The character strings supported vary with the type of model fitted. For unmarkedFitOccu objects, either psi or detect can be supplied to indicate whether the parameter is on occupancy or detectability, respectively. For unmarkedFitColExt objects, possible values are psi, gamma, epsilon, and detect, for parameters on occupancy in the inital year, colonization, extinction, and detectability, respectively. For unmarkedFitOccuTTD objects, possible values are psi, gamma, epsilon, and detect, for parameters on occupancy in the inital year, colonization, extinction, and time-to-dection (lambda rate parameter), respectively. For unmarkedFitOccuFP objects, one can specify psi, detect, falsepos, and certain, for occupancy, detectability, probability of assigning false-positives, and probability detections are certain, respectively. For unmarkedFitOccuRN objects, either lambda or detect can be entered for abundance and detectability parameters, respectively. For unmarkedFitPCount and unmarkedFitMPois objects, lambda or detect denote parameters on abundance and detectability, respectively. For unmarkedFitPCO, unmarkedFitMMO, and unmarkedFitDSO objects, one can enter lambda, gamma, omega, iota, or detect, to specify parameters on abundance, recruitment, apparent survival, immigration, and detectability, respectively. For unmarkedFitDS objects, lambda and detect are supported. For unmarkedFitGDS, lambda, phi, and detect denote abundance, availability, and detection probability, respectively. For unmarkedFitGMM and unmarkedFitGPC objects, lambda, phi, and detect denote abundance, availability, and detectability, respectively. For unmarkedFitOccuMS objects, psi, phi, and detect denote occupancy, transition, and detection probability, respectively. For unmarkedFitOccuMulti objects, psi and detect denote occupancy and detection probability, respectively.

...

additional arguments passed to the function.

Author

Marc J. Mazerolle

Details

The candidate models must be stored in a list. Note that a data frame from which to make predictions must be supplied with the newdata argument and that all variables appearing in the model set must appear in this data frame. Variables must be of the same type as in the original analysis (e.g., factor, numeric).

One can compute unconditional confidence intervals around the predictions from the elements returned by modavgPred. The classic computation based on asymptotic normality of the estimator is appropriate to estimate confidence intervals on the linear predictor (i.e., link scale). For predictions of some types of response variables such as counts or binary variables, the normal approximation may be inappropriate. In such cases, it is often better to compute the confidence intervals on the linear predictor scale and then back-transform the limits to the scale of the response variable. These are the confidence intervals returned by modavgPred. Burnham et al. (1987), Burnham and Anderson (2002, p. 164), and Williams et al. (2002) suggest alternative methods of computing confidence intervals for small degrees of freedom with profile likelihood intervals or bootstrapping, but these approaches are not yet implemented in modavgPred.

References

Anderson, D. R. (2008) Model-based Inference in the Life Sciences: a primer on evidence. Springer: New York.

Burnham, K. P., Anderson, D. R., White, G. C., Brownie, C., Pollock, K. H. (1987) Design and analysis methods for fish survival experiments based on release-recapture. American Fisheries Society Monographs 5, 1--437.

Burnham, K. P., Anderson, D. R. (2002) Model Selection and Multimodel Inference: a practical information-theoretic approach. Second edition. Springer: New York.

Dail, D., Madsen, L. (2011) Models for estimating abundance from repeated counts of an open population. Biometrics 67, 577--587.

MacKenzie, D. I., Nichols, J. D., Lachman, G. B., Droege, S., Royle, J. A., Langtimm, C. A. (2002) Estimating site occupancy rates when detection probabilities are less than one. Ecology 83, 2248--2255.

MacKenzie, D. I., Nichols, J. D., Hines, J. E., Knutson, M. G., Franklin, A. B. (2003) Estimating site occupancy, colonization, and local extinction when a species is detected imperfectly. Ecology 84, 2200--2207.

Royle, J. A. (2004) N-mixture models for estimating population size from spatially replicated counts. Biometrics 60, 108--115.

Williams, B. K., Nichols, J. D., Conroy, M. J. (2002) Analysis and Management of Animal Populations. Academic Press: New York.

See Also

AICc, aictab, importance, c_hat, confset, evidence, modavg, modavgCustom, modavgEffect, modavgShrink, predict, predictSE

Examples

Run this code
##example from subset of models in Table 1 in Mazerolle (2006)
data(dry.frog)

Cand.models <- list( )
Cand.models[[1]] <- lm(log_Mass_lost ~ Shade + Substrate +
                       cent_Initial_mass + Initial_mass2,
                       data = dry.frog)
Cand.models[[2]] <- lm(log_Mass_lost ~ Shade + Substrate +
                       cent_Initial_mass + Initial_mass2 +
                       Shade:Substrate, data = dry.frog)
Cand.models[[3]] <- lm(log_Mass_lost ~ cent_Initial_mass +
                       Initial_mass2, data = dry.frog)
Cand.models[[4]] <- lm(log_Mass_lost ~ Shade + cent_Initial_mass +
                       Initial_mass2, data = dry.frog)
Cand.models[[4]] <- lm(log_Mass_lost ~ Shade + cent_Initial_mass +
                       Initial_mass2, data = dry.frog)
Cand.models[[5]] <- lm(log_Mass_lost ~ Substrate + cent_Initial_mass +
                       Initial_mass2, data = dry.frog)

##setup model names
Modnames <- paste("mod", 1:length(Cand.models), sep = "")

##compute model-averaged value and unconditional SE of predicted log of
##mass lost for frogs of average mass in shade for each substrate type

##first create data set to use for predictions
new.dat <- data.frame(Shade = c(1, 1, 1),
                      cent_Initial_mass = c(0, 0, 0),
                      Initial_mass2 = c(0, 0, 0),
                      Substrate = c("SOIL", "SPHAGNUM", "PEAT")) 

##compare unconditional SE's using both methods
modavgPred(cand.set = Cand.models, modnames = Modnames,
           newdata = new.dat, type = "response", uncond.se = "old")
modavgPred(cand.set = Cand.models, modnames = Modnames,
           newdata = new.dat, type = "response", uncond.se = "revised")
##round to 4 digits after decimal point
print(modavgPred(cand.set = Cand.models, modnames = Modnames,
                 newdata = new.dat, type = "response",
                 uncond.se = "revised"), digits = 4)



##Gamma glm
if (FALSE) {
##clotting data example from 'gamma.shape' in MASS package of
##Venables and Ripley (2002, Modern applied statistics with
##S. Springer-Verlag: New York.)
clotting <- data.frame(u = c(5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 40, 60, 80, 100),
                       lot1 = c(118, 58, 42, 35, 27, 25, 21, 19, 18),
                       lot2 = c(69, 35, 26, 21, 18, 16, 13, 12, 12))
clot1 <- glm(lot1 ~ log(u), data = clotting, family = Gamma)

require(MASS)
gamma.dispersion(clot1) #dispersion parameter
gamma.shape(clot1) #reciprocal of dispersion parameter ==
##shape parameter 
summary(clot1, dispersion = gamma.dispersion(clot1))  #better

##create list with models
Cand <- list( )
Cand[[1]] <- glm(lot1 ~ log(u), data = clotting, family = Gamma)
Cand[[2]] <- glm(lot1 ~ 1, data = clotting, family = Gamma)

##create vector of model names
Modnames <- paste("mod", 1:length(Cand), sep = "")

##compute model-averaged predictions on scale of response variable for
##all observations
modavgPred(cand.set = Cand, modnames = Modnames, newdata = clotting,
           gamdisp = gamma.dispersion(clot1), type = "response") 

##compute model-averaged predictions on scale of linear predictor
modavgPred(cand.set = Cand, modnames = Modnames, newdata = clotting,
           gamdisp = gamma.dispersion(clot1), type = "link")

##compute model-averaged predictions on scale of linear predictor
modavgPred(cand.set = Cand, modnames = Modnames, newdata = clotting,
           gamdisp = gamma.dispersion(clot1), type = "terms") #returns an error
##because type = "terms" is not defined for 'modavgPred'

modavgPred(cand.set = Cand, modnames = Modnames, newdata = clotting,
           type = "terms") #returns an error because
##no gamma dispersion parameter was specified (i.e., 'gamdisp' missing) 
}


##example of model-averaged predictions from N-mixture model
##each variable appears twice in the models - this is a bit longer
if (FALSE) {
require(unmarked)
data(mallard)
mallardUMF <- unmarkedFramePCount(mallard.y, siteCovs = mallard.site,
                                  obsCovs = mallard.obs)
##set up models so that each variable on abundance appears twice
fm.mall.one <- pcount(~ ivel + date  ~ length + forest, mallardUMF,
                      K = 30)
fm.mall.two <- pcount(~ ivel + date  ~ elev + forest, mallardUMF,
                      K = 30)
fm.mall.three <- pcount(~ ivel + date  ~ length + elev, mallardUMF,
                        K = 30)
fm.mall.four <- pcount(~ ivel + date  ~ 1, mallardUMF, K = 30)

##model list
Cands <- list(fm.mall.one, fm.mall.two, fm.mall.three, fm.mall.four)
Modnames <- c("length + forest", "elev + forest", "length + elev",
              "null")

##compute model-averaged predictions of abundance for values of elev
modavgPred(cand.set = Cands, modnames = Modnames, newdata =
           data.frame(elev = seq(from = -1.4, to = 2.4, by = 0.1),
                      length = 0, forest = 0), parm.type = "lambda",
           type = "response")

##compute model-averaged predictions of detection for values of ivel
modavgPred(cand.set = Cands, modnames = Modnames, newdata =
           data.frame(ivel = seq(from = -1.75, to = 5.9, by = 0.5),
                      date = 0), parm.type = "detect",
           type = "response")
detach(package:unmarked)
}


##example of model-averaged abundance from distance model
if (FALSE) {
##this is a bit longer
data(linetran) #example from ?distsamp
     
ltUMF <- with(linetran, {
  unmarkedFrameDS(y = cbind(dc1, dc2, dc3, dc4),
                  siteCovs = data.frame(Length, area, habitat),
                  dist.breaks = c(0, 5, 10, 15, 20),
                  tlength = linetran$Length * 1000, survey = "line",
                  unitsIn = "m")
})
     
## Half-normal detection function. Density output (log scale). No covariates.
fm1 <- distsamp(~ 1 ~ 1, ltUMF)
     
## Halfnormal. Covariates affecting both density and and detection.
fm2 <- distsamp(~area + habitat ~ habitat, ltUMF)

## Hazard function. Covariates affecting both density and and detection.
fm3 <- distsamp(~area + habitat ~ habitat, ltUMF, keyfun="hazard")

##assemble model list
Cands <- list(fm1, fm2, fm3)
Modnames <- paste("mod", 1:length(Cands), sep = "")

##model-average predictions on abundance
modavgPred(cand.set = Cands, modnames = Modnames, parm.type = "lambda", type = "link",
           newdata = data.frame(area = mean(linetran$area), habitat = c("A", "B")))
detach(package:unmarked)
}



##example using Orthodont data set from Pinheiro and Bates (2000)
if (FALSE) {
require(nlme)

##set up candidate models
m1 <- gls(distance ~ age, correlation = corCompSymm(value = 0.5, form = ~ 1 | Subject),
          data = Orthodont, method = "ML")

m2 <- gls(distance ~ 1, correlation = corCompSymm(value = 0.5, form = ~ 1 | Subject),
          data = Orthodont, method = "ML")

##assemble in list
Cand.models <- list(m1, m2)
##model names
Modnames <- c("age effect", "null model")

##model selection table
aictab(cand.set = Cand.models, modnames = Modnames)

##model-averaged predictions
modavgPred(cand.set = Cand.models, modnames = Modnames, newdata =
data.frame(age = c(8, 10, 12, 14)))
detach(package:nlme)
}

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