Learn R Programming

VGAM (version 1.1-8)

weightsvglm: Prior and Working Weights of a VGLM fit

Description

Returns either the prior weights or working weights of a VGLM object.

Usage

weightsvglm(object, type = c("prior", "working"),
            matrix.arg = TRUE, ignore.slot = FALSE,
            deriv.arg = FALSE, ...)

Value

If type = "working" and deriv = TRUE then a list is returned with the two components described below. Otherwise the prior or working weights are returned depending on the value of type.

deriv

Typically the first derivative of the log-likelihood with respect to the linear predictors. For example, this is the variable deriv.mu in vglm.fit(), or equivalently, the matrix returned in the "deriv" slot of a VGAM family function.

weights

The working weights.

Arguments

object

a model object from the VGAM R package that inherits from a vector generalized linear model (VGLM), e.g., a model of class "vglm".

type

Character, which type of weight is to be returned? The default is the first one.

matrix.arg

Logical, whether the answer is returned as a matrix. If not, it will be a vector.

ignore.slot

Logical. If TRUE then object@weights is ignored even if it has been assigned, and the long calculation for object@weights is repeated. This may give a slightly different answer because of the final IRLS step at convergence may or may not assign the latest value of quantities such as the mean and weights.

deriv.arg

Logical. If TRUE then a list with components deriv and weights is returned. See below for more details.

...

Currently ignored.

Author

Thomas W. Yee

Details

Prior weights are usually inputted with the weights argument in functions such as vglm and vgam. It may refer to frequencies of the individual data or be weight matrices specified beforehand.

Working weights are used by the IRLS algorithm. They correspond to the second derivatives of the log-likelihood function with respect to the linear predictors. The working weights correspond to positive-definite weight matrices and are returned in matrix-band form, e.g., the first \(M\) columns correspond to the diagonals, etc.

If one wants to perturb the linear predictors then the fitted.values slots should be assigned to the object before calling this function. The reason is that, for some family functions, the variable mu is used directly as one of the parameter estimates, without recomputing it from eta.

See Also

glm, vglmff-class, vglm.

Examples

Run this code
pneumo <- transform(pneumo, let = log(exposure.time))
(fit <- vglm(cbind(normal, mild, severe) ~ let,
             cumulative(parallel = TRUE, reverse = TRUE), pneumo))
depvar(fit)  # These are sample proportions
weights(fit, type = "prior", matrix = FALSE)  # No. of observations

# Look at the working residuals
nn <- nrow(model.matrix(fit, type = "lm"))
M <- ncol(predict(fit))

wwt <- weights(fit, type="working", deriv=TRUE)  # Matrix-band format
wz <- m2a(wwt$weights, M = M)  # In array format
wzinv <- array(apply(wz, 3, solve), c(M, M, nn))
wresid <- matrix(NA, nn, M)  # Working residuals
for (ii in 1:nn)
  wresid[ii, ] <- wzinv[, , ii, drop = TRUE] %*% wwt$deriv[ii, ]
max(abs(c(resid(fit, type = "work")) - c(wresid)))  # Should be 0

(zedd <- predict(fit) + wresid)  # Adjusted dependent vector

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab