Obtain component inputs
input_eval(...)# S3 method for component
input_eval(component, data, ...)
# S3 method for component_list
input_eval(components, data, ...)
# S3 method for bru_input
input_eval(input, data, env = NULL, null.on.fail = FALSE, ...)
An list of mapper input values, formatted for the full component mapper
(of type bru_mapper_pipe
)
Unused.
A component.
A data.frame
or Spatial*
object of covariates and/or point locations.
If NULL
, return the component's map.
It is not unusual for a random effect act on a transformation of a covariate. In other frameworks this
would mean that the transformed covariate would have to be calculated in advance and added to the
data frame that is usually provided via the data
parameter. inlabru provides the option to do
this transformation automatically. For instance, one might be interested in the effect of a covariate
\(x^2\). In inla and other frameworks this would require to add a column xsquared
to the
input data frame and use the formula
formula = y ~ f(xsquared, model = "linear")
,
In inlabru this can be achieved in several ways of using the main
parameter
(map
in version 2.1.13 and earlier), which does not need to be named.
components = y ~ psi(main = x^2, model = "linear")
components = y ~ psi(x^2, model = "linear")
components = y ~ psi(mySquareFun(x), model = "linear")
,
components = y ~ psi(myOtherSquareFun, model = "linear")
,
In the first example inlabru will interpret the map parameter as an expression to be evaluated within
the data provided. Since \(x\) is a known covariate it will know how to calculate it. The second
example is an expression as well but it uses a function called mySquareFun
. This function is
defined by user but has to be accessible within the work space when setting up the components.
The third example provides the function myOtherSquareFun
. In this case,
inlabru will call the function as myOtherSquareFun(.data.)
, where .data.
is the data provided via the like()
data
parameter.
The function needs to know what parts of the data to use to construct the
needed output. For example,
myOtherSquareFun <- function(data) {
data[ ,"x"]^2
}
When fitting spatial models it is common to work with covariates that depend on space, e.g. sea
surface temperature or elevation. Although it is straight forward to add this data to the input
data frame or write a covariate function like in the previous section there is an even more
convenient way in inlabru. Spatial covariates are often stored as SpatialPixelsDataFrame
,
SpatialPixelsDataFrame
or RasterLayer
objects. These can be provided directly via
the input expressions if the like()
data is a SpatialPointsDataFrame
object.
inlabru will automatically
evaluate and/or interpolate the covariate at your data locations when using code like
components = y ~ psi(mySpatialPixels, model = "linear")
A common spatial modelling component when using inla are SPDE models. An important feature of
inlabru is that it will automatically calculate the so called A-matrix (a component model matrix)
which maps SPDE
values at the mesh vertices to values at the data locations. For this purpose, the input
can be set to coordinates
, which is the sp
package function that extracts point
coordinates from the SpatialPointsDataFrame
that was provided as input to like()
. The code for
this would look as follows:
components = y ~ mySPDE(main = coordinates, model = inla.spde2.matern(...))
Fabian E. Bachl bachlfab@gmail.com, Finn Lindgren finn.lindgren@gmail.com