This function merges multiple imputed data frames from
mids
-objects into a single data frame
by computing the mean or selecting the most likely imputed value.
merge_imputations(dat, imp, ori = NULL, summary = c("none", "dens",
"hist", "sd"), filter = NULL)
The data frame that was imputed and used as argument in the
mice
-function call.
The mids
-object with the imputed data frames
from dat
.
Optional, if ori
is specified, the imputed variables are
appended to this data frame; else, a new data frame with the imputed
variables is returned.
After merging multiple imputed data, summary
displays
a graphical summary of the "quality" of the merged values, compared
to the original imputed values.
"dens"
Creates a density plot, which shows the distribution of the mean of the imputed values for each variable at each observation. The larger the areas overlap, the better is the fit of the merged value compared to the imputed value.
"hist"
Similar to summary = "dens"
, however, mean and merged
values are shown as histogram. Bins should have almost equal
height for both groups (mean and merged).
"sd"
Creates a dot plot, where data points indicate the standard deviation for all imputed values (y-axis) at each merged value (x-axis) for all imputed variables. The higher the standard deviation, the less precise is the imputation, and hence the merged value.
A character vector with variable names that should be plotted. All non-defined variables will not be shown in the plot.
A data frame with (merged) imputed variables; or ori
with
appended imputed variables, if ori
was specified.
If summary
is included, returns a list with the data frame
data
with (merged) imputed variables and some other summary
information, which are required for the plot-output.
This method merges multiple imputations of variables into a single variable by computing the (rounded) mean of all imputed values of missing values. By this, each missing value is replaced by those values that have been imputed the most times.
imp
must be a mids
-object, which is returned by the
mice()
-function of the mice-package. merge_imputations()
than creates a data frame for each imputed variable, by combining all
imputations (as returned by the complete
-function)
of each variable, and computing the row means of this data frame.
The mean value is then rounded for integer values (and not for numerical
values with fractional part), which corresponds to the most frequent
imputed value (mode) for a missing value. Missings in the original variable
are replaced by the most frequent imputed value.
Burns RA, Butterworth P, Kiely KM, Bielak AAM, Luszcz MA, Mitchell P, et al. 2011. Multiple imputation was an efficient method for harmonizing the Mini-Mental State Examination with missing item-level data. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology;64:787<U+2013>93 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2010.10.011
# NOT RUN {
library(mice)
imp <- mice(nhanes)
# return data frame with imputed variables
merge_imputations(nhanes, imp)
# append imputed variables to original data frame
merge_imputations(nhanes, imp, nhanes)
# show summary of quality of merging imputations
merge_imputations(nhanes, imp, summary = "dens", filter = c("chl", "hyp"))
# }
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