rmh(model, ...)
"ppp"
.
See rmh.default
for details.
spatstat
a subtle change was
made to rmh.default()
. We had noticed that the results
produced were sometimes not ``scalable'' in that two models,
differing in effect only by the units in which distances are
measured and starting from the same seed, gave different results.
This was traced to an idiosyncracy of floating point arithmetic.
The code of rmh.default()
has been changed so that the
results produced by rmh
are now scalable. The downside of
this is that code which users previously ran may now give results
which are different from what they formerly were. In order to recover former behaviour (so that previous results
can be reproduced) set spatstat.options(scalable=FALSE)
.
See the last example in the help for rmh.default
.rmh
is generic; it has methods
rmh.ppm
(for objects of class "ppm"
)
and rmh.default
(the default).
The actual implementation of the Metropolis-Hastings algorithm is
contained in rmh.default
.
For details of its use, see
rmh.ppm
or rmh.default
. [If the model is a Poisson process, then Metropolis-Hastings
is not used; the Poisson model is generated directly
using rpoispp
or rmpoispp
.]
In brief, the Metropolis-Hastings algorithm is a Markov Chain, whose states are spatial point patterns, and whose limiting distribution is the desired point process. After running the algorithm for a very large number of iterations, we may regard the state of the algorithm as a realisation from the desired point process.
However, there are difficulties in deciding whether the algorithm has run for ``long enough''. The convergence of the algorithm may indeed be extremely slow. No guarantees of convergence are given!
While it is fashionable to decry the Metropolis-Hastings algorithm for its poor convergence and other properties, it has the advantage of being easy to implement for a wide range of models.
rmh.default
# See examples in rmh.default and rmh.ppm
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