Dear all,
I am a new learner of OpenMX and R. I am interested to know if there is alternative estimation (robust ML such as Satorra-Bentler test statisitc, ADF/WLS by Browne) besides normal-theory ML?
Thank you!
Heining Cham
Dear all,
I am a new learner of OpenMX and R. I am interested to know if there is alternative estimation (robust ML such as Satorra-Bentler test statisitc, ADF/WLS by Browne) besides normal-theory ML?
Thank you!
Heining Cham
Dear Heining,
ADF can be implemented quite easily. The results look reasonable. The other approaches may be more challenging.
Cheers,
Mike
library(MASS)
http://r-forge.r-project.org/projects/sem-additions/
It is used to estimate the fourth order moment matrix.
library(sem.additions)
library(OpenMx)
Generate artificial data based on a one-factor CFA
set.seed(100)
n <- 1000
Population values for 1 factor model
L1 <- matrix(c(1,1.2,1.3,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,1.2,1.3),ncol=2)
P1 <- matrix(c(1,0.3,0.3,1), ncol=2)
E1 <- diag(rep(0.5,6))
Sigma <- L1 %&% P1 + E1 # one factor model
my.df <- data.frame(mvrnorm(n=n, mu=rep(0,6), Sigma=Sigma))
Sample covariance matrix
cov.sample <- cov(my.df)
Sample asymptotic covariance matrix
acov <- adf.wmat(my.df)
Sample covariance matrix
D <- mxMatrix("Full", ncol=6, nrow=6, values=c(cov.sample), name="D")
Factor loadings
L <- mxMatrix("Full", ncol=2, nrow=6, values=c(1,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,1,1),
free=c(rep(T,3),rep(F,6),rep(T,3)), name="L")
Factor correlation matrix
P <- mxMatrix("Stand", ncol=2, nrow=2, value=0.5,free=TRUE, name="P")
Error covariance matrx
E <- mxMatrix("Diag", ncol=6, nrow=6, values=0.2, free=TRUE, name="E")
Discrepancy between sample covariance matrix and model implied covariance matrix
S <- mxAlgebra( D-(L %&% P + E ), name="S")
Convert it into a vector of covariance elements
vech_S <- mxAlgebra(vech(S), "vech_S")
Weight matrix multiplied by n
acov_S <- mxMatrix("Full", ncol=21, nrow=21, values=n*c(solve(acov)), free=FALSE, name="acov_S")
Objective function
obj <- mxAlgebra( t(vech_S) %&% acov_S , name="obj")
objective <- mxAlgebraObjective('obj')
model <- mxModel("WLS", D, L, P, E, S, vech_S, acov_S, obj, objective, mxCI(c("P")))
fit <- mxRun(model, intervals=TRUE)
summary(fit)
Very cool. One small comment is that in OpenMx 0.3.1 confidence intervals for all the cells of the "P" matrix are calculated, including those cells with fixed values. In OpenMx 0.3.2 (coming soon) only cells with free parameters will be calculated. In the meantime, use mxCI(c("P[1,2]", "P[2,1]")).
I used the following steps to install the sem.additions library. I needed the prerequisites sem, mvnormtest, sna, matrixcalc, and igraph on my system. Then I downloaded the source for sem.additions, opened the tarball, and ran "R CMD INSTALL ." They have binaries for Windows and OS X platforms.
Hi Mike,
Very cool! This is the way we hoped OpenMx would be used. Easy implementation of methods as mxAlgebraObjectives and then later incorporating these into optimized C versions in the computational engine.
I hope this is just the first of many discussions that implement well-known methods.
We also hope that people will use the mxAlgebraObjective to experiment with novel methods. If we have accelerated the pace of your development of new methods, the OpenMx team will feel a real sense of accomplishment in our work.
Hi Michael Spiegel and Steve,
Indeed, I have to thank the core team in developing OpenMx and entertaining requests from end users like me. I asked a few questions related to the vech and vechs calculations in OpenMx. Then vech() and vechs() were implemented a few days later!
Mike
Very nice going! How about the same approach for binary/ordinal data (preferably allowing for missing values)?
Thank you! I can install sem.additions. I am trying to start from the WLS syntax in Mike's post.
I am writing a package to conduct meta-analysis based on OpenMx. One of the functions is WLS that fits correlation and covariance structure analysis. It also calculates some goodness-of-fit indices. It is available for testing at http://courses.nus.edu.sg/course/psycwlm/internet/metaSEM/index.html When the Jacobian matrix is accessible in a later release of OpenMx, I will implement the robust standard error and robust test statistics.
Thanks for the hard work on OpenMx. It's very flexible and extensible.
Regards,
Mike
library(metaSEM)
Sample correlation matrix
R1 <- matrix(c(1.00, 0.22, 0.24, 0.18,
0.22, 1.00, 0.30, 0.22,
0.24, 0.30, 1.00, 0.24,
0.18, 0.22, 0.24, 1.00), ncol=4, nrow=4)
n <- 1000
Calculate the asymptotic covariance matrix of the sample correlation matrix
acovR <- asyCov(R1, n)
P1: Factor variance
P1 <- mxMatrix("Full", ncol=1, nrow=1, value=1, free=FALSE, name="P1")
L1: Factor loadings
L1 <- mxMatrix("Full", ncol=1, nrow=4, value=c(0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.4), free=TRUE, name="L1")
Model implied correlation matrix
Please note that error variances are not involved in correlation structure analysis
impliedR1 <- mxAlgebra(L1 %&% P1, name="impliedR1")
wls.fit1 <- wls(S=R1, acovS=acovR, n=n, impliedS=impliedR1, matrices=c(P1, L1), cor.analysis=TRUE, intervals=TRUE)
summary(wls.fit1)
Call:
wls(S = tssem1.obj$pooledS, acovS = tssem1.obj$acovS, n = tssem1.obj$total.n, impliedS = impliedS, matrices = matrices, cor.analysis = cor.analysis,
Coefficients:
Estimate Std.Error lbound ubound z value Pr(>|z|)
L1[1,1] 0.517058 0.023568 0.470865 0.563252 21.9386 < 2.2e-16 ***
L1[2,1] 0.575070 0.023120 0.529756 0.620385 24.8732 < 2.2e-16 ***
L1[3,1] 0.593858 0.025586 0.543710 0.644005 23.2103 < 2.2e-16 ***
L1[4,2] 0.705137 0.014698 0.676329 0.733944 47.9750 < 2.2e-16 ***
L1[5,2] 0.579020 0.016902 0.545893 0.612147 34.2578 < 2.2e-16 ***
L1[6,2] 0.746402 0.013060 0.720805 0.771999 57.1514 < 2.2e-16 ***
L1[7,2] 0.692214 0.013622 0.665515 0.718913 50.8156 < 2.2e-16 ***
L1[8,3] 0.621997 0.052462 0.519174 0.724820 11.8562 < 2.2e-16 ***
L1[9,3] 0.332554 0.032670 0.268522 0.396586 10.1793 < 2.2e-16 ***
P1[1,2] 0.544762 0.025617 0.494554 0.594969 21.2659 < 2.2e-16 ***
P1[1,3] 0.488475 0.055862 0.378987 0.597964 8.7442 < 2.2e-16 ***
P1[2,3] 0.392610 0.040345 0.313536 0.471684 9.7314 < 2.2e-16 ***
---
Signif. codes: 0 '' 0.001 '' 0.01 '' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
Goodness-of-fit indices:
Value
Sample size 2902.0000
Chi-square of target model 384.9062
DF of target model 24.0000
p value of target model 9.344e-67
Chi-square of independent model 4636.5664
DF of independent model 36.0000
RMSEA 0.0720
SRMR 0.0729
TLI 0.8823
CFI 0.9216
AIC 336.9062
BIC 193.5504