[R-sig-ME] single argument anova for GLMMs (really, glmer, or dispersion?)
John Maindonald
john.maindonald at anu.edu.au
Fri Dec 12 06:29:19 CET 2008
The approaches have the fundamental difference that the overdispersion
model multiplies the theoretical variance by an amount that is
constant (whether on the scale of the response [the binomial variance
becomes \phi n p(1-p)], or on the scale of the linear predictor).
I have called overdispersion a model - actually it is not one model,
but a range of possible models. I have no problem, in principle, with
one fitting method that reflects multiple possible models once one
gets down to detail.
GLMMs add to the theoretical variance, on the scale of the linear
predictor. For binomial models with the usual link functions (logit,
probit, cloglog), the scale spreads out close to p=0 or close to
p=1, With the glmm models the variances then increase more,
relatively to the overdispersion model, at the extremes of the
scale. (For the Poisson with a log link, there is just one relevant
extreme, at 0.)
NB also, all variance assessments are conditional on getting the link
right. If the link is wrong in a way that matters, there will be
apparent increases in variance in some parts of the scale that reflect
biases that arise from the inappropriate choice of link.
There may be cases where overdispersion gives too small a variance
(relatively) at the extremes, while glmer gives too high a variance.
As there are an infinite number of possible ways in which the variance
might vary with (in the binomial case) p, it would be surprising if
(detectable with enough data, or enough historical experience), there
were not such "intermediate" cases.
There might in principle be subplot designs, with a treatment at the
subplot level, where the overdispersion model is required at the
subplot level in order to get the treatment comparisons correct at
that level.
As much of this discussion is focused around ecology, experience with
fitting one or other model to large datasets is surely required that
will help decide just how, in one or other practical context, 1) the
variance is likely to change with p (or in the Poisson case, with the
Poisson mean) and 2) what links seem preferable.
The best way to give the flexibility required for modeling the
variance, as it seems to me, would be the ability to make the variance
of p a fairly arbitrary function of p, with other variance components
added on the scale of the linear predictor. More radically, all
variance components might be functions of p. I am not sure that going
that far would be a good idea - there'd be too many complaints that
model fits will not converge!
The following shows a comparison that I did recently for a talk. The
p's are not sufficiently extreme to show much difference between the
two models:
The dataset cbpp is from the lme4 package.
infect <- with(cbpp, cbind(incidence, size - incidence))
(gm1 <- glmer(infect ~ period + (1 | herd),
family = binomial, data = cbpp))
Random effects:
Groups Name Variance Std.Dev.
herd (Intercept) 0.412 0.642
Number of obs: 56, groups: herd, 15
Fixed effects:
Estimate Std. Error z value Pr(>|z|)
(Intercept) -1.399 0.228 -6.14 8.4e-10
period2 -0.992 0.305 -3.25 0.00116
period3 -1.129 0.326 -3.46 0.00054
period4 -1.580 0.429 -3.69 0.00023
Here, use the “sum” contrasts, and compare with the overall mean.
glmer quasibinomial
Est SE z Est SE (binomial SE) t
(Intercept) -2.32 0.22 -10.5 -2.33 0.21 (.14) -11.3
Period1 -0.66 0.32 -2.1 -0.72 0.45 (.31) -1.6
Period2 0.93 0.18 5.0 1.06 0.26 (.17) 4.2
Period3 -0.07 0.23 -0.3 -0.11 0.34 (.23) -0.3
Period4 -0.20 0.25 -0.8 -0.24 0.36 (.24) -0.7
The SEs (really SEDs) are not much increased from the quasibinomial
model. The estimates of treatment effects (differences from the
overall mean) are substantially reduced (pulled in towards the overall
mean). The net effect is that the z -statistic is smaller for the
glmer model than the t for the quasibinomial model.
John Maindonald email: john.maindonald at anu.edu.au
phone : +61 2 (6125)3473 fax : +61 2(6125)5549
Centre for Mathematics & Its Applications, Room 1194,
John Dedman Mathematical Sciences Building (Building 27)
Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200.
On 12/12/2008, at 7:52 AM, Andrew Robinson wrote:
> Echoing Murray's points here - nicely put, Murray - it seems to me
> that the quasi-likelihood and the GLMM are different approaches to the
> same problem.
>
> Can anyone provide a substantial example where random effects and
> quasilikelihood have both been necessary?
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Andrew
>
>
> On Fri, Dec 12, 2008 at 09:11:39AM +1300, Murray Jorgensen wrote:
>> The following is how I think about this at the moment:
>>
>> The quasi-likelihood approach is an attempt at a model-free
>> approach to
>> the problem of overdispersion in non-Gaussian regression situations
>> where standard distributional assumptions fail to provide the
>> observed
>> mean-variance relationship.
>>
>> The glmm approach, on the other hand, does not abandon models and
>> likelihood but seeks to account for the observed mean-variance
>> relationship by adding unobserved latent variables (random effects)
>> to
>> the model.
>>
>> Seeking to combine the two approaches by using both quasilikelihood
>> *and* random effects would seem to be asking for trouble as being
>> able
>> to use two tools on one problem would give a lot of flexibility to
>> the
>> parameter estimation; probably leading to a very flat quasilikelihood
>> surface and ill-determined optima.
>>
>> But all of the above is only thoughts without the benefit of either
>> serious attempts at fitting real data or doing serious theory so I
>> will
>> defer to anyone who has done either!
>>
>> Philosophically, at least, there seems to be clash between the two
>> approaches and I doubt that attempts to combine them will be
>> successful.
>>
>> Murray Jorgensen
>>
>>
>
> --
> Andrew Robinson
> Department of Mathematics and Statistics Tel:
> +61-3-8344-6410
> University of Melbourne, VIC 3010 Australia Fax:
> +61-3-8344-4599
> http://www.ms.unimelb.edu.au/~andrewpr
> http://blogs.mbs.edu/fishing-in-the-bay/
>
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