rxLogit: Logistic Regression
Description
Use rxLogit
to fit logistic regression models for small or large data.
Usage
rxLogit(formula, data, pweights = NULL, fweights = NULL, cube = FALSE,
cubePredictions = FALSE, variableSelection = list(), rowSelection = NULL,
transforms = NULL, transformObjects = NULL,
transformFunc = NULL, transformVars = NULL,
transformPackages = NULL, transformEnvir = NULL,
dropFirst = FALSE, dropMain = rxGetOption("dropMain"),
covCoef = FALSE, covData = FALSE,
initialValues = NULL,
coefLabelStyle = rxGetOption("coefLabelStyle"),
blocksPerRead = rxGetOption("blocksPerRead"),
maxIterations = 25, coeffTolerance = 1e-06,
gradientTolerance = 1e-06, objectiveFunctionTolerance = 1e-08,
reportProgress = rxGetOption("reportProgress"), verbose = 0,
computeContext = rxGetOption("computeContext"),
...)
Arguments
formula
formula as described in rxFormula. Dependent variable must be binary. It can be a logical variable, a factor with only two categories, or a numeric variable with values in the range (0,1). In the latter case it will be converted to a logical.
data
either a data source object, a character string specifying a .xdf file, or a data frame object.
pweights
character string specifying the variable to use as probability weights for the observations.
fweights
character string specifying the variable to use as frequency weights for the observations.
cube
logical flag. If TRUE
and the first term of the predictor variables is categorical (a factor or an interaction of factors), the regression is performed by applying the Frisch-Waugh-Lovell Theorem, which uses a partitioned inverse to save on computation time and memory. See Details section below.
cubePredictions
logical flag. If TRUE
and cube
is TRUE
the estimated model is evaluated (predicted) for each cell in the cube, fixing the non-cube variables in the model at their mean values, and these predictions are included in the countDF
component of the returned value. This may be time and memory intensive for large models. See Details section below.
variableSelection
a list specifying various parameters that control aspects of stepwise regression. If it is an empty list (default), no stepwise model selection will be performed. If not, stepwise regression will be performed and cube
must be FALSE
. See rxStepControl for details.
rowSelection
name of a logical variable in the data set (in quotes) or a logical expression using variables in the data set to specify row selection. For example, rowSelection = "old"
will use only observations in which the value of the variable old
is TRUE
. rowSelection = (age > 20) & (age < 65) & (log(income) > 10)
will use only observations in which the value of the age
variable is between 20 and 65 and the value of the log
of the income
variable is greater than 10. The row selection is performed after processing any data transformations (see the arguments transforms
or transformFunc
). As with all expressions, rowSelection
can be defined outside of the function call using the expression function.
transforms
an expression of the form list(name = expression, ...)
representing the first round of variable transformations. As with all expressions, transforms
(or rowSelection
) can be defined outside of the function call using the expression function.
transformObjects
a named list containing objects that can be referenced by transforms
, transformsFunc
, and rowSelection
.
transformFunc
variable transformation function. See rxTransform for details.
transformVars
character vector of input data set variables needed for the transformation function. See rxTransform for details.
transformPackages
character vector defining additional R packages (outside of those specified in rxGetOption("transformPackages")
) to be made available and preloaded for use in variable transformation functions, e.g., those explicitly defined in RevoScaleR functions via their transforms
and transformFunc
arguments or those defined implicitly via their formula
or rowSelection
arguments. The transformPackages
argument may also be NULL
, indicating that no packages outside rxGetOption("transformPackages")
will be preloaded.
transformEnvir
user-defined environment to serve as a parent to all environments developed internally and used for variable data transformation. If transformEnvir = NULL
, a new "hash" environment with parent baseenv()
is used instead.
dropFirst
logical flag. If FALSE
, the last level is dropped in all sets of factor levels in a model. If that level has no observations (in any of the sets), or if the model as formed is otherwise determined to be singular, then an attempt is made to estimate the model by dropping the first level in all sets of factor levels. If TRUE
, the starting position is to drop the first level. Note that for cube regressions, the first set of factors is excluded from these rules and the intercept is dropped.
dropMain
logical value. If TRUE
, main-effect terms are dropped before their interactions.
covCoef
logical flag. If TRUE
and if cube
is FALSE
, the variance-covariance matrix of the regression coefficients is returned. Use the rxCovCoef function to obtain these data.
covData
logical flag. If TRUE
and if cube
is FALSE
and if constant term is included in the formula, then the variance-covariance matrix of the data is returned. Use the rxCovData function to obtain these data.
initialValues
Starting values for the Iteratively Reweighted Least Squares algorithm used to estimate the model coefficients. Supported values for this argument come in four forms:
NA
- Initial values of the parameters are computed by a weighted least squares step in which, if there is no user-specified weight, the expected value (mu) of the dependent variable is set to 0.75 if the binary dependent variable is 1, and to 0.25 if it is 0, and to a correspondingly weighted value otherwise. This is equivalent to the default option for theglm
function's logistic regression initial values, and can sometimes lead to convergence when the defaultNULL
option does not, though it may result in more iterations in other cases. If convergence fails with the defaultNULL
option, estimation is restarted withNA
, and vice versa.NULL
- (Default) The initial values will be estimated based on a linear regression. This can speed up convergence significantly in many cases. If the model fails to converge using these values, estimation is automatically re-started using theNA
option for the initial values.Scalar
- A numeric scalar that will be replicated once for each of the coefficients in the model to form the initial values. Zeros are often good starting values.Vector
- A numeric vector of lengthK
, whereK
is the number of model coefficients, including the intercept if any and including any that might be dropped from sets of dummies. This argument is most useful when a set of estimated coefficients is available from a similar set of data. Note thatK
can be found by running the model on a small number of observations and obtaining the number of coefficients from the output, sayz
, vialength(z$coefficients)
.
coefLabelStyle
character string specifying the coefficient label style. The default is "Revo". If "R", R-compatible labels are created.
blocksPerRead
number of blocks to read for each chunk of data read from the data source.
maxIterations
maximum number of iterations.
coeffTolerance
convergence tolerance for coefficients. If the maximum absolute change in the coefficients (step), divided by the maximum absolute coefficient value, is less than or equal to this tolerance at the end of an iteration, the estimation is considered to have converged. To disable this test, set this value to 0.
gradientTolerance
This argument is deprecated. Use objectiveFunctionTolerance
and coeffTolerance
to control convergence.
objectiveFunctionTolerance
convergence tolerance for the objective function. If the absolute relative change in the deviance (-2.0 times log likelihood) is less than or equal to this tolerance at the end of an iteration, the estimation is considered to have converged. To disable this test, set this value to 0.
reportProgress
integer value with options:
0
: no progress is reported.1
: the number of processed rows is printed and updated.2
: rows processed and timings are reported.3
: rows processed and all timings are reported.
verbose
integer value. If 0
, no verbose output is printed during calculations. Integer values from 1
to 4
provide increasing amounts of information are provided.
computeContext
a valid RxComputeContext. The RxSpark
and RxHadoopMR
compute contexts distribute the computation among the nodes specified by the compute context; for other compute contexts, the computation is distributed if possible on the local computer.
...
additional arguments to be passed directly to the Revolution Compute Engine.
Details
The special function F()
can be used in formula
to force a
variable to be interpreted as a factor.
When cube
is TRUE
, the Frisch-Waugh-Lovell (FWL) Theorem is
applied to the model. The FWL approach parameterizes the model to include
one coefficient for each category (a single factor level or combination of
factor levels) instead of using an intercept in the model with contrasts for
each of the factor combinations. Additionally when cube
is TRUE
,
the output contains a countDF
element representing the counts for each
category. If cubePredictions
is also TRUE
, predicted values using
means of conditional independent continuous variables and weighted coefficients
of conditional independent categorical variables are also computed and included in
countDF
. This may be time and memory intensive for large models.
If there are no conditional independent variables (outside of the cube), the predicted values are
equivalent to the coefficients and will be included in countDF
whenever
cube
is TRUE
.
Value
an rxLogit object containing the following elements:
coefficients
named vector of coefficients.
covCoef
variance-covariance matrix for the regression coefficient estimates.
covData
variance-covariance matrix for the explanatory variables in the regression model.
condition.number
estimated reciprocal condition number of final weighted cross-product (X'WX) matrix.
rank
numeric rank of the fitted linear model.
aliased
logical vector specifying whether columns were dropped or not due to collinearity.
coef.std.error
standard errors of the coefficients.
coef.t.value
coefficients divided by their standard errors.
coef.p.value
p-values for coef.t.values, using the normal distribution (Pr(>|z|))
total.squares
Y'Y of raw Y's
f.pvalue
the p-value resulting from an F-test on the fitted model.
df
degrees of freedom, a 3-vector (p, n-p, p*), the last being the number of non-aliased coefficients.
y.names
names for dependent variables.
partitions
when cube
is TRUE
, partitioned results will also be returned.
fstatistics
(for models including non-intercept terms) a 3-vector with the value of the F-statistic with its numerator and denominator degrees of freedom.
params
parameters sent to Microsoft R Services Compute Engine.
formula
the model formula
call
the matched call.
countDF
when cube is TRUE
, a data frame containing category counts for the cube portion will also be returned. If cubePredictions
is also TRUE
, predicted values for each group in the cube are included.
nValidObs
number of valid observations.
nMissingObs
number of missing observations.
deviance
minus twice the maximized log-likelihood (up to a constant)
dispersion
for rxLogit
, which estimates a generalized linear model with family binomial
, the dispersion is always 1.
Note
Logistic regression is computed using the Iteratively Reweighted Least Squares (IRLS) algorithm, which is equivalent to full maximum likelihood.
Author(s)
Microsoft Corporation Microsoft Technical Support
References
Frisch, Ragnar; Waugh, Frederick V., Partial Time Regressions as Compared with Individual Trends, Econometrica, 1 (4) (Oct., 1933), pp. 387-401.
Lovell, M., 1963, Seasonal adjustment of economic time series, Journal of the American Statistical Association, 58, pp. 993-1010.
Lovell, M., 2008, A Simple Proof of the FWL (Frisch,Waugh,Lovell) Theorem, Journal of Economic Education.
See Also
Examples
# Compare rxLogit and glm, which produce similar results when contr.SAS is used
infertLogit <- rxLogit(case ~ age + parity + education + spontaneous + induced,
data = infert)
infertLogit
summary(infertLogit)
infertGLM <- glm(case ~ age + parity + education + spontaneous + induced,
data = infert, family = binomial(), contrasts = list(education = contr.SAS))
summary(infertGLM)
# Instead of using the equivalent of contr.SAS, estimate the parameters
# for the categorical levels without contrasting against an intercept term.
infertCubeLogit <-
rxLogit(case ~ education + age + parity + spontaneous + induced,
data = infert, cube = TRUE)
# Define an ageGroup variable through a variable transformation list.
# Partition the age groups between 1 and 100 by 20 years.
rxLogit(case ~ education + ageGroup + parity + spontaneous + induced,
transforms=list(ageGroup = cut(age, seq(1, 100, 20))),
data = infert, cube = TRUE)
summary(infertCubeLogit)