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04mi

Multiple Imputation


Description

The mi function cannot be run in isolation. It is the most important step of a multi-step process to perform multiple imputation. The data must be specified as a missing_data.frame before mi is used to impute missing values for one or more missing_variables. An iterative algorithm is used where each missing_variable is modeled (using fit_model) as a function of all the other missing_variables and their missingness patterns. This documentation outlines the technical uses of the mi function. For a more general discussion of how to use mi for multiple imputation, see mi-package.

Usage

mi(y, model, ...)
## Hidden arguments:
## n.iter = 30, n.chains = 4, max.minutes = Inf, seed = NA, verbose = TRUE,
## save_models = FALSE, parallel = .Platform$OS.type != "windows"

Arguments

y

Typically an object that inherits from the missing_data.frame-class, although many methods are defined for subclasses of the missing_variable-class. Alternatively, y = "parallel" the appropriate parallel backend will be registered but no imputation performed. See the Details section.

model

Missing when y = "parallel" or when y inherits from the missing_data.frame-class but otherwise should be the result of a call to fit_model.

...

Further arguments, the most important of which are

n.iter

number of iterations to perform, defaulting to 30

n.chains

number of chains to use, ideally equal to the number of virtual cores available for use, and defaulting to 4

max.minutes

hard time limit that defaults to 20

seed

either NA, which is the default, or a psuedo-random number seed

verbose

logical scalar that is TRUE by default, indicating that progress of the iterative algorithm should be printed to the screen, which does not work under Windows when the chains are executed in parallel

save_models

logical scalar that defaults to FALSE but if TRUE indicates that the models estimated on a frozen completed dataset should be saved. This option should be used if the user is interested in evaluating the quality of the models run after the last iteration of the mi algorithm, but saving these models consumes much more RAM

debug

logical scalar indicating whether to run in debug mode, which forces the processing to be sequential, and allows developers to capture errors within chains

parallel

if TRUE, then parallel processing is used, if available. If FALSE, sequential processing is used. In addition, ths argument may be an object produced by makeCluster

Details

It is important to distinguish the two mi methods that are most relevant to users from the many mi methods that are less relevant. The primary mi method is that where y inherits from the missing_data.frame-class and model is omitted. This method “does” the imputation according to the additional arguments described under ... above and returns an object of class "mi". Executing two or more independent chains is important for monitoring the convergence of each chain, see Rhats.

If the chains have not converged in the amount of iterations or time specified, the second important mi method is that where y is an object of class "mi" and model is omitted, which continues a previous run of the iterative imputation algorithm. All the arguments described under ... above remain applicable, except for n.chains and save_RAM because these are established by the previous run that is being continued.

The numerous remaining methods are of less importance to users. One mi method is called when y = "parallel" and model is omitted. This method merely sets up the parallel backend so that the chains can be executed in parallel on the local machine. We use the mclapply function in the parallel package to implement parallel processing on non-Windows machines, and we use the snow package to implement parallel processing on Windows machines; we refer users to the documentation for these packages for more detail about parallel processing. Parallel processing is used by default on machines with multiple processors, but sequential processing can be used instead by using the parallel=FALSE option. If the user is not using a mulitcore computer, sequential processing is used instead of parallel processing.

The first two mi methods described above in turn call a mi method where y inherits from the missing_data.frame-class and model is that which is returned by one of the fit_model-methods. The methods impute values for the originally missing values of a missing_variable given a fitted model, according to the imputation_method slot of the missing_variable in question. Advanced users could define new subclasses of the missing_variable-class in which case it may be necessary to write such a mi method for the new class. It will almost certainly be necessary to add to the fit_model-methods. The existing mi and fit-model-methods should provide a template for doing so.

Value

If model is missing and n.chains is positive, then the mi method will return an object of class "mi", which has the following slots:

call

the call to mi

data

a list of missing_data.frames, one for each chain

total_iters

an integer vector that records how many iterations have been performed

There are a few methods for such an object, such as show, summary, dimnames, nrow, ncol, etc.

If mi is called on a missing_data.frame with model missing and a nonpositive n.chains, then the missing_data.frame will be returned after allocating storeage.

If model is not missing, then the mi method will impute missing values for the y argument and return it.

Author(s)

Ben Goodrich and Jonathan Kropko, for this version, based on earlier versions written by Yu-Sung Su, Masanao Yajima, Maria Grazia Pittau, Jennifer Hill, and Andrew Gelman.

See Also

Examples

# STEP 0: Get data
data(CHAIN, package = "mi")

# STEP 1: Convert to a missing_data.frame
mdf <- missing_data.frame(CHAIN) # warnings about missingness patterns
show(mdf)

# STEP 2: change things
mdf <- change(mdf, y = "log_virus", what = "transformation", to = "identity")

# STEP 3: look deeper
summary(mdf)

# STEP 4: impute
## Not run: 
imputations <- mi(mdf)

## End(Not run)

mi

Missing Data Imputation and Model Checking

v1.0
GPL (>= 2)
Authors
Andrew Gelman [ctb], Jennifer Hill [ctb], Yu-Sung Su [aut], Masanao Yajima [ctb], Maria Pittau [ctb], Ben Goodrich [cre, aut], Yajuan Si [ctb], Jon Kropko [aut]
Initial release
2015-04-16

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