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Provides sampling and density functions for matrix variate normal,
t, and inverted t distributions; ML estimation
using the EM algorithm for matrix variate normal and t
distributions including some restrictions on the parameters; and
classification by linear and quadratic discriminant analysis for matrix
variate normal and t distributions. Performs clustering with
matrix variate normal and t mixture models.
See the vignettes for an example of how it works.
It is currently possible to constrain the mean matrices for normal and t distributed matrices to have a common mean across rows, columns, or both, as well as AR(1), compound symmetric, on identity covariance matrices across rows, columns, or both in the maximum likelihood estimation functions and the LDA and QDA functions. In the mixture model function, it is possible to have a common mean within groups across rows, columns, or both.
There are some other R packages you may be interested in if you are working with matrix-variate distributions. The excellent matrixsampling package has sampling and distribution functions for these and many other matrix distributions, as does LaplacesDemon. The MatrixLDA package performs LDA for normal distributions with penalized likelihood.
Install from CRAN by running:
install.packages('MixMatrix')
The development version of the software can be installed by running:
devtools::install_github("gzt/MixMatrix")
The various r*
and d*
functions return or
take as input an array indexed by the third dimension.
meanmatrix = matrix(1:12, nrow = 3)
A = rmatrixnorm(n = 10, mean = meanmatrix, U = diag(3), V = diag(4))
A[,,1:2]
dmatrixnorm(A, mean = meanmatrix, U = diag(3), V = diag(4), log = TRUE)
The package presents a method of maximum likelihood estimation of the parameters of the matrix variate t distribution using ECME.
X = rmatrixt(n = 100, mean = meanmatrix, U = diag(3), V = diag(4), df = 10)
MLmatrixt(X, fixed = FALSE) # fixed = FALSE indicates to estimate the DF parameter
Because it might be useful in conjunction with the r*
and d*
functions, the package also includes some
convenience functions for generating AR(1) and compound symmetry
correlation matrices.
ARgenerate(5, .5)
CSgenerate(5, .5)
The package also presents linear discriminant analysis and quadratic discriminant analysis for matrix variate distributions in the case of the normal and the t-distribution. In the case of the t, linear and quadratic refer whether the covariance matrices are constrained to be the same between classes rather than the form of the classifier.
A <- rmatrixnorm(30,mean=matrix(0,nrow=3,ncol=4))
B <- rmatrixnorm(30,mean=matrix(1,nrow=3,ncol=4), U = 2 * ARgenerate(3, .8))
C <- array(c(A,B), dim=c(3,4,60))
groups <- c(rep(1,30),rep(2,30))
prior <- c(.5,.5)
D <- matrixqda(C, groups, prior)
predict(D)$posterior[1:10,]
In the future, this will include a more comprehensive treatment of matrix variate mixture modeling, including complete specification of covariance matrices in mixture modeling after the style of Mclust, t-Eigen, and other similar work.
### set two different matrix variate populations and combine into one array
A <- rmatrixnorm(30,mean=matrix(0,nrow=3,ncol=4))
B <- rmatrixnorm(30,mean=matrix(1,nrow=3,ncol=4), U = 2 * ARgenerate(3, .8))
C <- array(c(A,B), dim=c(3,4,60))
groups <- c(rep(1,30),rep(2,30))
prior <- c(.5,.5)
### set up the mixture model
D <- matrixmixture(C, prior, row.mean = TRUE, tolerance = 1e-2)
### print the results, the final mixing proportion, the log-likelihood,
### the BIC, and a plot of the log-likelihood.
print(D$centers) # the final centers
print(D$pi) # the final mixing proportion
logLik(D)
BIC(logLik(D))
plot(D) # the log likelihood by iteration
Please let me know if you have any issues or suggestions here: https://github.com/gzt/MixMatrix/issues
Please note that the MixMatrix
project is released with
a Contributor
Code of Conduct. By contributing to this project, you agree to abide
by its terms.
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
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