NAG Library Function Document
nag_blgm_lm_formula (g22yac)
 
1
 Purpose
nag_blgm_lm_formula (g22yac) parses a text string containing a formula specifying a linear model and outputs a G22 handle to an internal data structure.  This G22 handle can then be passed to various functions in 
Chapter g22.  In particular, the G22 handle can be passed to 
nag_blgm_lm_design_matrix (g22ycc) to produce a design matrix or 
nag_blgm_lm_submodel (g22ydc) to produce a vector of column inclusion flags suitable for use with functions in 
Chapter g02.
 
 
2
 Specification
| 
| #include <nag.h> |  
| #include <nagg22.h> |  | 
 
3
 Description
 
3.1
 Background
Let  denote a data matrix with  observations on  independent variables, denoted .  Let  denote a vector of  observations on a dependent variable.
A linear model, , as the term is used in this function, expresses a relationship between the independent variables, , and the dependent variable.  This relationship can be expressed as a series of additive terms , with each term, , representing either a single independent variable , called the main effect of , or the interaction between two or more independent variables.  An interaction term, denoted here using the  operator, allows the effect of an independent variable on the dependent variable to depend on the value of one or more other independent variables.  As an example, the three-way interaction between  and  is denoted  and describes a situation where the effect of one of these three variables is influenced by the value of the other two.
This function takes a description of 
, supplied as a text string containing a formula, and outputs a G22 handle to an internal data structure.  This G22 handle can then be passed to 
nag_blgm_lm_design_matrix (g22ycc) to produce a design matrix for use in analysis functions from other chapters, for example the regression functions of 
Chapter g02.
A more detailed description of what is meant by a G22 handle can be found in 
Section 2.1 in  the g22 Chapter Introduction.
 
3.2
 Syntax
In its most verbose form  can be described by one or more variable names, , and the two operators,  and .  In order to allow a wide variety of models to be specified compactly this syntax is extended to six operators (,,,,,) and parentheses.
A formula describing the model is supplied to nag_blgm_lm_formula (g22yac) via a character string which must obey the following rules:
| 1. | Variables can be denoted by arbitrary names, as long as 
| (i) | The names used are a subset of those supplied to nag_blgm_lm_describe_data (g22ybc) when describing . |  
| (ii) | The names do not contain any of the characters in . | 
 | 
| 2. | The  operator denotes an interaction between two or more variables or terms, with  denoting the three-way interaction between ,  and . | 
| 3. | A term in  can contain one or more variable names, separated using the  operator, i.e., a term can be either a main effect or an interaction term between two or more variables. 
| (i) | If a variable appears in an interaction term more than once, all subsequent appearances, after the first, are ignored, therefore  is the same as . |  
| (ii) | The ordering of the variables in an interaction term is ignored when comparing terms, therefore  is the same as .  This ordering may have an effect when the resulting G22 handle is passed to another function, for example nag_blgm_lm_design_matrix (g22ycc). |  
| (iii) | Applying the  operator to two terms appends one to the other, for example, if  and , . | 
 | 
| 4. | The  operator allows additional terms to be included in , therefore  is a model that includes terms  and . 
| (i) | If a term is added to  more than once, all subsequent appearances, after the first, are ignored, therefore  is the same as . |  
| (ii) | The ordering of the terms is ignored whilst parsing the formula, therefore  is the same as .  This ordering may have an effect when the resulting G22 handle is passed to another function, for example nag_blgm_lm_design_matrix (g22ycc). |  
| (iii) | Internally, the terms are reordered so that all main effects come first, followed by two-way interactions, then three-way interactions, etc. The ordering within each of these categories is preserved. | 
 | 
| 5. | The  operator can be used as a shorthand notation denoting the main effects and all interactions between the variables involved.  Therefore,  is equivalent to  and  is equivalent to . | 
| 6. | The  operator removes a term from , therefore  is equivalent to  as the three-way interaction, , usually present due to  has been removed. | 
| 7. | The  operator is a shorthand way of specifying a series of variables, with  being equivalent to . 
| (i) | This operator can only be used if the variable names end in a numeric, therefore  would be valid, but  would not. |  
| (ii) | The root part of both variable names (i.e., the part before the trailing numeric, so  in the valid example above) must be the same. |  
| (iii) | The trailing numeric parts of the two variable names must be in ascending order. | 
 | 
| 8. | The  operator is a shorthand notation for a series of  operators.   is equivalent to  which in turn is equivalent to . 
| (i) | This notation is present primarily for use with the  operator in examples of the form,  which specifies a model containing the main effects for variables  to  as well as all two- and three-way interactions. |  
| (ii) | Using the  operator on a single term has no effect, therefore  is the same as . | 
 | 
 
3.2.1
 Precedence
Each operator has an associated default precedence, but this can be overridden through the use of parentheses.  The default precedence is:
| 1. | The  operator, with the resulting expression is treated as if it was surrounded by parentheses.  Therefore,  is equivalent to . | 
| 2. | The  operator, with the resulting expression is treated as if it was surrounded by parentheses.  Therefore,  is equivalent to , which is the equivalent to . | 
| 3. | The  operator, so  is equivalent to . | 
| 4. | The  operator. 
| (i) | When using parentheses with the  or  operators the usual rules of multiplication apply, therefore  is equivalent to  and  is equivalent to . |  
| (ii) | Syntax of the following form is invalid: , where  indicates an operator, unless one or more of those operators are  and/or .  Therefore,  is invalid, whilst  is valid. | 
 | 
| 5. | The  and  operators have equal precedence. 
| (i) | If the terms associated with a  operator do not occur in the current expression they are ignored, therefore  is the equivalent to ; the  part of the expression is calculated first and results in  as the  term does not exist in this particular sub-expression so cannot be removed. | 
 | 
 
3.2.2
 Mean Effect / Intercept Term
A mean effect (or intercept term) can be explicitly added to a formula by specifying  and can be explicitly excluded from the formula by specifying .  For example,  indicates a model with the main effects of two variables and a mean effect, whereas  denotes the same model, but without the mean effect.  The mean indicator can appear anywhere in the formula string as long as it is not contained within parentheses.
If the mean effect is not explicitly mentioned in the model formula, the model is assumed to include a mean effect.
 
4
 References
None.
 
5
 Arguments
- 1:
  
      – void **Input/Output
- 
On entry: must be set to  NULL.
 As an alternative, an existing G22 handle may be supplied in which case this function will destroy the supplied G22 handle as if  nag_blgm_handle_free (g22zac) had been called. 
 On exit: holds a G22 handle to the internal data structure containing a description of the model   as specified in  formula. You  must not change the G22 handle other than through functions in  Chapter g22. 
 
- 2:
  
      – const char *Input
- 
On entry: a string containing the formula specifying  . See  Section 3 for details on the allowed model syntax. 
 
- 3:
  
      – NagError *Input/Output
- 
The NAG error argument (see  Section 3.7 in How to Use the NAG Library and its Documentation). 
 
6
 Error Indicators and Warnings
- NE_ALLOC_FAIL
- 
Dynamic memory allocation failed.
       
      See  Section 2.3.1.2  in How to Use the NAG Library and its Documentation for further information. 
- NE_BAD_PARAM
- 
On entry, argument   had an illegal value. 
- NE_HANDLE
- 
On entry,  hform is not  NULL or a recognised G22 handle.
 
- NE_INTERNAL_ERROR
- 
An internal error has occurred in this function. Check the function call and any array sizes. If the call is correct then please contact  NAG for assistance. 
	See  Section 2.7.6  in How to Use the NAG Library and its Documentation for further information. 
- NE_INVALID_FORMAT
- 
After processing, the model contains no terms.
 
An invalid contrast specifier has been supplied.
 The position in the formula string of the error is .
 
An operator was missing.
 The position in the formula string of the error is .
 
Invalid specification for the colon operator.
 The position in the formula string of the error is .
 
Invalid specification for the mean.
 The position in the formula string of the error is .
 
Invalid specification for the power operator.
 The position in the formula string of the error is .
 
Invalid use of an operator.
 The position in the formula string of the error is .
 
Invalid variable name.
 The position in the formula string of the error is .
 
Missing variable name.
 The position in the formula string of the error is .
 
The formula contained a mismatched parenthesis.
 The position in the formula string of the error is .
 
- NE_NO_LICENCE
- 
Your licence key may have expired or may not have been installed correctly.
       
      See  Section 2.7.5 in How to Use the NAG Library and its Documentation for further information. 
- NW_POTENTIAL_PROBLEM
- 
A term contained a repeated variable with a different contrast specifier.
 
 
7
 Accuracy
Not applicable.
 
8
 Parallelism and Performance
nag_blgm_lm_formula (g22yac) is not threaded in any implementation.
None.
 
10
 Example
This example reads in and parses a formula specifying a model, 
, and displays the processed formula.  A data matrix, 
, is then read in and a design matrix constructed from 
 and 
 using 
nag_blgm_lm_design_matrix (g22ycc).
The design matrix includes an explicit term for the mean effect.
 
10.1
 Program Text
Program Text (g22yace.c)
 
10.2
 Program Data
Program Data (g22yace.d)
 
10.3
 Program Results
Program Results (g22yace.r)
 
11
 Optional Parameters
As well as the optional parameters common to all G22 handles described in 
nag_blgm_optset (g22zmc) and 
nag_blgm_optget (g22znc), a number of additional optional parameters can be specified for a G22 handle holding the description of a model, as returned by 
nag_blgm_lm_formula (g22yac) in 
hform.
Each writeable optional parameter has an associated default value; to set any of them to a non-default value, use 
nag_g02_opt_set (g02zkc).  The value of any optional parameter can be queried using 
nag_blgm_optget (g22znc).
The remainder of this section can be skipped if you wish to use the default values for all optional parameters.
The following is a list of the optional parameters available. A full description of each optional parameter is provided in 
Section 11.1.
All functions that make use of the G22 handle returned by nag_blgm_lm_formula (g22yac) combine it with a description of a data matrix, , to construct a design matrix, .
 
11.1
 Description of the Optional Parameters
For each option, we give a summary line, a description of the optional parameter and details of constraints.
The summary line contains:
- a parameter value, 
where the letters ,  and  denote options that take character, integer and real values respectively;
- the default value.
Keywords and character values are case and white space insensitive.
This parameter controls the default contrasts used for the categorical independent variables appearing in the model.  Six types of contrasts and dummy variables are available:
- Treatment contrasts relative to the first level of the variable will be used.
- Treatment contrasts relative to the last level of the variable will be used.
- Sum contrasts relative to the first level of the variable will be used.
- Sum contrasts relative to the last level of the variable will be used.
- Helmert contrasts will be used.
- Polynomial contrasts will be used.
- Dummy variables will be used rather than a contrast.
See 
nag_blgm_lm_design_matrix (g22ycc) for more information on contrasts, their effect on the design matrix and how they are constructed.
This parameter may have an 
instance identifier associated with it (see 
nag_blgm_optset (g22zmc) and 
nag_blgm_optget (g22znc)).  The 
instance identifier must be the name of one of the variables appearing in the model supplied in 
formula when the G22 handle was created.  For example, 
CONTRAST : VAR1 = HELMERT would set Helmert contrasts for the variable named 
VAR1.
If no instance identifier is specified, the default contrast for all categorical variables in the model is changed, otherwise only the default contrast for the named variable is changed.
In some situations it might be necessary for a variable to use a different contrast, depending on where it appears in the model formula.  In order to allow contrasts to be specified on a term by term basis the  operator can be used in the model formula.  The syntax for this operator is , where  is one of: F, L, SF, SL, H, P or D, corresponding to treatment contrasts relative to the first and last levels, sum contrasts relative to the first and last levels, Helmert contrasts, polynomial contrasts or dummy variables respectively.
If the contrast has not been explicitly specified via the  operator, the value obtained from the optional parameter  is used.
For example, setting 
formula to 
VAR1 + VAR1@H.VAR2@P + VAR2@H.VAR3, specifies that the variable named 
VAR1 should use the default contrasts in the first term and Helmert contrasts in the second term.  The variable named 
VAR2 should use polynomial contrasts in the second term and Helmert contrasts in the third term.  The variable named 
VAR3 should use the default contrasts in the third term.
Constraint:
  , , , , ,  or .
| Explicit Mean |  | Default | 
If , any mean effect included in the model will be explicitly added to the design matrix, , as a column of s.
If 
, it is assumed that the function to which 
 will be passed treats the mean effect as a special case, see 
mean in 
nag_regsn_mult_linear (g02dac) for example.
Constraint:
   or .
This parameter returns a verbose version of the model formula specified in 
formula, expanded and simplified to only contain variable names, the operators 
 and 
 and any contrast identifiers present.
| Storage Order |  | Default | 
This optional parameter controls how the design matrix, 
, should be stored in its output array and only has an effect if the design matrix is being constructed using 
nag_blgm_lm_design_matrix (g22ycc).
If , , the value for the th variable of the th observation of the design matrix is stored in .
If , , the value for the th variable of the th observation of the design matrix is stored in .
Where 
x is the output parameter of the same name in 
nag_blgm_lm_design_matrix (g22ycc).
Constraint:
   or .