(Vignette under construction!)
Each inlabru latent model component generates an effect,
given the latent state vector. The purpose of the mapper system
is to define the link from state vectors to effect vectors. For an
ordinary model component, named \(c\),
this link can be represented as a matrix-vector product \[
\eta_c(u_c) = A_c(\text{input}) u_c,
\] where \(u_c\) is the latent
state vector, \(\eta_c(u_c)\) is the
resulting component effect vector, and \(A_c(\text{input})\) is a component
model matrix. This matrix depends on the component inputs
(covariates, index information, etc) from main
,
group
, replicate
, and weights
in
the component definition.
The wider scope of component definitions is discussed in the component vignette. Here, we will focus on the mapper system itself, how the basic building blocks are used to construct the built-in mappers, and finally how to construct new mappers.
The in-package documentation for the mapper methods is contained in four parts:
?bru_mapper # Mapper constructors
?bru_mapper_generics # Generic and default methods
?bru_mapper_methods # Specialised mapper methods
?bru_get_mapper # Mapper extraction methods
Regular users normally at most need some of the methods from
?bru_mapper
and sometimes
?bru_mapper_generics
. The methods in
?bru_mapper_methods
provides more details and allows the
user to query mappers and to use them outside the context of inlabru
model definitions. The bru_mapper_define()
and
bru_get_mapper()
methods are needed for those implementing
their own mapper class.
The main purpose of each mapper class is to allow evaluating a
component effect, from given input
and latent
state
, by calling
for the mapper
associated with the component
definition.
Basic mappers take covariate vectors or matrices as input and numeric vectors as state.
Constructors:
bru_mapper_const()
bru_mapper_linear()
bru_mapper_index(n)
bru_mapper_factor(values, factor_mapping)
bru_mapper_matrix()
bru_mapper_harmonics(order, scaling, intercept, interval)
The const
mapper defines a mapping from an empty state
vector. This is used to define offset components, \(\eta(u)_j = z_j\), where \(z\) is a fixed input vector, indexed by
\(j\).
The linear
mapper defines a mapper from a length 1 state
vector. This is used to define ordinary “fixed” covariate effects,
linear in both the covariate and in the state variable; \(\eta(u)_j = z_j u\), where \(u\) is the state, and \(z\) is the input covariate vector.
The index(n)
mapper defines a direct mapping from a
length n
state variable. This is used for structured and
unstructured “random effect” component effects; \(\eta(u)_j = u_{z_j}\), where \(u\) is the state vector, and \(z\) is the input index vector.
The factor(values, factor_mapping)
mapper defines a
direct mapping between a state vector of length equal to the number of
factor levels of values
(for
factor_mapping = "full"
), or one less (for
factor_mapping = "contrast"
). Each factor level is
represented as a dummy 0/1 variable, or equivalently, the input is used
as a label index into the state vector; \(\eta(u)_j = u_{z_j}\). In the
"contrast"
case, the first factor level is removed from the
model, and the corresponding effect defined to be zero.
The matrix
mapper defines a direct matrix multiplication
between a pre-computed model matrix \(A_\text{input}\) with the state vector;
\(\eta(u) = A_\text{input} u\). This is
used e.g. for linear model formula input, that is converted to a
component model matrix before handing it over to the mapper system.
The harmonics(order, scaling, intercept, interval)
mapper defines a sum of weighted harmonics on a real interval \((L, U)\), each frequency additionally
scaled by factors determined by scale
; \(\eta(u_j) = \sum_{k=1}^{1+2p} A_{j,k}
u_k\), where \(A_{j,k}=s_k\) for
\(k=1\), \(A_{j,2k}=s_{k+1}\cos[2\pi k (z_j -
L)/(U-L)]\) for \(k=1,2,\dots,p\), and \(A_{j,2k+1}=s_{k+1}\sin[2\pi k (z_j -
L)/(U-L)]\) for \(k=1,2,\dots,p\), where \(p=\)order
. When
intercept
is TRUE
, the state vector has length
\(1+2p\). When intercept
is FALSE
, the first, constant, column is removed, and the
state vector has length \(2p\).
Transformation mappers are mappers that would normally be combined with other mappers, as steps in a sequence of transformations, or as individual transformation mappers.
bru_mapper_scale()
bru_mapper_marginal(qfun, pfun, ...)
bru_mapper_aggregate(rescale)
bru_mapper_logsumexp(rescale)
The scale
mapper multiplies the input
vector with the state
vector. This is used for INLA models
to implement the weights
component scaling, as the final
stage of a pipe
mapper, see below.
The marginal
mapper transforms the state
vector from standardised Gaussian marginal distribution to the
distribution defined by a quantile function. This can be used to define
components with latent marginal N(0,1)
distribution but
non-Gaussian effect.
mapper <- bru_mapper_marginal(
qfun = ..., pfun = ..., dfun = ..., ..., inverse = ...
)
ibm_eval(mapper,
input = NULL, # If a list is given, it overrides the parameter specification
state = ...
)
# Examples:
mapper <- bru_mapper_marginal(qfun = qexp, rate = 1 / 8)
mapper <- bru_mapper_marginal(
qfun = qexp, pfun = pexp, dfun = dexp, rate = 1 / 8
)
The aggregate
mapper aggregates the state
vector elements by blockwise summation after scaling the elements by
weights. This can be used for summation, integration, and averaging (for
rescale=TRUE
).
The logsumexp
mapper aggregates the
exp(state)
vector elements by blockwise summation after
scaling the elements by weights, and takes the logarithm. The
implementation takes care to avoid numerical overflow. This can be used
for summation, integration, and averaging (for
rescale=TRUE
).
Compound mappers define collections or chains of mappings, and can take various forms of input. The state vector is normally a numeric vector, but can in some cases be a list of vectors.
bru_mapper_collect(mappers, hidden)
bru_mapper_multi(mappers)
bru_mapper_pipe(mappers)
bru_mapper_repeat(mapper, n_rep)
The collect
mapper defines a compound mapper where the
Jacobian is block-diagonal, and each block is defined by a separate
sub-mapper. When hidden = TRUE
, it can be used for INLA
models where the user-visible part of the latent state is only a part of
the internal state, such as for "bym"
models.
mapper <- bru_mapper_collect(list(name1 = ..., name2 = ..., ...),
hidden = FALSE
)
ibm_eval(mapper,
input = list(name1 = ..., name2 = ..., ...),
state = ...
)
# If hidden = TRUE, the inla_f=TRUE argument "hides" all but the first mapper:
ibm_eval(mapper,
input = name1_input,
state = ...,
inla_f = TRUE
)
The multi
mapper defines a compound mapper where the
Jacobian is the row-wise Kronecker product between the sub-mapper
Jacobians. This can be used for INLA models to construct the internal
mapper for main
, group
, and
replicate
, but also for user-defined models where a single
rgeneric
or cgeneric
model is defined on e.g.
a space-time product domain.
Pipe mappers chain multiple mappers into a sequence, where the evaluation result of each mapper is given as the state vector for the next mapper.
Repeat mappers take a single mapper and repeats it, by defining the
Jacobian as a Kronecker product of a row vector of ones, corresponding
to a state vector of length nrep * ibm_n(mapper, ...)
. The
ibm_
method inputs are passed on to the sub-mapper
methods.
All model component mappers are currently defined as a
pipe
mapper containing a multi
mapper followed
by a scale
mapper:
For object with predefined mapper conversion methods, use
bru_mapper(object)
to obtain a suitable mapper object.
Current predefined object mappers are defined for objects of these
classes:
fm_mesh_2d
and inla.mesh
; Use
bru_mapper(object)
or
bru_mapper_fmesher(object)
fm_mesh_1d
and inla.mesh.1d
; Use
bru_mapper(object, indexed)
or, if
indexed=TRUE
, bru_mapper_fmesher(object)
.fmesher::fm_dof()
and
fmesher::fm_basis()
methods; Use
bru_mapper_fmesher(object)
. If fmesher
in the
future gains a common base class for such objects, a corresponding
bru_mapper()
conversion method will be added.More details are given below.
For inla model objects with predefined mappers, use
bru_get_mapper(object)
Current predefined model object
mappers are defined for models of these classes:
inla.spde
; this includes
inla.spde2.matern()
and inla.spde2.pcmatern()
models. The conversion method calls bru_mapper()
in the
appropriate way for the mesh type used for the modelinla.rgeneric
; This relies on the rgeneric definition
including a "mapper"
callback argument. A less invasive
method, that works for both rgeneric and cgeneric models, is to define a
bru_get_mapper()
method for the class, which needs to
include a unique class identifier, e.g. add
class(object) <- c("my_unique_model_class", class(object))
and defineand register it in the namespace.
bru_mapper_taylor()
ibm_n(mapper, inla_f, ...)
ibm_n_output(mapper, input, ...)
ibm_values(mapper, inla_f, ...)
ibm_jacobian(mapper, input, state, ...)
ibm_eval(mapper, input, state, ...)
ibm_names(mapper, ...)
ibm_inla_subset(mapper, ...)
An example where the inla_f
argument matters is the
bru_mapper_collect
class, when the hidden=TRUE
argument is used to indicate that only the first mapper should be used
for the INLA::f()
inputs, e.g. for "bym2"
models. For inla_f=FALSE
(the default), the
ibm_n
and ibm_values
methods return the total
number of latent variables, but with inla_f=TRUE
we get the
values needed by INLA::f()
instead:
mapper <- bru_mapper_collect(
list(
a = bru_mapper_index(3),
b = bru_mapper_index(2)
),
hidden = TRUE
)
ibm_n(mapper)
#> [1] 5
ibm_values(mapper)
#> [1] 1 2 3 4 5
ibm_n(mapper, inla_f = TRUE)
#> [1] 3
ibm_values(mapper, inla_f = TRUE)
#> [1] 1 2 3
ibm_n(mapper, multi = TRUE)
#> $a
#> [1] 3
#>
#> $b
#> [1] 2
ibm_values(mapper, multi = TRUE)
#> $a
#> [1] 1 2 3
#>
#> $b
#> [1] 1 2
ibm_n(mapper, inla_f = TRUE, multi = TRUE)
#> $a
#> [1] 3
#>
#> $b
#> [1] 2
ibm_values(mapper, inla_f = TRUE, multi = TRUE)
#> $a
#> [1] 1 2 3
#>
#> $b
#> [1] 1 2
For the bru_mapper_multi
class, the multi
argument provides access to the inner layers of the multi-mapper:
mapper <- bru_mapper_multi(list(
a = bru_mapper_index(3),
b = bru_mapper_index(2)
))
ibm_n(mapper)
#> [1] 6
ibm_n(mapper, multi = TRUE)
#> $a
#> [1] 3
#>
#> $b
#> [1] 2
ibm_values(mapper)
#> [1] 1 2 3 4 5 6
ibm_values(mapper, multi = TRUE)
#> a b
#> 1 1 1
#> 2 2 1
#> 3 3 1
#> 4 1 2
#> 5 2 2
#> 6 3 2
ibm_n(mapper, inla_f = TRUE)
#> [1] 6
ibm_n(mapper, multi = TRUE, inla_f = TRUE)
#> $a
#> [1] 3
#>
#> $b
#> [1] 2
ibm_values(mapper, inla_f = TRUE)
#> [1] 1 2 3 4 5 6
ibm_values(mapper, multi = TRUE, inla_f = TRUE)
#> a b
#> 1 1 1
#> 2 2 1
#> 3 3 1
#> 4 1 2
#> 5 2 2
#> 6 3 2
The default ibm_inla_subset
method determines the inla
subset by comparing the full values information from
ibm_values(mapper, inla_f = FALSE)
to the inla specific
values information from ibm_values(mapper, inla_f = TRUE)
,
to determine the logical vector identifying the inla values subset.
Custom mappers should normally not need to specialise this method.
For component models referenced by a character label
(e.g. "iid"
, "bym2"
, "rw2"
etc),
inlabru will construct default mappers, that in most cases replicate the
default INLA::f()
behaviour.
For the fm_mesh_1d
, fm_mesh_2d
,
inla.mesh
and inla.mesh.1d
classes, default
mappers can be constructed by the pre-defined bru_mapper
S3
methods. For 2d meshes (fm_mesh_2d
,
inla.mesh
),
For 1d meshes (fm_mesh_1d
,
inla.mesh.1d
),
A mapper object should store enough information in order for the
ibm_*
methods to work. The simplest case of a customised
mapper is to just attached a new class label to the front of the S3
class()
information of an existing mapper, to obtain a
class to override some of the standard ibm_*
method
implementations. More commonly, one would instead start with a basic
list()
, that might contain an existing mapper
object, and then add methods that know how to use that information. In
all these cases, the bru_mapper_define()
method should be
used to properly set the class information:
Implementations can avoid having to define ibm_n
and
ibm_values
methods, by instead computing and storing
n
, n_inla
, values
, and
values_inla
in the mapper object during construction:
The default ibm_n
and ibm_values
methods
checks if these values are available, and return the appropriate values
depending on the inla_f
argument. When *_inla
values are requested but not available, the methods fall back to the
non-inla versions. If the needed information is not found, the default
methods give an error message.
Note: Before version 2.6.0, ibm_amatrix
was used instead
of ibm_jacobian
. Version 2.6.0 still supports this, by
having the default ibm_jacobian
method call
ibm_amatrix
, but will give a deprecation message later, and
it may be removed in a future version.
Let’s build a mapper class bru_mapper_p_quadratic
for a
model component that takes input covariates with values \(a_{ij}\), \(i=1,\dots,m\) and \(j=1,\dots,p\), in a matrix
or
data.frame
and evaluates a full quadratic expression \[
\eta_i = x_0 + \sum_{j=1}^p a_{ij} x_j +
\frac{1}{2}\sum_{j=1}^p\sum_{k=1}^j \gamma_{j,k} a_{ij}a_{ik} x_{j,k},
\] where the latent component vector is \(\boldsymbol{x}=[x_0,x_1,\dots,x_p,x_{1,1},\dots,x_{p,1},x_{2,2}\dots,x_{p,p}]\),
and \[
\gamma_{j,k} = \begin{cases}
1, & j = k,\\
2, & j > k.
\end{cases}
\]
We start with the constructor method. Like the
bru_mapper_matrix
, we require the user to supply a vector
of covariate labels, and store them as a character vector. We also
include a min_degree
parameter to control if an intercept
(min_degree <= 0
) and linear terms
(min_degree <= 1
) should be included in the model.
bru_mapper_p_quadratic <- function(labels, min_degree = 0, ...) {
if (is.factor(labels)) {
mapper <- list(
labels = levels(labels),
min_degree = min_degree
)
} else {
mapper <- list(
labels = as.character(labels),
min_degree = min_degree
)
}
bru_mapper_define(mapper, new_class = "bru_mapper_p_quadratic")
}
The ibm_n
method can compute the value of \(n\) from \(n=1+p+\frac{p(p+1)}{2}\):
ibm_n.bru_mapper_p_quadratic <- function(mapper, ...) {
p <- length(mapper$labels)
(mapper$min_degree <= 0) + (mapper$min_degree <= 1) * p + p * (p + 1) / 2
}
For ibm_values
, the default method is sufficient,
returning the vector \([1,\dots,n]\)
with \(n\) obtained by
ibm_n(mapper)
. However, for clearer result naming, we can
use a character vector, at least for INLA f()
models that
allow it (we could have an option argument to the
bru_mapper_p_quadratic
constructor to control this):
ibm_values.bru_mapper_p_quadratic <- function(mapper, ...) {
p <- length(mapper$labels)
n <- ibm_n(mapper)
jk <- expand.grid(seq_len(p), seq_len(p))
jk <- jk[jk[, 2] <= jk[, 1], , drop = FALSE]
c(
if (mapper$min_degree <= 0) "Intercept" else NULL,
if (mapper$min_degree <= 1) mapper$labels else NULL,
paste0(mapper$labels[jk[, 1]], ":", mapper$labels[jk[, 2]])
)
}
While the approach to ibm_n
and ibm_values
above works, it is wasteful to recompute the n
and
values
information for each call. Instead we can use that
the default method will check if n
or values
are stored in the mapper object, and then return them. If we change the
.
in the method definitions to _
, we can end
the constructor method like this, making subsequent method calls
faster:
bru_mapper_p_quadratic <- function(labels, min_degree = 0, ...) {
...
mapper <- bru_mapper_define(mapper, new_class = "bru_mapper_p_quadratic")
mapper$n <- ibm_n_bru_mapper_p_quadratic(mapper)
mapper$values <- ibm_values_bru_mapper_p_quadratic(mapper)
mapper
}
Note that the order matters, since our
ibm_values_bru_mapper_p_quadratic
function calls
ibm_n(mapper)
.
We can now define the main part of the mapper interface that computes
the model matrix linking the latent variables to the component effect.
It’s required that NULL
input should return a \(0\)-by-\(n\) matrix.
ibm_jacobian.bru_mapper_p_quadratic <- function(mapper, input, ...) {
if (is.null(input)) {
return(Matrix::Matrix(0, 0, ibm_n(mapper)))
}
p <- length(mapper$labels)
n <- ibm_n(mapper)
N <- NROW(input)
A <- list()
in_ <- as(input, "Matrix")
idx <- 0
if (mapper$min_degree <= 0) {
idx <- idx + 1
A[[idx]] <- Matrix::Matrix(1, N)
}
if (mapper$min_degree <= 1) {
idx <- idx + 1
A[[idx]] <- in_
}
for (k in seq_len(p)) {
idx <- idx + 1
A[[idx]] <- in_[, seq(k, p, by = 1), drop = FALSE] * in_[, k]
A[[idx]][, k] <- A[[idx]][, k] / 2
}
A <- do.call(cbind, A)
colnames(A) <- as.character(ibm_values(mapper))
A
}
If the output of a mapper is of a different size than
NROW(input)
, the mapper should define a
ibm_n_output(mapper, input, ...)
method to return the
output size for a given input.