MEDseq: Mixtures of Exponential-Distance Models with Covariates

Keefe Murphy

2022-03-28

Introduction

MEDseq is an R package which fits a range of models introduced by Murphy et al. (2021). These are finite mixtures of exponential-distance models for clustering longitudinal/categorical life-course sequence data. A family of parsimonious precision parameter constraints are accommodated. So too are sampling weights. Gating covariates can be supplied via formula interfaces. Visualisation of the results of such models is also facilitated.

The most important function in the MEDseq package is: MEDseq_fit, for fitting the models via the EM or CEM algorithms. MEDseq_control allows supplying additional arguments which govern, among other things, controls on the initialisation of the allocations for the EM/CEM algorithm and the various model selection options. MEDseq_compare is provided for conducting model selection between different results from using different covariate combinations &/or initialisation strategies, etc. MEDseq_stderr is provided for computing the standard errors of the coefficients for the covariates in the gating network.

A dedicated plotting function exists for visualising various aspects of the results, using new methods as well as some existing methods adapted from the TraMineR package. Finally, the package also contains two data sets: biofam and mvad.

If you find bugs or want to suggest new features please visit the MEDseq GitHub issues page.

This vignette mostly aims to demonstrate the MEDseq models by reproducing the analysis of the MVAD data in the Murphy et al. (2021) paper. However, an additional example data set is also analysed.

Installing MEDseq

MEDseq will run in Windows, Mac OS X, or Linux. To install it you first need to install R. Installing RStudio as a nice desktop environment for using R is also recommended.

Once in R you can type at the R command prompt:

install.packages('devtools')
devtools::install_github('Keefe-Murphy/MEDseq')

to install the latest development version of the package from the MEDseq GitHub page. To instead install the latest stable official release of the package from CRAN go to R and type:

install.packages('MEDseq')

In either case, if you then type:

library(MEDseq)

it will load in all the MEDseq functions.

The GitHub version contains a few more features but some of these may not yet be fully tested, and occasionally this version might be liable to break when it is in the process of being updated.

MVAD Data

Load the MVAD data. The data comes from a study by McVicar and Anyadike-Danes (2002) on transition from school to work. The data consist of static background characteristics (covariates and sampling weights) and a time series sequence of 72 monthly labour market activities for each of 712 individuals in a cohort survey. The individuals were followed up from July 1993 to June 1999. Type ?mvad for more information. We will drop the first two sequence positions (i.e. months) as they (along with the covariates Grammar and Location) were used to define the sampling weights.

Note that the data set must have equal sequence lengths, intervals must be evenly spaced, and missingness is not allowed. The MVAD data meet these criteria. The TraMineR function seqdef is used to convert the data to the appropriate format.

data(mvad, package="MEDseq")
mvad$Location <- factor(apply(mvad[,5L:9L], 1L, function(x) which(x == "yes")), 
                        labels = colnames(mvad[,5L:9L]))
mvad          <- list(covariates = mvad[c(3L:4L,10L:14L,87L)], 
                      sequences = mvad[,15L:86L],
                      weights = mvad[,2L])
mvad.cov      <- mvad$covariates
mvad.seq      <- seqdef(mvad$sequences[-c(1L,2L)],
                        states = c("EM", "FE", "HE", "JL", "SC", "TR"),
                        labels = c("Employment", "Further Education", "Higher Education", 
                                   "Joblessness", "School", "Training"))

The names of the model types are CC, UC, CU, UU, CCN, UCN, CUN, and UUN. The first letter denotes whether the precision parameters are constrained (C) or unconstrained (U) across clusters, the second denotes the same across time periods, and the third letter (N) indicates the precision of a noise component, i.e. one in which the distribution of the sequences is uniform.

The MEDseq_control function allows the algorithm used for model fitting, the method used to initialise the allocations (e.g. k-medoids or Ward’s hierarchical clustering), the criterion used to identify the optimal model (e.g. BIC, density-based silhouette (DBS), average silhouette width (ASW), etc.), and more to be specified. By default, the EM algorithm is employed, k-medoids is used to obtain starting values, and the BIC is used to choose the optimal model (if a range of models are fitted). In this vignette, we will mostly accept these defaults, with the exception of the noise.gate argument.

The optimal model identified in the Murphy et al. (2021) paper has G=11 components, the UUN model type, sampling weights, and one covariate (an indicator of GCSE exam performance) in the gating network, identified using a stepwise variable selection procedure. The UUN model has a specific precision parameter for each time point in each cluster. The gating covariates can be specified via a formula interface. The argument covars tells the formula where to look for the specified covariates. Here, the probability of belonging to this noise component is set to be independent of the included gating covariate. Thus, to fit such a model:

mod1 <- MEDseq_fit(mvad.seq, G=11, modtype="UUN", weights=mvad$weights, gating= ~ gcse5eq, 
                   covars=mvad.cov, control=MEDseq_control(noise.gate=FALSE))

Typically, a range of G values and modtype settings are supplied to a single call to MEDseq_fit and chosen from using some criterion. Thus, for a given set of covariates, the model which is optimal in terms of the number of components and the precision parameter configuration can be identified.

To compare different runs using different sets of covariates, the function MEDseq_compare can be used. First, let’s fit models with all covariates included (except Grammar and Location) and no covariates included. Let’s try different numbers of components and different model types. Note that only the first model here includes a noise component.

# 10-component CUN model with no covariates.
# CUN models have a precision parameter for each sequence position (i.e. time point),
# though each time point's precision is common across clusters.

mod2 <- MEDseq_fit(mvad.seq, G=10, modtype="CUN", weights=mvad$weights)

# 12-component CC model with all covariates.
# CC models have a single precision parameter across all clusters and time points.

mod3 <- MEDseq_fit(mvad.seq, G=12, modtype="CC", weights=mvad$weights,
                   gating= ~ . - Grammar - Location, covars=mvad.cov)

Confirm that the first model is indeed optimal according to the BIC. Examine the optimal model in greater detail.

(comp <- MEDseq_compare(mod1, mod2, mod3, criterion="bic"))
#> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
#> Comparison of Mixtures of Exponential-Distance Models with Covariates
#> Data: mvad.seq
#> Ranking Criterion: BIC
#> Optimal Only: FALSE
#> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
#> 
#>  rank MEDNames modelNames  G   df iters        bic        icl        aic   dbs
#>     1     mod1        UUN 11 3669     9 -92953.853 -92958.276 -76193.575 0.455
#>     2     mod2        CUN 10 2734     9 -98132.771 -98143.386 -85643.646 0.385
#>     3     mod3         CC 12 3618     6 -98566.426  -98587.89  -82039.12 0.223
#>    asw     loglik                                               gating algo
#>  0.386 -34427.788                                             ~gcse5eq   EM
#>  0.366 -40087.823                                                 None   EM
#>  0.349  -37401.56 ~male + catholic + funemp + gcse5eq + fmpr + livboth   EM
#>  weights noise noise.gate equalPro
#>     TRUE  TRUE      FALSE         
#>     TRUE  TRUE               FALSE
#>     TRUE FALSE
opt   <- comp$optimal
summary(opt, classification = TRUE, parameters = FALSE, network = FALSE)
#> ------------------------------------------------------
#> Mixture of Exponential-Distance Models with Covariates
#> Data: mvad.seq
#> ------------------------------------------------------
#> 
#> MEDseq (UUN), with 11 components
#> Gating Network Covariates:  ~gcse5eq
#> Noise Component:            TRUE
#> Noise Component Gating:     FALSE
#> 
#>  log.likelihood   N  P V   df iters       BIC   DBS   ASW Algo
#>       -34427.79 712 70 6 3669     9 -92953.85 0.455 0.386   EM
#> 
#> Clustering table :
#>   0   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10 
#>  18  87  59  18  32  60  67 165  95  56  55

Examine the estimated gating network coefficients with the dedicated print method. Note that standard errors can be computed by calling MEDseq_stderr on the opt object, to better inform the interpretations of the covariate effects.

print(opt$gating)
#> 
#> Coefficients:
#>           (Intercept) gcse5eqyes
#> Cluster2   -0.9529057 -0.4670714
#> Cluster3   -0.4618282 -1.2292897
#> Cluster4    0.5804638 -2.1756487
#> Cluster5    1.0273366 -3.4335736
#> Cluster6    1.1878210 -3.7253458
#> Cluster7    1.6985296 -4.0901375
#> Cluster8    0.6040331 -2.2020626
#> Cluster9    0.9480638 -3.1958694
#> Cluster10   0.9044878 -3.7306802
#> 
#> Formula: ~gcse5eq 
#> Noise: TRUE 
#> Noise Component Gating: FALSE 
#> EqualPro: FALSE

Visualise the clusters uncovered by the optimal model. Note that seriation is applied (by default) to the observations within clusters for visual clarity. The legend indicates which colours correspond to which state categories.

plot(opt, type="clusters")

Many other plotting options exist, some of which are adapted from the TraMineR package. Use the following code to examine the central sequence parameters. Note that the central sequence of the noise component is not shown as it doesn’t contribute to the likelihood.

plot(opt, type="central")

Use the following code to see the observation-specific (weighted) density-based silhouette values (coloured by cluster). The (weighted) mean within each cluster is also shown. Note that the low average for the noise component is as expected; we do not expect this cluster to be internally coherent, rather it acts as a filter that allows the other clusters to be captured more clearly.

plot(opt, type="dbsvals")

Finally, we can quantify the type of observation characterising each cluster by computing the mean time spent in each state within each cluster. By specifying MAP=TRUE here, we are computing the mean time based on the hard MAP partition rather than weighted by the soft cluster membership probabilities (albeit still weighted by the sampling weights used during model fitting, by default). By specifying norm=TRUE (which is the default), the mean times are normalised to sum to the sequence length within each cluster. The size of each cluster in terms of the number of observations assigned to it is also reported.

MEDseq_meantime(opt, MAP=TRUE, norm=TRUE)
#>           Size    EM     FE     HE     JL     SC     TR
#> Cluster1    87  3.77  0.286 38.447  0.886 26.076  0.535
#> Cluster2    59  4.65 26.513 37.629  0.447  0.762  0.000
#> Cluster3    18  3.38 30.557  8.563  4.065 21.812  1.558
#> Cluster4    32 35.60  1.683  3.623  2.850 25.598  0.634
#> Cluster5    60 28.36  1.230  0.000  3.378  1.353 35.757
#> Cluster6    67 45.33  1.463  0.000  3.122  1.511 17.912
#> Cluster7   165 57.68  2.085  0.000  5.177  1.625  3.671
#> Cluster8    95 41.47 22.692  0.990  3.039  1.304  0.725
#> Cluster9    56 21.84 35.209  0.268  3.992  6.165  2.576
#> Cluster10   55  8.41  3.388  0.217 42.903  4.199 10.925
#> Noise       18 21.52 11.422  1.187 14.478  2.200 19.226

Biofam Data

As a second example, let’s consider data on \(N=2000\) 16 year-long family life state sequences built from the retrospective biographical survey carried out by the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) in 2002. Each of the \(v=8\) states are defined from a combination of five basic states; namely, living with parents (Parent), left home (Left), married (Marr), having children (Child), and Divorced. The data is available in the MEDseq package as biofam. Type ?biofam for more information.

data(biofam, package="MEDseq")
biofam  <- list(covs = cbind(biofam[2L:9L], age = 2002 - biofam$birthyr), 
                sequences = biofam[10L:25L] + 1L)
bio.cov <- biofam$covs[,colSums(is.na(biofam$covs)) == 0]
bio.seq <- seqdef(biofam$sequences,
                  states = c("P", "L", "M", "L+M", 
                             "C", "L+C", "L+M+C", "D"),
                  labels = c("Parent", "Left", "Married", 
                             "Left+Marr", "Child", "Left+Child", 
                             "Left+Marr+Child", "Divorced"))

While the data set contains weights, they are not appropriate for use; biofam is merely a subsample of the original data so the weights are not properly adapted. Thus, we will fit a model without supplying the weights argument. Secondly, the data set also contain some baseline covariates. As many of them contain missing values, let’s only consider the age variable, derived from the birthyr reported in 2002. Again, we override the noise.gate=TRUE default so that the covariate(s) do not influence the mixing proportions of the noise component. We do so here directly, without invoking MEDseq_control explicitly. Thus, the noise component’s mixing proportion will be constant (though estimated) across all observed sequences and covariate patterns.

# The UUN model includes a noise component.
# Otherwise, there is a precision parameter for each time point in each cluster.

bio <- MEDseq_fit(bio.seq, G=10, modtype="UUN", gating= ~ age, 
                  covars=bio.cov, noise.gate=FALSE)

Such a model was identified as optimal following the same steps as the analysis of the MVAD data in the Murphy et al. (2021) paper, albeit according to the weighted DBS criterion rather than the BIC. Print the details of the model to the screen:

print(bio)
#> Call:    MEDseq_fit(seqs = bio.seq, G = 10, modtype = "UUN", gating = ~age, 
#>     covars = bio.cov, noise.gate = FALSE)
#> 
#> Best Model: UUN, with 10 components and no weights (incl. gating covariates)
#> BIC = -53285.922 | ICL = -53414.91 | AIC = -47897.854
#> DBS = 0.537 | ASW = 0.388
#> Gating: ~age

As before, let’s look at the clusters uncovered by the model. This time, seriated="both" means to order the clusters themselves as well as the observations within clusters for visual clarity.

plot(bio, type="clusters", seriated="both")

Use the following code to examine the precision parameters. Note how we have a full \(16\times G\) matrix of precision parameters, one for each time point in each cluster. In this case there are many quite large precision parameter values which skew the colour scale. Indeed, some are even infinite! Infinite precision under UU or UUN models implies that all values for that time point are identical to the corresponding central sequence position estimate of the given cluster. By specifying quant.scale=TRUE, quantiles are used to construct non-linear break-points, thereby ensuring each colour represents an equal proportion of the data. We invoke seriated again for comparability.

plot(bio, type="precision", quant.scale=TRUE, seriated="clusters")

This time, rather than showing the weighted mean DBS values, let’s look at observation-specific (unweighted) average silhouette-width values. Note that this relies instead on the MAP partition rather than the soft cluster assignment probabilities.

plot(bio, type="aswvals")

As stated above, some plot types are adapted from TraMineR, specifically from its seqplot function. Let’s first look at a plot of the transversal Shannon entropies for the whole data set.

seqplot(bio.seq, type="Ht")

Now let’s use the plot function from MEDseq to examine the transversal entropies within each cluster (by default weighted by the cluster membership probabilities and sampling weights, if any). Here we can see for instance that subjects assigned to Cluster 9, corresponding to those individuals who left the parental home to marry relatively early and had a child on average just one year later, do indeed exhibit greater variability. Conversely, a postponement of the transition to adulthood is evident for subjects in Cluster 5. Note that the y-axis labels are suppressed here, for clarity.

plot(bio, type="Ht", ylab=NA)

Other plot types adapted from TraMineR can be produced using type="d" (state distribution plots), type="f" (state frequency plots), type="i" (selected sequence index plots), type="I" (whole set index plots), type="ms" (modal state plots; an alternative to type="central" above), and type="mt" (mean times plots). Each of these plots are shown on a per-cluster basis; by default, all account for the sampling weights (if any), via the weighted argument, and such plots are typically additionally weighted according to the soft cluster membership probabilities, though it is also possible to use the hard MAP partition instead, via modifying the soft argument. All plot types adapted from TraMineR additionally, by default, invoke the SPS argument, which causes each constituent panel to be labelled by the central sequence characterising the given cluster, in state-permanence-sequence (SPS) format. Finally, clustering uncertainties, the gating network, and model selection criteria can also be visualised.


References

Murphy, K., Murphy, T. B., Piccarreta, R., and Gormley, I. C. (2021). Clustering longitudinal life-course sequences using mixtures of exponential-distance models. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society), 184(4): 1414–1451. <doi:10.1111/rssa.12712>.

Gabadinho, A., Ritschard, G., Müller, N. S., and Studer, M. (2011). Analyzing and visualizing state sequences in R with TraMineR. Journal of Statistical Software, 40(4): 1–37.

McVicar, D. and Anyadike-Danes, M. (2002). Predicting successful and unsuccessful transitions from school to work by using sequence methods. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society), 165(2): 317–334.

Müller, N. S., Studer, M., and Ritschard, G. (2007). Classification de parcours de vie à l’aide de l’optimal matching. In XIVe Rencontre de la Société francophone de classification (SFC 2007), Paris, 5-7 septembre 2007, pp. 157–160.

Studer, M. (2018). Divisive property-based and fuzzy clustering for sequence analysis. In G. Ritschard and M. Studer (Eds.), Sequence Analysis and Related Approaches: Innovative Methods and Applications, pp. 223–239. Cham: Springer International Publishing.