Nested Sampling

Richèl J.C. Bilderbeek

2022-08-12

Introduction

This vignette demonstrates how to use the Nested Sampling approach to obtain the marginal likelihood and a Bayes factor, as described in [1]

Setup

library(babette)
library(testthat)

babette needs to have ‘BEAST2’ installed to work.

In the case ‘BEAST2’ is not installed, we’ll use this fabricated data:

out_jc69 <- create_test_bbt_run_output()
out_jc69$ns$marg_log_lik <- c(-1.1)
out_jc69$ns$marg_log_lik_sd <- c(0.1)
out_gtr <- out_jc69

Here we setup how to interpret the Bayes factor:

interpret_bayes_factor <- function(bayes_factor) {
  if (bayes_factor < 10^-2.0) {
    "decisive for GTR"
  } else if (bayes_factor < 10^-1.5) {
    "very strong for GTR"
  } else if (bayes_factor < 10^-1.0) {
    "strong for GTR"
  } else if (bayes_factor < 10^-0.5) {
    "substantial for GTR"
  } else if (bayes_factor < 10^0.0) {
    "barely worth mentioning for GTR"
  } else if (bayes_factor < 10^0.5) {
    "barely worth mentioning for JC69"
  } else if (bayes_factor < 10^1.0) {
    "substantial for JC69"
  } else if (bayes_factor < 10^1.5) {
    "strong for JC69"
  } else if (bayes_factor < 10^2.0) {
    "very strong for JC69"
  } else {
    "decisive for JC69"
  }
}
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(1 / 123.0), "decisive for GTR")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(1 / 85.0), "very strong for GTR")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(1 / 12.5), "strong for GTR")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(1 / 8.5), "substantial for GTR")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(1 / 1.5), "barely worth mentioning for GTR")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(0.99), "barely worth mentioning for GTR")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(1.01), "barely worth mentioning for JC69")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(1.5), "barely worth mentioning for JC69")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(8.5), "substantial for JC69")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(12.5), "strong for JC69")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(85.0), "very strong for JC69")
expect_equal(interpret_bayes_factor(123.0), "decisive for JC69")

Experiment

In this experiment, we will use the same DNA alignment to see which DNA nucleotide substitution model is the better fit.

Load the DNA alignment, a subset of taxa from [2]:

fasta_filename <- get_babette_path("anthus_aco_sub.fas")
image(ape::read.FASTA(fasta_filename))

Do the run

In this vignette, the MCMC run is set up to be short:

mcmc <- beautier::create_test_ns_mcmc()

For academic research, better use a longer MCMC chain (with an effective sample size above 200).

Here we do two ‘BEAST2’ runs, with both site models:

if (is_beast2_installed() && is_beast2_pkg_installed("NS")) {
  inference_model <- create_inference_model(
    site_model = beautier::create_jc69_site_model(),
    mcmc = mcmc
  )
  beast2_options <- create_beast2_options(
    beast2_path = beastier::get_default_beast2_bin_path()
  )
  out_jc69 <- bbt_run_from_model(
    fasta_filename = fasta_filename,
    inference_model = inference_model,
    beast2_options = beast2_options
  )
  bbt_delete_temp_files(
    inference_model = inference_model,
    beast2_options = beast2_options
  )
  inference_model <- create_inference_model(
    site_model = beautier::create_gtr_site_model(),
    mcmc = mcmc
  )
  beast2_options <- create_beast2_options(
    beast2_path = beastier::get_default_beast2_bin_path()
  )
  out_gtr <- bbt_run_from_model(
    fasta_filename = fasta_filename,
    inference_model = inference_model,
    beast2_options = beast2_options
  )
  bbt_delete_temp_files(
    inference_model = inference_model,
    beast2_options = beast2_options
  )
}
#> [1] TRUE

I will display the marginal likelihoods in a nice table:

if (is_beast2_installed() && is_beast2_pkg_installed("NS")) {
  df <- data.frame(
    model = c("JC69", "GTR"),
    mar_log_lik = c(out_jc69$ns$marg_log_lik, out_gtr$ns$marg_log_lik),
    mar_log_lik_sd = c(out_jc69$ns$marg_log_lik_sd, out_gtr$ns$marg_log_lik_sd)
  )
  knitr::kable(df)
}
model mar_log_lik mar_log_lik_sd
JC69 -142.5287 1.921124
GTR -146.1935 2.395289

The Bayes factor is ratio between the marginal (non-log) likelihoods. In this case, we use the simpler JC69 model as a focus:

if (is_beast2_installed() && is_beast2_pkg_installed("NS")) {
  bayes_factor <- exp(out_jc69$ns$marg_log_lik) / exp(out_gtr$ns$marg_log_lik)
  print(interpret_bayes_factor(bayes_factor))
}
#> [1] "very strong for JC69"

Whatever the support is, be sure to take the error of the marginal likelihood estimation into account.

References