Mathematical description of lgpr models

Juho Timonen

11th August 2021

library(lgpr)
#> Attached lgpr 1.1.5, using rstan 2.21.2. Type ?lgpr to get started.

This vignette describes mathematically the statistical models of lgpr. We study the different arguments of the lgp() or create_model() modeling functions and what parts of the probabilistic model they customize. This is a concise description, and the original publication (Timonen et al. (2021)) has more information about the actual motivation for the used modeling approaches, and the tutorials have code examples.

1. Bayesian GP regression

The models in lgpr are models for the conditional distribution \[ p(y \mid f(\textbf{x}), \theta_{\text{obs}}), \] of response variable \(y\) given covariates \(\textbf{x}\), where \(\theta_{\text{obs}}\) is a possible parameter of the observation model (like the magnitude of observation noise). The function \(f\) has a Gaussian Process (GP) prior \[ f \sim \mathcal{GP}(0, k\left(\textbf{x}, \textbf{x}' \mid \theta_{\text{GP}})\right), \]

with covariance (kernel) function \(k(\textbf{x}, \textbf{x}' \mid \theta_{\text{GP}})\) that has hyperparameters \(\theta_{\text{GP}}\). In addition to the GP prior for \(f\), there is a parameter prior distribution \(p(\theta)\) for \(\theta = \left\{ \theta_{\text{GP}}, \theta_{\text{obs}} \right\}\). Given \(N\) observations \(\mathcal{D} = \{y_n, \textbf{x}_n\}_{n=1}^N\) the probabilistic models in lgpr have the form \[\begin{align} p\left(\theta, \textbf{f}\right) &= p\left(\textbf{f} \mid \theta\right) \cdot p(\theta) & \text{(prior)} \\ p(\textbf{y} \mid \textbf{f}, \theta) &= \prod_{n=1}^N p(y_n \mid f(\textbf{x}_n), \theta_{\text{obs}}) & \text{(likelihood)}, \end{align}\] where \(\textbf{f} = \left[ f(\textbf{x}_1), \ldots, f(\textbf{x}_N) \right]^{\top}\), \(\textbf{y} = \left[y_1, \ldots, y_N\right]^{\top}\). The parameter prior density \(p(\theta)\) is the product of the prior densities of each parameter, and the GP prior means that the prior for \(\textbf{f}\) is the multivariate normal \[\begin{equation} p\left(\textbf{f} \mid \theta\right) = \mathcal{N}\left(\textbf{f} \mid \textbf{0}, \textbf{K} \right), \end{equation}\] where the \(N \times N\) matrix \(\textbf{K}\) has entries \(\{ \textbf{K} \}_{in} = k(\textbf{x}_i, \textbf{x}_n \mid \theta_{\text{GP}})\).

2. Connection between lgpr arguments and different model parts

The below table shows which parts of the above mathematical description are affected by which arguments to lgp() or create_model(). You can read more about them in the documentation of said functions.

Argument Affected model part
formula \(k(\textbf{x}, \textbf{x}')\)
data \(\mathcal{D}\)
likelihood \(p(y_n \mid f(\textbf{x}_n), \theta_{\text{obs}})\)
prior \(p(\theta)\)
c_hat \(p(y_n \mid f(\textbf{x}_n), \theta_{\text{obs}})\)
num_trials \(\mathcal{D}\)
options \(k(\textbf{x}, \textbf{x}')\)

3. The likelihood argument and observation models

The terms observation model and likelihood are used to refer to the same formula, i.e. \(p(y_n \mid f(\textbf{x}_n), \theta_{\text{obs}})\), though the former means it as a function of \(\textbf{y}\) and the latter as a function of \(\theta\). There are currently five observation models available and they all involve an inverse link function transformation \[ h_n = g^{-1}\left( f(\textbf{x}_n)+ \hat{c}_n \right) \] where \(g\) is determined by the likelihood argument and \(\hat{c}_n\) by the c_hat argument. The below table shows what the link function is in different cases, and what parameter the corresponding observation model has.

likelihood Link function \(g\) Parameter \(\theta_{\text{obs}}\)
gaussian identity \(\sigma\)
poisson logarithm -
nb logarithm \(\phi\)
binomial logit -
bb logit \(\gamma\)

When using the Gaussian observation model with sample_f=TRUE the continuous response \(y\) is normalized to unit variance and zero mean, and \(\hat{c}_n = 0\) for all \(n\) is set. In this case the c_hat argument has no effect. With sample_f = TRUE, sensible defaults are used. See the documentation of the c_hat argument of lgp() for exact details and the 5. Model inference section for information about the sample_f argument.

4. The formula argument and kernel functions

Additive GP regression

The GP models of lgpr are additive, so that \[\begin{equation} k(\textbf{x}, \textbf{x}' \mid \theta_{\text{GP}}) = \sum_{j=1}^J \alpha_j^2 k_j(\textbf{x}, \textbf{x}' \mid \theta_{\text{GP}}). \end{equation}\] This is equivalent to saying that we have \(f = f^{(1)} + \ldots + f^{(J)}\) modeled so that each component \(j = 1, \ldots, J\) has a GP prior \[\begin{equation} f^{(j)} \sim \mathcal{GP}\left(0, \alpha_j^2 k_j(\textbf{x}, \textbf{x}' \mid \theta_{\text{GP}}) \right), \end{equation}\] independently from other components.

Formulas and terms

The number of components \(J\) is equal to the number of terms in your formula. Terms are separated by a plus sign. An example formula with three terms could be

y ~ gp(age) + gp(age)*zs(id) + categ(group)

where y, age, id and group have to be columns of data. Each formula term defines what the corresponding kernel \(k_j\) will be like, and what covariates and parameters it depends on. Each term adds one \(\alpha\) parameter in the GP parameter vector \(\theta_{\text{GP}}\), and possible additional parameters depending on the term.

Expressions and kernels

Each term is a product (separated by *) of what we call expressions. At this point we are not using standard R formula terminology because terms in lgpr are parsed in a custom way. Each expression corresponds to one kernel, and the kernel \(k_j\) is the product of all the kernels in term \(j\). Inside parentheses, each expression must contain the name of one data variable, as in gp(age). This determines what variable the kernel depends on. Most of the allowed expressions, their corresponding kernels, and allowed variable types are listed below.

Expression Corresponding kernel Allowed variable type
gp() Exponentiated quadratic (EQ) Continuous
zs() Zero-sum (ZS) Categorical
categ() Categorical (CAT) Categorical
gp_ns() Nonstationary (NS) Continuous
gp_vm() Variance-mask (VM) Continuous

Continuous covariates should be represented in data as numeric and categorical covariates as factors. Equations for different kernels are listed here briefly. See Timonen et al. (2021) for more motivation and details about what kind of effects they can model alone and in combinations.

Masking missing covariates

All kernels that work with continuous covariates are actually also multiplied by a binary mask (BIN) kernel \(k_{\text{BIN}}(x,x')\) which returns \(0\) if either \(x\) or \(x'\) is missing and \(1\) if they are both available. Missing data should be encoded as NA or NaN in data.

Heterogeneous effects and covariate uncertainty

There are also the het() and unc() expressions. They cannot be alone in a term but have to be multiplied by EQ, NS or VM. They are not actually kernels alone but edit the covariate or kernel of their term and add additional parameters. See the tutorials for example use cases and Timonen et al. (2021) for their mathematical definition.

5. Model inference

After the model is defined, lgpr uses the MCMC methods of Stan to obtain draws from the joint posterior \(p\left(\theta, \textbf{f} \mid \mathcal{D}\right)\) or the marginal posterior of parameters, i.e.  \(p\left(\theta \mid \mathcal{D}\right)\). Which one of these is done is determined by the sample_f argument of lgp() or create_model().

With sample_f = TRUE

This option is always possible but not recommended with likelihood = "gaussian". The joint posterior that is sampled from is \[\begin{equation} p\left(\theta, \textbf{f} \mid \mathcal{D}\right) \propto p\left(\theta, \textbf{f}\right) \cdot p(\textbf{y} \mid \textbf{f}, \theta) \\ \end{equation}\] and sampling requires evaluating the right-hand side and its gradient thousands of times.

With sample_f = FALSE

This option is only possible (and is automatically selected by default) if likelihood = "gaussian". This is because \[\begin{equation} p\left(\textbf{y} \mid \theta\right) = \mathcal{N}\left(\textbf{y} \mid \textbf{0}, \textbf{K} + \sigma^2 \textbf{I} \right) \end{equation}\] is analytically available only in this case. The distribution that is sampled from is \[\begin{equation} p\left(\theta \mid \mathcal{D}\right) \propto p\left(\theta\right) \cdot p(\textbf{y} \mid \theta) \\ \end{equation}\] and now sampling requires repeatedly evaluating the right-hand side of this equation and its gradient. This analytical marginalization reduces the MCMC dimension by \(N\) and likely improves sampling efficiency. The conditional posterior \(p\left(\textbf{f} \mid \theta, \mathcal{D}\right)\) also has an analytical form for a fixed \(\theta\), so draws from the marginal posterior \(p\left(\textbf{f} \mid \mathcal{D}\right)\) could be obtained by first drawing \(\theta\) and then \(\textbf{f}\), according to the process \[\begin{align} \theta &\sim p\left(\theta \mid \mathcal{D}\right) \\ \textbf{f} & \sim p\left(\textbf{f} \mid \theta, \mathcal{D}\right). \end{align}\] By combining these, we again have draws from the joint posterior \(p\left(\theta, \textbf{f} \mid \mathcal{D}\right)\), but likely with less computational effort.

References

Timonen, Juho, Henrik Mannerström, Aki Vehtari, and Harri Lähdesmäki. 2021. “Lgpr: An Interpretable Non-Parametric Method for Inferring Covariate Effects from Longitudinal Data.” Bioinformatics 37 (13): 1860–67. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btab021.