[R] gnls( ) question

Paul, David A paulda at BATTELLE.ORG
Wed Sep 17 17:02:21 CEST 2003


Thank you!  Using "control = gnlsControl(...)" has made
a difference in several of my model calls [no other change
needed, except that gnlsControl(...) does not accept
pnlsTol or pnlsMaxIter options].  For several other model
calls, fiddling with the intial parameter estimates helped.

Best,
  david paul


-----Original Message-----
From: Jesus Frias [mailto:Jesus.Frias at dit.ie] 
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2003 10:35 AM
To: Paul, David A; R help
Subject: RE: [R] gnls( ) question


Hi Paul,
	The message has to do with the gauss-newton algorithm and it
announces that there will be a failure in convergence. An old version of the
algorithm is in Bates and Watts "Nonlinear regression and its applications"
(one of the appendix).

	When I get that kind of messages, it can mean two things:

1.-The initial estimates that I have provided are not good enough. You can
try to get some good estimates using optim().

2.-The model that I am trying to fit is not appropriate to describe the
data. No straight-forward solution goes for this.

	If you want to fiddle around with the parameters of gnls and try to
see if you reach convergence from your model and starting points, have a
look at the gnls page and the gnlsControl help pages. I think you need to
specify inside your gnls() call

control =gnlsControl(maxIter = 1000, pnlsMaxIter = 200, msMaxIter = 1000,
tolerance = 1e-06, pnlsTol = 1e-04, msTol = 1e-07, minScale = 1e-10,
returnObject = TRUE)


best regards,

IOsu

P.S.: That gnls function is a superb addition to the nonlinear regression
facilities R had before!.

--------------------------------------------------------------
Jesús María Frías Celayeta
School of Food Sci. and Env. Health.
Faculty of Tourism and Food
Dublin Institute of Technology
Cathal Brugha St., Dublin 1. Ireland
Phone: +353 1 4024459 Fax: +353 1 4024495
http://www.dit.ie/DIT/tourismfood/science/staff/frias.html
--------------------------------------------------------------

> -----Original Message-----
> From: r-help-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch 
> [mailto:r-help-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch]On Behalf Of Paul, David A
> Sent: 16 September 2003 16:19
> To: 'r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch'
> Subject: [R] gnls( ) question
>
>
> Last week (Wed 9/10/2003, "regression questions") I posted
> a question regarding the use of gnls( ) and its dissimilarity to the 
> syntax that nls( ) will accept.  No one replied, so I partly answered 
> my own question by constructing indicator variables for use in gnls( 
> ).  The code I used to construct the indicators is at the end of this 
> email.
>
> I do have a nagging, unanswered question:
>
> What exactly does "Warning message: Step halving factor reduced below 
> minimum in NLS step in: gnls(model = y ~ 5 + ...)" mean?  I have tried 
> to address this by specifying "control = list(maxIter = 1000, 
> pnlsMaxIter = 200, msMaxIter = 1000, tolerance = 1e-06, pnlsTol = 
> 1e-04, msTol = 1e-07, minScale = 1e-10, returnObject = TRUE)" in my 
> model calls, but this does not entirely eliminate the problem (I am 
> running gnls( ) 24 separate times on separate data sets).
>
>
> Much thanks in advance,
>   david paul
>
>
>
> #Constructing Indicator Variables
> indicator <- paste( "foo$X <- sapply(foo$subject.id,
> 	FUN = function(x) if(x == X) 1 else 0)" )
> indicator <- parse( text = indicator )[[1]]
> subjectID.foo <- as.factor(as.character(unique(foo$animal.id)))
>
> for(i in subjectID.foo)
> {
> 	INDICATOR <-  do.call("substitute",
> 			list(indicator, list(i = i,
> 				X = as.character(subjectID.foo[i]))))
> 	eval(INDICATOR)
> }
>
> foo$Overall.Effect <- rep(1,length(foo$dose.group))
>
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