syntax_to_i | R Documentation |
Converts lavaan syntax to positions in the model parameter table.
syntax_to_i(syntax, sem_out)
syntax |
A vector of parameters, defined as in lavaan. |
sem_out |
The SEM output. Currently |
syntax_to_i()
converts a vector of strings, in lavaan syntax, to the
positions in the parameter table of a lavaan::lavaan fit object.
Each element in the vector should have left hand side (lhs
),
operator (op
), and/or right hand side (rhs
). For example:all.x
"m ~ x"
denotes the coefficient of the path from x
to m
.
"y ~~ x"
denotes the covariance between y
and x
.
For user-defined parameters, only lhs
and op
will be
interpreted. For example:
To specify the user parameter ab
, both "ab := ..."
and "ab :="
will do, ...
the definition of ab
in the model. The
right-hand side will be ignored.
To denote a labelled parameters, such as "y ~ a*x"
, treat it as a
user-defined parameters and use :=
, e.g., "a :="
in this example.
For multiple-group models, if a parameter is specified as in a single-group models, then this parameter in all groups will be selected. For example:all.x
If a model has three groups, "y ~ x"
denotes this path parameter
in all three groups, and it will be converted to three row numbers.
To select the parameter in a specific group, "multiply" the right-hand-side variable by the group number. For example:
"y ~ 2*x"
denotes the path coefficient from x
to y
in Group 2.
To denote the parameters in more than one group, multiply the right-hand side variable by a vector of number. For example:all.x
"f1 =~ c(2,3)*x2"
denotes the factor loading of x2
on f1
in Group 2
and Group 3.
Elements that cannot be converted to a parameter in the parameter table will be ignored.
Currently supports lavaan::lavaan outputs only.
A numeric vector of positions (row numbers) in the parameter table.
library(lavaan)
data(simple_med)
mod <-
"
m ~ a*x
y ~ b*m
ab:= a*b
asq:= a^2
"
fit_med <- sem(mod, simple_med, fixed.x = FALSE)
p_table <- parameterTable(fit_med)
pars <- c("m ~ x",
"y ~ m",
"asq := 1",
"ab := 2")
out <- syntax_to_i(pars, fit_med)
out
p_table[out, ]
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.