gam | R Documentation |
gam
is used to fit generalized additive models, specified by giving a
symbolic description of the additive predictor and a description of the
error distribution. gam
uses the backfitting algorithm to
combine different smoothing or fitting methods. The methods currently
supported are local regression and smoothing splines.
gam(
formula,
family = gaussian,
data,
weights,
subset,
na.action,
start = NULL,
etastart,
mustart,
control = gam.control(...),
model = TRUE,
method = "glm.fit",
x = FALSE,
y = TRUE,
...
)
gam.fit(
x,
y,
smooth.frame,
weights = rep(1, nobs),
start = NULL,
etastart = NULL,
mustart = NULL,
offset = rep(0, nobs),
family = gaussian(),
control = gam.control()
)
formula |
a formula expression as for other regression models, of the
form |
family |
a description of the error distribution and link function to
be used in the model. This can be a character string naming a family
function, a family function or the result of a call to a family function.
(See |
data |
an optional data frame containing the variables in the model.
If not found in |
weights |
an optional vector of weights to be used in the fitting process. |
subset |
an optional vector specifying a subset of observations to be used in the fitting process. |
na.action |
a function which indicates what should happen when the data
contain |
start |
starting values for the parameters in the additive predictor. |
etastart |
starting values for the additive predictor. |
mustart |
starting values for the vector of means. |
control |
a list of parameters for controlling the fitting process.
See the documentation for |
model |
a logical value indicating whether model frame should be
included as a component of the returned value. Needed if |
method |
the method to be used in fitting the parametric part of the
model. The default method |
x , y |
For For |
... |
further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
smooth.frame |
for |
offset |
this can be used to specify an a priori known component to be included in the additive predictor during fitting. |
The gam model is fit using the local scoring algorithm, which iteratively
fits weighted additive models by backfitting. The backfitting algorithm is a
Gauss-Seidel method for fitting additive models, by iteratively smoothing
partial residuals. The algorithm separates the parametric from the
nonparametric part of the fit, and fits the parametric part using weighted
linear least squares within the backfitting algorithm. This version of
gam
remains faithful to the philosophy of GAM models as outlined in
the references below.
An object gam.slist
(currently set to c("lo","s","random")
)
lists the smoothers supported by gam
. Corresponding to each of these
is a smoothing function gam.lo
, gam.s
etc that take particular
arguments and produce particular output, custom built to serve as building
blocks in the backfitting algorithm. This allows users to add their own
smoothing methods. See the documentation for these methods for further
information. In addition, the object gam.wlist
(currently set to
c("s","lo")
) lists the smoothers for which efficient backfitters are
provided. These are invoked if all the smoothing methods are of one kind
(either all "lo"
or all "s"
).
gam
returns an object of class Gam
, which inherits
from both glm
and lm
.
Gam objects can be examined by print
, summary
, plot
,
and anova
. Components can be extracted using extractor functions
predict
, fitted
, residuals
, deviance
,
formula
, and family
. Can be modified using update
. It
has all the components of a glm
object, with a few more. This also
means it can be queried, summarized etc by methods for glm
and
lm
objects. Other generic functions that have methods for Gam
objects are step
and preplot
.
The following components must be included in a legitimate ‘Gam’ object. The
residuals, fitted values, coefficients and effects should be extracted by
the generic functions of the same name, rather than by the "$"
operator. The family
function returns the entire family object used
in the fitting, and deviance
can be used to extract the deviance of
the fit.
coefficients |
the coefficients of the parametric part of the
|
additive.predictors |
the additive fit,
given by the product of the model matrix and the coefficients, plus the
columns of the |
fitted.values |
the fitted
mean values, obtained by transforming the component
|
smooth , nl.df , nl.chisq , var |
these four characterize the nonparametric aspect of
the fit. |
smooth.frame |
This is essentially a subset of the
model frame corresponding to the smooth terms, and has the ingredients
needed for making predictions from a |
residuals |
the residuals from the final weighted additive fit; also known as residuals, these are typically not interpretable without rescaling by the weights. |
deviance |
up to a constant, minus twice the maximized log-likelihood. Similar to the residual sum of squares. Where sensible, the constant is chosen so that a saturated model has deviance zero. |
null.deviance |
The deviance for the null model, comparable with
|
iter |
the number of local scoring iterations used to compute the estimates. |
bf.iter |
a vector of
length |
family |
a three-element character vector giving the name of the family, the link, and the variance function; mainly for printing purposes. |
weights |
the working weights, that is the weights in the final iteration of the local scoring fit. |
prior.weights |
the case weights initially supplied. |
df.residual |
the residual degrees of freedom. |
df.null |
the residual degrees of freedom for the null model. |
The object will also have the components of a lm
object:
coefficients
, residuals
, fitted.values
, call
,
terms
, and some others involving the numerical fit. See
lm.object
.
Written by Trevor Hastie, following closely the design in the
"Generalized Additive Models" chapter (Hastie, 1992) in Chambers and Hastie
(1992), and the philosophy in Hastie and Tibshirani (1991). This version of
gam
is adapted from the S version to match the glm
and
lm
functions in R.
Note that this version of gam
is different from the function with the
same name in the R library mgcv
, which uses only smoothing splines
with a focus on automatic smoothing parameter selection via GCV. To avoid
issues with S3 method handling when both packages are loaded, the object
class in package "gam" is now "Gam".
Hastie, T. J. (1991) Generalized additive models. Chapter 7 of Statistical Models in S eds J. M. Chambers and T. J. Hastie, Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
Hastie, T. and Tibshirani, R. (1990) Generalized Additive Models. London: Chapman and Hall.
Venables, W. N. and Ripley, B. D. (2002) Modern Applied Statistics with S. New York: Springer.
glm
, family
, lm
.
data(kyphosis)
gam(Kyphosis ~ s(Age,4) + Number, family = binomial, data=kyphosis,
trace=TRUE)
data(airquality)
gam(Ozone^(1/3) ~ lo(Solar.R) + lo(Wind, Temp), data=airquality, na=na.gam.replace)
gam(Kyphosis ~ poly(Age,2) + s(Start), data=kyphosis, family=binomial, subset=Number>2)
data(gam.data)
Gam.object <- gam(y ~ s(x,6) + z,data=gam.data)
summary(Gam.object)
plot(Gam.object,se=TRUE)
data(gam.newdata)
predict(Gam.object,type="terms",newdata=gam.newdata)
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