Maximum Likelihood Estimation (Generic models)¶
This tutorial explains how to quickly implement new maximum likelihood models in statsmodels
. We give two examples:
Probit model for binary dependent variables
Negative binomial model for count data
The GenericLikelihoodModel
class eases the process by providing tools such as automatic numeric differentiation and a unified interface to scipy
optimization functions. Using statsmodels
, users can fit new MLE models simply by “plugging-in” a log-likelihood function.
Example 1: Probit model¶
[1]:
import numpy as np
from scipy import stats
import statsmodels.api as sm
from statsmodels.base.model import GenericLikelihoodModel
The Spector
dataset is distributed with statsmodels
. You can access a vector of values for the dependent variable (endog
) and a matrix of regressors (exog
) like this:
[2]:
data = sm.datasets.spector.load_pandas()
exog = data.exog
endog = data.endog
print(sm.datasets.spector.NOTE)
print(data.exog.head())
::
Number of Observations - 32
Number of Variables - 4
Variable name definitions::
Grade - binary variable indicating whether or not a student's grade
improved. 1 indicates an improvement.
TUCE - Test score on economics test
PSI - participation in program
GPA - Student's grade point average
GPA TUCE PSI
0 2.66 20.0 0.0
1 2.89 22.0 0.0
2 3.28 24.0 0.0
3 2.92 12.0 0.0
4 4.00 21.0 0.0
Them, we add a constant to the matrix of regressors:
[3]:
exog = sm.add_constant(exog, prepend=True)
To create your own Likelihood Model, you simply need to overwrite the loglike method.
[4]:
class MyProbit(GenericLikelihoodModel):
def loglike(self, params):
exog = self.exog
endog = self.endog
q = 2 * endog - 1
return stats.norm.logcdf(q*np.dot(exog, params)).sum()
Estimate the model and print a summary:
[5]:
sm_probit_manual = MyProbit(endog, exog).fit()
print(sm_probit_manual.summary())
Optimization terminated successfully.
Current function value: 0.400588
Iterations: 292
Function evaluations: 494
MyProbit Results
==============================================================================
Dep. Variable: GRADE Log-Likelihood: -12.819
Model: MyProbit AIC: 33.64
Method: Maximum Likelihood BIC: 39.50
Date: Wed, 02 Nov 2022
Time: 17:02:03
No. Observations: 32
Df Residuals: 28
Df Model: 3
==============================================================================
coef std err z P>|z| [0.025 0.975]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
const -7.4523 2.542 -2.931 0.003 -12.435 -2.469
GPA 1.6258 0.694 2.343 0.019 0.266 2.986
TUCE 0.0517 0.084 0.617 0.537 -0.113 0.216
PSI 1.4263 0.595 2.397 0.017 0.260 2.593
==============================================================================
Compare your Probit implementation to statsmodels
’ “canned” implementation:
[6]:
sm_probit_canned = sm.Probit(endog, exog).fit()
Optimization terminated successfully.
Current function value: 0.400588
Iterations 6
[7]:
print(sm_probit_canned.params)
print(sm_probit_manual.params)
const -7.452320
GPA 1.625810
TUCE 0.051729
PSI 1.426332
dtype: float64
[-7.45233176 1.62580888 0.05172971 1.42631954]
[8]:
print(sm_probit_canned.cov_params())
print(sm_probit_manual.cov_params())
const GPA TUCE PSI
const 6.464166 -1.169668 -0.101173 -0.594792
GPA -1.169668 0.481473 -0.018914 0.105439
TUCE -0.101173 -0.018914 0.007038 0.002472
PSI -0.594792 0.105439 0.002472 0.354070
[[ 6.46416769e+00 -1.16966616e+00 -1.01173181e-01 -5.94788997e-01]
[-1.16966616e+00 4.81472112e-01 -1.89134585e-02 1.05438225e-01]
[-1.01173181e-01 -1.89134585e-02 7.03758394e-03 2.47189243e-03]
[-5.94788997e-01 1.05438225e-01 2.47189243e-03 3.54069512e-01]]
Notice that the GenericMaximumLikelihood
class provides automatic differentiation, so we did not have to provide Hessian or Score functions in order to calculate the covariance estimates.
Example 2: Negative Binomial Regression for Count Data¶
Consider a negative binomial regression model for count data with log-likelihood (type NB-2) function expressed as:
with a matrix of regressors \(X\), a vector of coefficients \(\beta\), and the negative binomial heterogeneity parameter \(\alpha\).
Using the nbinom
distribution from scipy
, we can write this likelihood simply as:
[9]:
import numpy as np
from scipy.stats import nbinom
[10]:
def _ll_nb2(y, X, beta, alph):
mu = np.exp(np.dot(X, beta))
size = 1/alph
prob = size/(size+mu)
ll = nbinom.logpmf(y, size, prob)
return ll
New Model Class¶
We create a new model class which inherits from GenericLikelihoodModel
:
[11]:
from statsmodels.base.model import GenericLikelihoodModel
[12]:
class NBin(GenericLikelihoodModel):
def __init__(self, endog, exog, **kwds):
super(NBin, self).__init__(endog, exog, **kwds)
def nloglikeobs(self, params):
alph = params[-1]
beta = params[:-1]
ll = _ll_nb2(self.endog, self.exog, beta, alph)
return -ll
def fit(self, start_params=None, maxiter=10000, maxfun=5000, **kwds):
# we have one additional parameter and we need to add it for summary
self.exog_names.append('alpha')
if start_params == None:
# Reasonable starting values
start_params = np.append(np.zeros(self.exog.shape[1]), .5)
# intercept
start_params[-2] = np.log(self.endog.mean())
return super(NBin, self).fit(start_params=start_params,
maxiter=maxiter, maxfun=maxfun,
**kwds)
Two important things to notice:
nloglikeobs
: This function should return one evaluation of the negative log-likelihood function per observation in your dataset (i.e. rows of the endog/X matrix).start_params
: A one-dimensional array of starting values needs to be provided. The size of this array determines the number of parameters that will be used in optimization.
That’s it! You’re done!
Usage Example¶
The Medpar dataset is hosted in CSV format at the Rdatasets repository. We use the read_csv
function from the Pandas library to load the data in memory. We then print the first few columns:
[13]:
import statsmodels.api as sm
[14]:
medpar = sm.datasets.get_rdataset("medpar", "COUNT", cache=True).data
medpar.head()
[14]:
los | hmo | white | died | age80 | type | type1 | type2 | type3 | provnum | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 30001 |
1 | 9 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 30001 |
2 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 30001 |
3 | 9 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 30001 |
4 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 30001 |
The model we are interested in has a vector of non-negative integers as dependent variable (los
), and 5 regressors: Intercept
, type2
, type3
, hmo
, white
.
For estimation, we need to create two variables to hold our regressors and the outcome variable. These can be ndarrays or pandas objects.
[15]:
y = medpar.los
X = medpar[["type2", "type3", "hmo", "white"]].copy()
X["constant"] = 1
Then, we fit the model and extract some information:
[16]:
mod = NBin(y, X)
res = mod.fit()
Optimization terminated successfully.
Current function value: 3.209014
Iterations: 805
Function evaluations: 1238
/opt/hostedtoolcache/Python/3.10.8/x64/lib/python3.10/site-packages/statsmodels/base/model.py:2694: UserWarning: df_model + k_constant differs from nparams
warnings.warn("df_model + k_constant differs from nparams")
/opt/hostedtoolcache/Python/3.10.8/x64/lib/python3.10/site-packages/statsmodels/base/model.py:2696: UserWarning: df_resid differs from nobs - nparams
warnings.warn("df_resid differs from nobs - nparams")
Extract parameter estimates, standard errors, p-values, AIC, etc.:
[17]:
print('Parameters: ', res.params)
print('Standard errors: ', res.bse)
print('P-values: ', res.pvalues)
print('AIC: ', res.aic)
Parameters: [ 0.2212642 0.70613942 -0.06798155 -0.12903932 2.31026565 0.44575147]
Standard errors: [0.05059259 0.07613047 0.05326095 0.06854137 0.06794697 0.01981542]
P-values: [1.22298069e-005 1.76979353e-020 2.01818957e-001 5.97480106e-002
2.15240570e-253 4.62688812e-112]
AIC: 9604.95320583016
As usual, you can obtain a full list of available information by typing dir(res)
. We can also look at the summary of the estimation results.
[18]:
print(res.summary())
NBin Results
==============================================================================
Dep. Variable: los Log-Likelihood: -4797.5
Model: NBin AIC: 9605.
Method: Maximum Likelihood BIC: 9632.
Date: Wed, 02 Nov 2022
Time: 17:02:03
No. Observations: 1495
Df Residuals: 1490
Df Model: 4
==============================================================================
coef std err z P>|z| [0.025 0.975]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
type2 0.2213 0.051 4.373 0.000 0.122 0.320
type3 0.7061 0.076 9.275 0.000 0.557 0.855
hmo -0.0680 0.053 -1.276 0.202 -0.172 0.036
white -0.1290 0.069 -1.883 0.060 -0.263 0.005
constant 2.3103 0.068 34.001 0.000 2.177 2.443
alpha 0.4458 0.020 22.495 0.000 0.407 0.485
==============================================================================
Testing¶
We can check the results by using the statsmodels implementation of the Negative Binomial model, which uses the analytic score function and Hessian.
[19]:
res_nbin = sm.NegativeBinomial(y, X).fit(disp=0)
print(res_nbin.summary())
NegativeBinomial Regression Results
==============================================================================
Dep. Variable: los No. Observations: 1495
Model: NegativeBinomial Df Residuals: 1490
Method: MLE Df Model: 4
Date: Wed, 02 Nov 2022 Pseudo R-squ.: 0.01215
Time: 17:02:04 Log-Likelihood: -4797.5
converged: True LL-Null: -4856.5
Covariance Type: nonrobust LLR p-value: 1.404e-24
==============================================================================
coef std err z P>|z| [0.025 0.975]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
type2 0.2212 0.051 4.373 0.000 0.122 0.320
type3 0.7062 0.076 9.276 0.000 0.557 0.855
hmo -0.0680 0.053 -1.276 0.202 -0.172 0.036
white -0.1291 0.069 -1.883 0.060 -0.263 0.005
constant 2.3103 0.068 34.001 0.000 2.177 2.443
alpha 0.4457 0.020 22.495 0.000 0.407 0.485
==============================================================================
[20]:
print(res_nbin.params)
type2 0.221218
type3 0.706173
hmo -0.067987
white -0.129053
constant 2.310279
alpha 0.445748
dtype: float64
[21]:
print(res_nbin.bse)
type2 0.050592
type3 0.076131
hmo 0.053261
white 0.068541
constant 0.067947
alpha 0.019815
dtype: float64
Or we could compare them to results obtained using the MASS implementation for R:
url = 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/vincentarelbundock/Rdatasets/csv/COUNT/medpar.csv'
medpar = read.csv(url)
f = los~factor(type)+hmo+white
library(MASS)
mod = glm.nb(f, medpar)
coef(summary(mod))
Estimate Std. Error z value Pr(>|z|)
(Intercept) 2.31027893 0.06744676 34.253370 3.885556e-257
factor(type)2 0.22124898 0.05045746 4.384861 1.160597e-05
factor(type)3 0.70615882 0.07599849 9.291748 1.517751e-20
hmo -0.06795522 0.05321375 -1.277024 2.015939e-01
white -0.12906544 0.06836272 -1.887951 5.903257e-02
Numerical precision¶
The statsmodels
generic MLE and R
parameter estimates agree up to the fourth decimal. The standard errors, however, agree only up to the second decimal. This discrepancy is the result of imprecision in our Hessian numerical estimates. In the current context, the difference between MASS
and statsmodels
standard error estimates is substantively irrelevant, but it highlights the fact that users who need very precise estimates may not always want to rely on default settings when
using numerical derivatives. In such cases, it is better to use analytical derivatives with the LikelihoodModel
class.