[R] predict.lm(...,type="terms") question

David Winsemius dwinsemius at comcast.net
Sun Sep 2 03:38:25 CEST 2012


On Sep 1, 2012, at 4:33 AM, Rui Barradas wrote:

> Hello,
>
> John is right, there seems to be an error in predict.lm. It can be  
> made to work but if the model is fitted with lm(...,data) then it  
> messes things up. Apparently predict.lm disregards the data argument  
> and uses whatever it finds in the global environment.

That is not how I would describe the "problem". See below.

> In the examples below, after running David's x <- rnorm(15) example  
> (case 1 is a simplified version of it), case 3 shows the bug, there  
> are 15 predictions for 4 new values. Then we must backtrack to case  
> 2 and also consider it a bug.
>
> Examples:
>
> # ------------------- 1
> # David's example simplified, only one regressor.
> # And with set.seed()
>
> set.seed(4409)
> x <- rnorm(15)
> y <- x + rnorm(15)
>
> fit <- lm(y ~ x)
> new <- data.frame(y = seq(-3.5, 3.5, 0.5))
> predict(fit, newdata = new, type = "terms")
> # no error is thrown.
>
> # ------------------- 2
> # Original post, 'area' and 'concn' are now 'y' and 'x'
> # Remove 'x' and 'y' from the global environment.
> rm(x, y)
> dat <- data.frame(
>    y = c(4875, 8172, 18065, 34555),
>    x = c(25, 50, 125, 250))
> new <- data.frame(y = c(8172, 10220, 11570, 24150))
>
> model <- lm(y ~ x, data = dat)
> predict(model, newdata = new, type = "terms")
> # Error in eval(expr, envir, enclos) : object 'x' not found

Why should predict not complain when it is offered a newdata argument  
that does no contain a vector of values for "x"? The whole point of  
the terms method of prediction is to offer estimates for specific  
values of items on the RHS of the formula. The OP seems to have  
trouble understanding that point. Putting in a vector with the name of  
the LHS item makes no sense to me. I certainly cannot see that any  
particular behavior for this pathological input is described for  
predict.lm in its help page, but throwing an error seems perfectly  
reasonable to me.

-- 
David.

>
> # ------------------- 3
> # Original post.
> # Do NOT remove 'x' and 'y' from the global environment.
> set.seed(4409)
> x <- rnorm(15)
> y <- x + rnorm(15)
>
> dat <- data.frame(
>    y = c(4875, 8172, 18065, 34555),
>    x = c(25, 50, 125, 250))
> new <- data.frame(y = c(8172, 10220, 11570, 24150))
>
> model <- lm(y ~ x, data = dat)
> predict(model, newdata = new, type = "terms")
> # Warning message:
> # 'newdata' had 4 rows but variable(s) found have 15 rows
>
> #------------------- 4
> # Original post, no data argument to lm.
>
> y <- c(4875, 8172, 18065, 34555)
> x <- c(25, 50, 125, 250)
> new <- data.frame(y = c(8172, 10220, 11570, 24150))
>
> model <- lm(y ~ x)
> predict(model, newdata = new, type = "terms")
> # no warning or error is thrown, predictions seem allright
>
> I haven't looked at the code for predict.lm, and really don't know  
> where the error is.
> Bug report?
>
> Rui Barradas
>
> Em 01-09-2012 06:40, David Winsemius escreveu:
>>
>> On Aug 31, 2012, at 3:48 PM, jjthaden wrote:
>>
>>> On Aug 30, 2012, at 4:35 PM,  David Windemius wrote:
>>>
>>>>> David said my newdata data frame 'new' must have a column named  
>>>>> 'area'.
>>>>> It did. Nonetheless predict.lm throws an error with type =  
>>>>> "terms" and
>>>>> newdata = new. I see nothing in the predict.lm documentation that
>>>>> bars this usage. Is there a bug?
>>>>
>>>> After correcting the error in your definition of the 'area'  
>>>> vector I
>>>> get no error from predict.lm().
>>>
>>>> David.
>>>
>>> What error did you correct?
>>
>> This was the code you offered:
>>
>> #Ludbrook's data set S1 (except renaming
>> #his 'x' as 'concn' and his 'y' as 'area')
>> S1 <- data.frame(
>>    area = c(2.4,2.6,6.0,6.5,8.9,),
>>    concn = c(1.1,4,5,8.5,8.5))
>>
>> There's an extra comma in the "area" vector.
>>
>>>
>>> The newdata data frames in my examples have been pretty simple,  
>>> and have
>>> defined the 'area' vector simply, for instance,
>>> new <- data.frame(area = c(8172, 10220, 11570, 24150))
>>> new
>>> #        area
>>> #    1  8172
>>> #    2 10220
>>> #    3 11570
>>> #    4 24150
>>>
>>> Is something wrong with this?
>>
>> I don't really know  ....  this appears to be a different problem  
>> than you posed earlier. If you would learn to post with context, we  
>> might not be in the position of trying to read your mind.
>>
>>> Were you able to make predict.lm work with newdata = new and type  
>>> = "terms"?
>>
>> Yes. I have no trouble doing so.
>>
>> >  x <- rnorm(15); x2=rnorm(15)
>> >  y <- x + x2 +rnorm(15)
>> >  fit <- lm(y ~ x+x2)
>> >  new <- data.frame(x2 = seq(-3.5, 3.5, 0.5)  )
>> >  predict(fit, newdata=new,type="terms", terms="x2")
>>           x2
>> 1  -4.9230035
>> 2  -4.1850588
>> 3  -3.4471141
>> 4  -2.7091694
>> 5  -1.9712248
>> 6  -1.2332801
>> 7  -0.4953354
>> 8   0.2426093
>> 9   0.9805539
>> 10  1.7184986
>> 11  2.4564433
>> 12  3.1943880
>> 13  3.9323326
>> 14  4.6702773
>> 15  5.4082220
>> attr(,"constant")
>> [1] 0.4501911
>>
>>
>>>
>>> -John
>>>
>>
>>> Sent from the (NOT) R help mailing list (and NOT) archive at  
>>> Nabble.com.
>>
>> Hmmm ... Nabble ... definitely part of the problem.
>>
>

David Winsemius, MD
Alameda, CA, USA




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