simcausal (version 0.5.6)

set.DAG: Create and Lock DAG Object

Description

Check current DAG (created with node) for errors and consistency of its node distributions, set the observed data generating distribution. Attempts to simulates several observations to catch any errors in DAG definition. New nodes cannot be added after function set.DAG has been applied.

Usage

set.DAG(
  DAG,
  vecfun,
  latent.v,
  n.test = 10,
  verbose = getOption("simcausal.verbose")
)

Value

A DAG (S3) object, which is a list consisting of node object(s) sorted by their temporal order.

Arguments

DAG

Named list of node objects that together will form a DAG. Temporal ordering of nodes is either determined by the order in which the nodes were added to the DAG (using +node(...) interface) or with an optional "order" argument to node().

vecfun

A character vector with names of the vectorized user-defined node formula functions. See examples and the vignette for more information.

latent.v

The names of the unobserved (latent) DAG node names. These variables will be hidden from the observed simulated data and will be marked differently on the DAG plot.

n.test

Non-negative simulation sample size used for testing the consistency of the DAG object. A larger n.test may be useful when simulating a network of a fixed size (see ?network) or when testing DAG for rare-event errors. A smaller n.test can be better for performance (faster validation of the DAG). Set n.test=0 to completely skip the simulation test (use at your own risk, since calling sim() on such un-tested DAG may lead to uninterpretable errors). Note that when using n.test=0, the plotDAG function will not draw any child-parent relationships, since the formula parsing is not performed.

verbose

Set to TRUE to print messages on status and information to the console. Turn this off by default using options(simcausal.verbose=FALSE).

References

Sofrygin O, van der Laan MJ, Neugebauer R (2017). "simcausal R Package: Conducting Transparent and Reproducible Simulation Studies of Causal Effect Estimation with Complex Longitudinal Data." Journal of Statistical Software, 81(2), 1-47. doi: 10.18637/jss.v081.i02.

Examples

Run this code
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 1A: Define some Bernoulli nodes, survival outcome Y and put it together in a
# DAG object
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
W1node <- node(name = "W1", distr = "rbern",
	prob = plogis(-0.5), order = 1)
W2node <- node(name = "W2", distr = "rbern",
	prob = plogis(-0.5 + 0.5 * W1), order = 2)
Anode <- node(name = "A", distr = "rbern",
	prob = plogis(-0.5 - 0.3 * W1 - 0.3 * W2), order = 3)
Ynode <- node(name = "Y", distr = "rbern",
	prob = plogis(-0.1 + 1.2 * A + 0.3 * W1 + 0.3 * W2), order = 4)
D1Aset <- set.DAG(c(W1node,W2node,Anode,Ynode))

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 1B: Same as 1A using +node interface and no order argument
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D1B <- DAG.empty()
D1B <- D1B +
  node(name = "W1", distr = "rbern", prob = plogis(-0.5)) +
  node(name = "W2", distr = "rbern", prob = plogis(-0.5 + 0.5 * W1)) +
  node(name = "A", distr = "rbern", prob = plogis(-0.5 - 0.3 * W1 - 0.3 * W2)) +
  node(name = "Y", distr = "rbern", prob = plogis(-0.1 + 1.2 * A + 0.3 * W1 + 0.3 * W2))
D1Bset <- set.DAG(D1B)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 1C: Same as 1A and 1B using add.nodes interface and no order argument
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D1C <- DAG.empty()
D1C <- add.nodes(D1C, node(name = "W1", distr = "rbern", prob = plogis(-0.5)))
D1C <- add.nodes(D1C, node(name = "W2", distr = "rbern",
	prob = plogis(-0.5 + 0.5 * W1)))
D1C <- add.nodes(D1C, node(name = "A", distr = "rbern",
	prob = plogis(-0.5 - 0.3 * W1 - 0.3 * W2)))
D1C <- add.nodes(D1C, node(name = "Y", distr = "rbern",
	prob = plogis(-0.1 + 1.2 * A + 0.3 * W1 + 0.3 * W2)))
D1C <- set.DAG(D1C)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 1D: Add a uniformly distributed node and redefine outcome Y as categorical
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D_unif <- DAG.empty()
D_unif <- D_unif +
 node("W1", distr = "rbern", prob = plogis(-0.5)) +
 node("W2", distr = "rbern", prob = plogis(-0.5 + 0.5 * W1)) +
 node("W3", distr = "runif", min = plogis(-0.5 + 0.7 * W1 + 0.3 * W2), max = 10) +
 node("An", distr = "rbern", prob = plogis(-0.5 - 0.3 * W1 - 0.3 * W2 - 0.2 * sin(W3)))
# Categorical syntax 1 (probabilities as values):
D_cat_1 <- D_unif + node("Y", distr = "rcat.b1", probs = {0.3; 0.4})
D_cat_1 <- set.DAG(D_cat_1)
# Categorical syntax 2 (probabilities as formulas):
D_cat_2 <- D_unif +
node("Y", distr = "rcat.b1",
	probs={plogis(-0.1 + 1.2 * An + 0.3 * W1 + 0.3 * W2 + 0.2 * cos(W3));
			   plogis(-0.5 + 0.7 * W1)})
D_cat_2 <- set.DAG(D_cat_2)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 2A: Define Bernoulli nodes using R rbinom() function, defining prob argument
# for L2 as a function of node L1
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D +
node("L1", t = 0, distr = "rbinom", prob = 0.05, size = 1) +
node("L2", t = 0, distr = "rbinom", prob = ifelse(L1[0] == 1, 0.5, 0.1), size = 1)
Dset <- set.DAG(D)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 2B: Equivalent to 2A, passing argument size to rbinom inside a named list
# params
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D +
node("L1", t = 0, distr = "rbinom", prob = 0.05, params = list(size = 1)) +
node("L2", t = 0, distr = "rbinom",
	prob = ifelse(L1[0] == 1,0.5,0.1), params = list(size = 1))
Dset <- set.DAG(D)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 2C: Equivalent to 2A and 2B, define Bernoulli nodes using a wrapper "rbern"
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D +
node("L1", t = 0, distr = "rbern", prob = 0.05) +
node("L2", t = 0, distr = "rbern", prob = ifelse(L1[0] == 1, 0.5, 0.1))
Dset <- set.DAG(D)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 3: Define node with normal distribution using rnorm() R function
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D + node("L2", t = 0, distr = "rnorm", mean = 10, sd = 5)
Dset <- set.DAG(D)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 4: Define 34 Bernoulli nodes, or 2 Bernoulli nodes over 17 time points,
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
t_end <- 16
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D +
node("L2", t = 0:t_end, distr = "rbinom",
	prob = ifelse(t == t_end, 0.5, 0.1), size = 1) +
node("L1", t = 0:t_end, distr = "rbinom",
	prob = ifelse(L2[0] == 1, 0.5, 0.1), size = 1)
Dset <- set.DAG(D)
sim(Dset, n=10)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 5: Defining new distribution function 'rbern', defining and passing a custom
# vectorized node function 'customfun'
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
rbern <- function(n, prob) { # defining a bernoulli wrapper based on R rbinom function
  rbinom(n = n, prob = prob, size = 1)
}
customfun <- function(arg, lambda) {
  res <- ifelse(arg == 1, lambda, 0.1)
  res
}
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D +
node("W1", distr = "rbern", prob = 0.05) +
node("W2", distr = "rbern", prob = customfun(W1, 0.5)) +
node("W3", distr = "rbern", prob = ifelse(W1 == 1, 0.5, 0.1))
D1d <- set.DAG(D, vecfun = c("customfun"))
sim(D1d, n = 10, rndseed = 1)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 6: Defining latent variables I and U.Y (will be hidden from simulated data)
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D +
  node("I",
    distr = "rcat.b1",
    probs = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.2, 0.2, 0.1, 0.1, 0.1)) +
  node("W1",
    distr = "rnorm",
    mean = ifelse(I == 1, 0, ifelse(I == 2, 3, 10)) + 0.6 * I,
    sd = 1) +
  node("W2",
    distr = "runif",
    min = 0.025*I, max = 0.7*I) +
  node("W3",
    distr = "rbern",
    prob = plogis(-0.5 + 0.7*W1 + 0.3*W2 - 0.2*I)) +
  node("A",
    distr = "rbern",
    prob = plogis(+4.2 - 0.5*W1 + 0.2*W2/2 + 0.2*W3)) +
	node("U.Y", distr = "rnorm", mean = 0, sd = 1) +
  node("Y",
    distr = "rconst",
    const = -0.5 + 1.2*A + 0.1*W1 + 0.3*W2 + 0.2*W3 + 0.2*I + U.Y)
Dset1 <- set.DAG(D, latent.v = c("I", "U.Y"))
sim(Dset1, n = 10, rndseed = 1)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 7: Multivariate random variables
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
if (requireNamespace("mvtnorm", quietly = TRUE)) {
  D <- DAG.empty()
  # 2 dimensional normal (uncorrelated), using rmvnorm function from rmvnorm package:
  D <- D +
    node(c("X1","X2"), distr = "mvtnorm::rmvnorm",
      asis.params = list(mean = "c(0,1)")) +
  # Can define a degenerate (rconst) multivariate node:
    node(c("X1.copy", "X2.copy"), distr = "rconst", const = c(X1, X2))
  Dset1 <- set.DAG(D, verbose = TRUE)
  sim(Dset1, n = 10)
}

# On the other hand this syntax wont work,
# since simcausal will parse c(0,1) into a two column matrix:
if (FALSE) {
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D + node(c("X1","X2"), distr = "mvtnorm::rmvnorm", mean = c(0,1))
Dset1 <- set.DAG(D, verbose = TRUE)
}

if (requireNamespace("mvtnorm", quietly = TRUE)) {
  D <- DAG.empty()
  # Bivariate normal (correlation coef 0.75):
  D <- D +
    node(c("X1","X2"), distr = "mvtnorm::rmvnorm",
      asis.params = list(mean = "c(0,1)",
        sigma = "matrix(c(1,0.75,0.75,1), ncol=2)")) +
  # Can use any component of such multivariate nodes when defining new nodes:
    node("A", distr = "rconst", const = 1 - X1)
  Dset2 <- set.DAG(D, verbose = TRUE)
  sim(Dset2, n = 10)
}

# Time-varying multivar node (3 time-points, 2 dimensional normal)
# plus changing the mean over time, as as function of t:
if (requireNamespace("mvtnorm", quietly = TRUE)) {
  D <- DAG.empty()
  D <- D +
    node(c("X1", "X2"), t = 0:2, distr = "mvtnorm::rmvnorm",
      asis.params = list(
        mean = "c(0,1) + t",
        sigma = "matrix(rep(0.75,4), ncol=2)"))
  Dset5b <- set.DAG(D)
  sim(Dset5b, n = 10)
}

# Two ways to define the same bivariate uniform copula:
if (requireNamespace("copula", quietly = TRUE)) {
  D <- DAG.empty()
  D <- D +
  # with a warning since normalCopula() returns an object unknown to simcausal:
    node(c("X1","X2"), distr = "copula::rCopula",
      copula = eval(copula::normalCopula(0.75, dim = 2))) +
  # same, as above:
    node(c("X3","X4"), distr = "copula::rCopula",
      asis.params = list(copula = "copula::normalCopula(0.75, dim = 2)"))
  vecfun.add("qbinom")
  # Bivariate binomial derived from previous copula, with same correlation:
  D <- D +
    node(c("A.Bin1", "A.Bin2"), distr = "rconst",
      const = c(qbinom(X1, 10, 0.5), qbinom(X2, 15, 0.7)))
  Dset3 <- set.DAG(D)
  sim(Dset3, n = 10)
}

# Same as "A.Bin1" and "A.Bin2", but directly using rmvbin function in bindata package:
if (requireNamespace("bindata", quietly = TRUE)) {
  D <- DAG.empty()
  D <- D +
    node(c("B.Bin1","B.Bin2"), distr = "bindata::rmvbin",
      asis.params = list(
        margprob = "c(0.5, 0.5)",
        bincorr = "matrix(c(1,0.75,0.75,1), ncol=2)"))
  Dset4b <- set.DAG(D)
  sim(Dset4b, n = 10)
}

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# EXAMPLE 8: Combining simcausal non-standard evaluation with eval() forced evaluation
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
coefAi <- 1:10
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D +
  node("A", t = 1, distr = "rbern", prob = 0.7) +
  node("A", t = 2:10, distr = "rconst", const = eval(coefAi[t]) * A[t-1])
Dset8 <- set.DAG(D)
sim(Dset8, n = 10)

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# TWO equivalent ways of creating a multivariate node (combining nodes W1 and W2):
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D <- DAG.empty()
D <- D + node("W1", distr = "rbern", prob = 0.45)
D <- D + node("W2", distr = "rconst", const = 1)

# option 1:
D <- D + node(c("W1.copy1", "W2.copy1"), distr = "rconst", const = c(W1, W2))

# equivalent option 2:
create_mat <- function(W1, W2) cbind(W1, W2)
vecfun.add("create_mat")
D <- D + node(c("W1.copy2", "W2.copy2"), distr = "rconst", const = create_mat(W1, W2))

Dset <- set.DAG(D)
sim(Dset, n=10, rndseed=1)

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