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Group Iterative Multiple Model Estimation (GIMME)

The GIMME algorithm is a continually maintained R package, gimme.

For up-to-date tutorials for both new and old options, check out our online gimme tutorials and CRAN documentation .

Developers or those who fixed a bug are invited to submit changes here at the GitHub repository.

The Basics

  • GIMME can be used to estimate the unified SEM (uSEM; Kim et al., 2007; Gates et al., 2010).

  • Missing data is not a problem.

  • Heterogeneous data is not a problem:

    • No "group" or "common" structure will be forced unless it truly describes the majority.

    • Individual-level nuances will surface after a group or common structure is fit (provided one exists).

    • If desired, subgroups of individuals with similar patterns of effects will be generated to aid the researcher in finding similar patterns among the varied individual models.

  • Works well with as little as 3 or as many as 20 variables.

  • Can be freely downloaded by installing the package "gimme" in R.

  • Requires at least T = 30 time points per person / per variable, with T = 60 and above recommended.

Running GIMME

1. Create two new folders (i.e., directories)

  • Create a source folder for your time series. This can be anywhere that you have permission to read and write.

  • Nothing can be in the source folder other than the time series data.

  • Create an output folder for your results. This must be different from the above folder.

2. Extract the time series for your variables

  • Have each variable be a column, with the rows being the observation (e.g., scan in fMRI or a day in daily diary studies).

  • Substitute NA for missing values.

  • Have a separate file for each individual/session.

  • Put each file in the source folder you created in step 1. Do not put anything else in this folder.

  • Files must be either comma, space, or tab delimited.

3. Installing gimme with R

  • Open an R script and enter into the console: install.packages("gimme")

  • Once gimme has been installed, you will need to load the package by entering: library(gimme)

4. Running gimme

The gimme (or equivalently, gimmeSEM) function requires that you input:

  • The path to the directory containing your data

  • How data are separated (e.g., comma-separated values)

  • Whether the data files contain a header row

All other fields are optional and will go to defaults if no user input is provided. If no output directory is indicated, all information is stored as R objects (see tutorial linked above for details).

fit <- gimme(         # can use "gimme" or "gimmeSEM"
  data = '',          # source directory where your data are 
  out = '',           # output directory where you'd like your output to go
  sep = "",           # how data are separated. "" for space; "," for comma, "\t" for tab-delimited
  header = ,          # TRUE or FALSE, is there a header
  ar = TRUE,          # TRUE (default) or FALSE, start with autoregressive paths open
  plot = TRUE,        # TRUE (default) or FALSE, generate plots
  subgroup = FALSE,   # TRUE or FALSE (default), cluster individuals based on similarities in effects
  paths = NULL,       # option to list paths that will be group-level (semi-confirmatory)
  groupcutoff = .75,  # the proportion that is considered the majority at the group level
  subcutoff = .5      # the proportion that is considered the majority at the subgroup level
)        

While gimme is running you will see information iterate in the command window. The algorithm will tell you when it is finished.

Output

  • The output directory will contain:

    • indivPathEstimates: Contains estimate, standard error, p-value, and z-value for each path and each individual

    • summaryFit: Contains model fit information for individual-level models. If subgroups are requested, this file also indicates the subgroup membership for each individual.

    • summaryPathCountMatrix: Contains counts of total number of paths, both contemporaneous and lagged, estimated for the sample. The row variable is the outcome and the column variable is the predictor variable.

    • summaryPathCounts: Contains summary count information for paths identified at the group-, subgroup (if subgroup = TRUE), and individual-level.

    • summaryPathPlots: Produced if plot = TRUE. Contains figure with group, subgroup (if subgroup = TRUE), and individual-level paths for the sample. Black paths are group-level, green paths are subgroup-level, and grey paths are individual-level, where the thickness of the line represents the count.

  • The subgroup output directory (if subgroup = TRUE) will contain:

    • subgroupkPathCounts: Contains counts of relations among lagged and contemporaneous variables for the kth subgroup

    • subgroupkPlot: Contains plot of group, subgroup, and individual level paths for the kth subgroup. Black represents group-level paths, grey represents individual-level paths, and green represents subgroup-level paths.

    • Note: if a subgroup of size n = 1 is discovered, subgroup-level output is not produced. Subgroups of size one can be considered outlier cases

  • In individual output directory (where id represents the original file name for each individual):

    • idBetas: Contains individual-level estimates of each path for each individual.

    • idStdErrors: Contains individual-level standard errors for each path for each individual.

    • idPlot: Contains individual-level plots. Red paths represent positive weights and blue paths represent negative weights.

FAQ

How many time points do I need? This is a difficult question since it will be related to the number of variables you are using. Rules of thumb for any analysis can generally be used: the more the better! Having at least 100 time points is recommended, but adequate results have been obtained in simulation studies with only T = 60.

Do all individuals have to have the same number of observations (T)? No.

How many people do I need in my sample? For regular gimme, reliable results are obtained with as few as 10 participants. Remember that in this context, power to detect effects is determined by the number of time points rather than the number of individuals. Still, having at least 10 individuals helps gimme to detect signal from noise by looking for effects that consistently occur.

What do I do if I obtain an error? Do some initial trouble-shooting. 1. Ensure that all of your individuals have the same number of variables (columns) in their data sets. 2. Ensure that all variables have variability (i.e., are not constant). gimme will let you know if this is the case. 3. Ensure your path directories are correct. 4. Ensure that the columns are variables and the rows contain the observations across time. 5. If all of this is correct, please email the error you received, code used to run gimme, and the data (we promise not to use it or share it) to: gimme@unc.edu.

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Install

install.packages('gimme')

Monthly Downloads

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Version

0.9.3

License

GPL-2

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Maintainer

KM Gates

Last Published

November 13th, 2025

Functions in gimme (0.9.3)

return.mis

Returns MIs from lavaan fit object.
residuals.gimme

GIMME Residuals.
solution.tree

Solution trees for multiple solutions gimme.
simulateVAR

Simulate data from Vector AutoRegression (VAR) models.
setupMultVarNames

Get names for bilinear effects.
setupPrelimDataChecks

Do some preliminary checks on the data.
return.zs

Returns z values from lavaan fit object.
sFIR

Estimate response function for each person using smoothed Finite Impulse Response.
lowest.z

Identifies lowest z value from list of z values.
subgroupStage

Create structure of group search solutions.
summaryPathsCounts

Create summary matrix of path counts and subgroup plots
setupPrepPaths

Allows user to open and close certain paths.
setupBaseSyntax

Set up base syntax file.
setupTransformData

Transform raw data as required.
search.paths.ms

Searches for paths. Ties together highest.mi and return.mis functions.
prune.paths

Prunes paths. Ties together lowest.z and return.zs functions.
recode.vars

Recode variable names.
search.paths

Searches for paths. Ties together highest.mi and return.mis functions.
simData

Large example, heterogeneous data, group, subgroup, and individual level effects.
ts

Small example, heterogeneous data, group and individual level effects
setupConvolve

Group iterative multiple model estimation.
simDataLV

Latent variable example, heterogeneous data, group, subgroup level effects.
setupDataLists

Create a list of dataframes
search.paths.ind

Searches for individual-level paths. Ties together highest.mi, return.mis, prune, and get.params functions.
w2e

Create edge list from weight matrix.
expand.grid.unique

Provides unique combinations of two vectors.
aggSEM

Group-level structural equation model search.
determine.subgroups

Determines subgroups.
fit.model

Attempt to fit lavaan model.
indSEM

Individual-level structural equation model search.
final.org

Wrapup, create output files.
gimme-package

Group iterative multiple model estimation
highest.mi

Identifies highest MI from list of MIs.
indiv.search

Individual-level search. Used in gimmeSEM, aggSEM, indSEM.
HRFsim

Hemodynamic Response Function (HRF) GIMME example.
batch.create.tree

Create tree structures for group search solutions.
get.params

Grabs final coefficients for each individual.
gimmems.write

Write MS-GIMME results to data.frame.
create.tree

Create structure of group search solutions.
indiv.search.ms

Individual-level search. Used in gimmeSEM, aggSEM, indSEM.
count.excellent

Counts number of excellent fit indices
ms.fit

Fitted gimme object with multiple solutions
predict.gimme

GIMME Predicted Values.
gimmeSEM

Group iterative multiple model estimation.