random are a subset of
the lmList object coefficient names, initial estimates for the
covariance matrix of the random effects are obtained (overwriting any
values given in random). formula(fixed) and the
data argument in the calling sequence used to obtain
fixed are passed as the fixed and data arguments
to lme.formula, together with any other additional arguments in
the function call. See the documentation on lme.formula for a
description of that function.## S3 method for class 'lmList':
lme(fixed, data, random, correlation, weights, subset, method,
na.action, control, contrasts)lmList,
representing a list of lm fits with a common model.pdMat object with a formula
attribute. Multiple levels of grouping are not allowed with this
method function. Defaults to a formula consisting ocorStruct object describing the
within-group correlation structure. See the documentation of
corClasses for a description of the available corStruct
classes. Defaults to NULL,
corvarFunc object or one-sided formula
describing the within-group heteroscedasticity structure. If given as
a formula, it is used as the argument to varFixed,
corresponding to fixed variance weights. See the dodata that should be used in the fit. This can be a logical
vector, or a numeric vector indicating which observation numbers are
to be included, or a character vector of th"REML" the model is fit by
maximizing the restricted log-likelihood. If "ML" the
log-likelihood is maximized. Defaults to "REML".NAs. The default action (na.fail) causes
lme to print an error message and terminate if there are any
incomplete observations.lmeControl.
Defaults to an empty list.contrasts.arg
of model.matrix.default.lme representing the linear mixed-effects
model fit. Generic functions such as print, plot and
summary have methods to show the results of the fit. See
lmeObject for the components of the fit. The functions
resid, coef, fitted, fixed.effects, and
random.effects can be used to extract some of its components.Bates, D.M. and Pinheiro, J.C. (1998) "Computational methods for multilevel models" available in PostScript or PDF formats at http://franz.stat.wisc.edu/pub/NLME/ Box, G.E.P., Jenkins, G.M., and Reinsel G.C. (1994) "Time Series Analysis: Forecasting and Control", 3rd Edition, Holden-Day.
Davidian, M. and Giltinan, D.M. (1995) "Nonlinear Mixed Effects Models for Repeated Measurement Data", Chapman and Hall.
Laird, N.M. and Ware, J.H. (1982) "Random-Effects Models for Longitudinal Data", Biometrics, 38, 963-974.
Lindstrom, M.J. and Bates, D.M. (1988) "Newton-Raphson and EM Algorithms for Linear Mixed-Effects Models for Repeated-Measures Data", Journal of the American Statistical Association, 83, 1014-1022.
Littel, R.C., Milliken, G.A., Stroup, W.W., and Wolfinger, R.D. (1996) "SAS Systems for Mixed Models", SAS Institute.
Pinheiro, J.C. and Bates., D.M. (1996) "Unconstrained Parametrizations for Variance-Covariance Matrices", Statistics and Computing, 6, 289-296.
Venables, W.N. and Ripley, B.D. (1997) "Modern Applied Statistics with S-plus", 2nd Edition, Springer-Verlag.
lme, lmList,
lmeObjectfm1 <- lmList(Orthodont)
fm2 <- lme(fm1)
summary(fm1)
summary(fm2)Run the code above in your browser using DataLab