randomForestSRC (version 2.9.3)

rfsrc: Fast Unified Random Forests for Survival, Regression, and Classification (RF-SRC)

Description

Fast OpenMP parallel computing of Breiman's random forests (Breiman 2001) for a variety of data settings including regression and classification and right-censored survival and competing risks (Ishwaran et al. 2008, 2012). Other key applications include multivariate regression/classification, unsupervised forests, quantile regression (see quantreg), and new solutions for class imbalanced data (see imbalanced). Different splitting rules invoked under deterministic or random splitting are available for all families. Variable importance (VIMP), see vimp and holdout.vimp, as well as confidence regions (see subsample), can be calculated for single and grouped variables. Missing data can be imputed on both training and test data (however see impute).

This is the main entry point to the randomForestSRC package. See rfsrc.fast for a fast implementation of rfsrc.

For more information about this package and OpenMP parallel processing, use the command package?randomForestSRC.

Usage

rfsrc(formula, data, ntree = 1000,
  mtry = NULL, ytry = NULL,
  nodesize = NULL, nodedepth = NULL,
  splitrule = NULL, nsplit = 10,
  importance = c(FALSE, TRUE, "none", "permute", "random", "anti"),
  block.size = if (any(is.element(as.character(importance),
                     c("none", "FALSE")))) NULL else 10,
  ensemble = c("all", "oob", "inbag"),
  bootstrap = c("by.root", "by.node", "none", "by.user"),
  samptype = c("swor", "swr"), samp = NULL, membership = FALSE,
  sampsize = if (samptype == "swor") function(x){x * .632} else function(x){x},
  na.action = c("na.omit", "na.impute"), nimpute = 1,
  ntime, cause,
  proximity = FALSE, distance = FALSE, forest.wt = FALSE,
  xvar.wt = NULL, yvar.wt = NULL, split.wt = NULL, case.wt  = NULL,
  forest = TRUE,
  var.used = c(FALSE, "all.trees", "by.tree"),
  split.depth = c(FALSE, "all.trees", "by.tree"),
  seed = NULL,
  do.trace = FALSE,
  statistics = FALSE,
  ...)

## convenient interface for growing a CART tree rfsrc.cart(formula, data, ntree = 1, mtry = ncol(data), bootstrap = "none", ...)

Arguments

formula

A symbolic description of the model to be fit. If missing, unsupervised splitting is implemented.

data

Data frame containing the y-outcome and x-variables.

ntree

Number of trees.

mtry

Number of variables randomly selected as candidates for splitting a node. The default is p/3 for regression, where p equals the number of variables. For all other families (including unsupervised settings), the default is sqrt(p). Values are always rounded up.

ytry

For unsupervised forests, sets the number of randomly selected pseudo-responses (see below for more details). The default is ytry=1, which selects one pseudo-response.

nodesize

Forest average number of unique cases (data points) in a terminal node. The defaults are: survival (15), competing risk (15), regression (5), classification (1), mixed outcomes (3), unsupervised (3). It is recommended to experiment with different nodesize values.

nodedepth

Maximum depth to which a tree should be grown. The default behaviour is that this parameter is ignored.

splitrule

Splitting rule (see below).

nsplit

Non-negative integer value for number of random splits to consider for each candidate splitting variable. This significantly increases speed. When zero or NULL, uses much slower deterministic splitting where all possible splits considered.

importance

Method for computing variable importance (VIMP); see below. Default action is codeimportance="none" but VIMP can always be recovered later using vimp or predict.

block.size

Should the cumulative error rate be calculated on every tree? When NULL, it will only be calculated on the last tree and the plot of the cumulative error rate will result in a flat line. To view the cumulative error rate on every nth tree, set the value to an integer between 1 and ntree. As an intended side effect, if importance is requested, VIMP is calculated in "blocks" of size equal to block.size, thus resulting in a useful compromise between ensemble and permutation VIMP. The default action is to use 10 trees.

ensemble

Specifies the type of ensemble. By default both out-of-bag (OOB) and inbag ensembles are returned. Always use OOB values for interfence on the training data.

bootstrap

Bootstrap protocol. The default is by.root which bootstraps the data by sampling with or without replacement (by default sampling is without replacement; see the option samptype below). If by.node is choosen, the data is bootstrapped with replacement at each node while growing the tree. If none is chosen, the data is not bootstrapped at all. If by.user is choosen, the bootstrap specified by samp is used. It is not possible to return OOB ensembles or prediction error if by.node or none are in effect.

samptype

Type of bootstrap when by.root is in effect. Choices are swor (sampling without replacement) and swr (sampling with replacement). Unlike Breiman's random forests, the default action here is sampling without replacement. Thus out-of-bag (OOB) technically means out-of-sample, but for legacy reasons we retain the term OOB.

samp

Bootstrap specification when by.user is in effect. Array of dim n x ntree specifying how many times each record appears inbag in the bootstrap for each tree.

membership

Should terminal node membership and inbag information be returned?

sampsize

Function specifying size of bootstrap data when by.root is in effect. For sampling without replacement, it is the requested size of the sample, which by default is .632 times the sample size. For sampling with replacement, it is the sample size. Can also be specified by using a number.

na.action

Action taken if the data contains NA's. Possible values are na.omit or na.impute. The default na.omit removes the entire record if even one of its entries is NA (for x-variables this applies only to those specifically listed in 'formula'). Selecting na.impute imputes the data. Also see the function impute for fast direct imputation.

nimpute

Number of iterations of the missing data algorithm. Performance measures such as out-of-bag (OOB) error rates tend to become optimistic if nimpute is greater than 1.

ntime

Integer value used for survival to constrain ensemble calculations to a grid of ntime time points. Alternatively if a vector of values of length greater than one is supplied, it is assumed these are the time points to be used to constrain the calculations (note that the constrained time points used will be the observed event times closest to the user supplied time points). If no value is specified, the default action is to use all observed event times.

cause

Integer value between 1 and J indicating the event of interest for splitting a node for competing risks, where J is the number of event types. If not specified, the default is to use a composite splitting rule that averages over all event types. Can also be a vector of non-negative weights of length J specifying weights for each event (for example, passing a vector of ones reverts to the default composite split statistic). Finally, regardless of how cause is specified, the returned forest object always provides estimates for all event types.

proximity

Proximity of cases as measured by the frequency of sharing the same terminal node. This is an nxn matrix, which can be large. Choices are inbag, oob, all, TRUE, or FALSE. Setting proximity = TRUE is equivalent to proximity = "inbag".

distance

Distance between cases as measured by the ratio of the sum of the count of edges from each case to their immediate common ancestor node to the sum of the count of edges from each case to the root node. If the cases are co-terminal for a tree, this measure is zero and reduces to 1 - the proximity measure for these cases in a tree. This is an nxn matrix, which can be large. Choices are inbag, oob, all, TRUE, or FALSE. Setting distance = TRUE is equivalent to distance = "inbag".

forest.wt

Should the forest weight matrix be calculated? Creates an nxn matrix which can be used for prediction and constructing customized estimators. Choices are similar to proximity: inbag, oob, all, TRUE, or FALSE. The default is TRUE which is equivalent to inbag.

xvar.wt

Vector of non-negative weights (does not have to sum to 1) representing the probability of selecting a variable for splitting. Default is to use uniform weights.

yvar.wt

NOT YET IMPLEMENTED: Vector of non-negative weights (does not have to sum to 1) representing the probability of selecting a response as a candidate for the split statistic in unsupervised settings. Default is to use uniform weights.

split.wt

Vector of non-negative weights used for multiplying the split statistic for a variable. A large value encourages the node to split on a specific variable. Default is to use uniform weights.

case.wt

Vector of non-negative weights (does not have to sum to 1) for sampling cases. Observations with larger weights will be selected with higher probability in the bootstrap (or subsampled) samples. It is generally better to use real weights rather than integers. See the example below for the breast data set for an illustration of its use for class imbalanced data.

forest

Should the forest object be returned? Used for prediction on new data and required by many of the package functions.

var.used

Return variables used for splitting? Default is FALSE. Possible values are all.trees which returns a vector of the number of times a split occurred on a variable, and by.tree which returns a matrix recording the number of times a split occurred on a variable in a specific tree.

split.depth

Records the minimal depth for each variable. Default is FALSE. Possible values are all.trees which returns a matrix of the average minimal depth for a variable (columns) for a specific case (rows), and by.tree which returns a three-dimensional array recording minimal depth for a specific case (first dimension) for a variable (second dimension) for a specific tree (third dimension).

seed

Negative integer specifying seed for the random number generator.

do.trace

Number of seconds between updates to the user on approximate time to completion.

statistics

Should split statistics be returned? Values can be parsed using stat.split.

...

Further arguments passed to or from other methods.

Value

An object of class (rfsrc, grow) with the following components:

call

The original call to rfsrc.

family

The family used in the analysis.

n

Sample size of the data (depends upon NA's, see na.action).

ntree

Number of trees grown.

mtry

Number of variables randomly selected for splitting at each node.

nodesize

Minimum size of terminal nodes.

nodedepth

Maximum depth allowed for a tree.

splitrule

Splitting rule used.

nsplit

Number of randomly selected split points.

yvar

y-outcome values.

yvar.names

A character vector of the y-outcome names.

xvar

Data frame of x-variables.

xvar.names

A character vector of the x-variable names.

xvar.wt

Vector of non-negative weights specifying the probability used to select a variable for splitting a node.

split.wt

Vector of non-negative weights specifying multiplier by which the split statistic for a covariate is adjusted.

cause.wt

Vector of weights used for the composite competing risk splitting rule.

leaf.count

Number of terminal nodes for each tree in the forest. Vector of length ntree. A value of zero indicates a rejected tree (can occur when imputing missing data). Values of one indicate tree stumps.

proximity

Proximity matrix recording the frequency of pairs of data points occur within the same terminal node.

forest

If forest=TRUE, the forest object is returned. This object is used for prediction with new test data sets and is required for other R-wrappers.

forest.wt

Forest weight matrix.

membership

Matrix recording terminal node membership where each column records node mebership for a case for a tree (rows).

splitrule

Splitting rule used.

inbag

Matrix recording inbag membership where each column contains the number of times that a case appears in the bootstrap sample for a tree (rows).

var.used

Count of the number of times a variable is used in growing the forest.

imputed.indv

Vector of indices for cases with missing values.

imputed.data

Data frame of the imputed data. The first column(s) are reserved for the y-responses, after which the x-variables are listed.

split.depth

Matrix [i][j] or array [i][j][k] recording the minimal depth for variable [j] for case [i], either averaged over the forest, or by tree [k].

node.stats

Split statistics returned when statistics=TRUE which can be parsed using stat.split.

err.rate

Tree cumulative OOB error rate.

importance

Variable importance (VIMP) for each x-variable.

predicted

In-bag predicted value.

predicted.oob

OOB predicted value.

++++++++

for classification settings, additionally ++++++++

class

In-bag predicted class labels.

class.oob

OOB predicted class labels.

++++++++

for multivariate settings, additionally ++++++++

regrOutput

List containing performance values for multivariate regression responses (applies only in multivariate settings).

clasOutput

List containing performance values for multivariate categorical (factor) responses (applies only in multivariate settings).

++++++++

for survival settings, additionally ++++++++

survival

In-bag survival function.

survival.oob

OOB survival function.

chf

In-bag cumulative hazard function (CHF).

chf.oob

OOB CHF.

time.interest

Ordered unique death times.

ndead

Number of deaths.

++++++++

for competing risks, additionally ++++++++

chf

In-bag cause-specific cumulative hazard function (CSCHF) for each event.

chf.oob

OOB CSCHF.

cif

In-bag cumulative incidence function (CIF) for each event.

cif.oob

OOB CIF.

time.interest

Ordered unique event times.

ndead

Number of events.

Details

  1. Types of forests

    There is no need to set the type of forest as the package automagically determines the underlying random forest requested from the type of response and the formula supplied. There are several possible scenarios:

    1. Regression forests for continuous responses.

    2. Classification forests for factor responses.

    3. Multivariate forests for continuous and/or factor responses and for mixed (both type) of responses.

    4. Unsupervised forests when there is no response.

    5. Survival forests for right-censored survival.

    6. Competing risk survival forests for competing risk.

  2. Splitting rules

    Splitting rules are specified by option splitrule.

    • Regression analysis:

      1. mse: default split rule implements weighted mean-squared error splitting (Breiman et al. 1984, Chapter 8.4).

      2. quantile.regr: quantile regression splitting via the "check-loss" function. Requires specifying the target quantiles. See quantreg.rfsrc for further details.

      3. la.quantile.regr: local adaptive quantile regression splitting. See quantreg.rfsrc.

    • Classification analysis:

      1. gini: default splitrule implements Gini index splitting (Breiman et al. 1984, Chapter 4.3).

      2. auc: AUC (area under the ROC curve) splitting for both two-class and multiclass setttings. AUC splitting is appropriate for imbalanced data. See imbalanced for more information.

      3. entropy: entropy splitting (Breiman et al. 1984, Chapter 2.5, 4.3).

    • Survival analysis:

      1. logrank: default splitrule implements log-rank splitting (Segal, 1988; Leblanc and Crowley, 1993).

      2. bs.gradient: gradient-based (global non-quantile) brier score splitting. The time horizon used for the Brier score is set to the 90th percentile of the observed event times. This can be over-ridden by the option prob, which must be a value between 0 and 1 (set to .90 by default).

      3. logrankscore: log-rank score splitting (Hothorn and Lausen, 2003).

    • Competing risk analysis:

      1. logrankCR: default splitrule implements a modified weighted log-rank splitting rule modeled after Gray's test (Gray, 1988).

      2. logrank: weighted log-rank splitting where each event type is treated as the event of interest and all other events are treated as censored. The split rule is the weighted value of each of log-rank statistics, standardized by the variance. For more details see Ishwaran et al. (2014).

    • Multivariate analysis: When one or both regression and classification responses are detected, a multivariate normalized composite split rule of mean-squared error and Gini index splitting is invoked. See Tang and Ishwaran (2017) for details.

    • Unsupervised analysis: In settings where there is no outcome, unsupervised splitting is invoked. In this case, the mixed outcome splitting rule (above) is applied. See Mantero and Ishwaran (2017) for details.

    • Custom splitting: All families except unsupervised are available for user defined custom splitting. Some basic C-programming skills are required. The harness for defining these rules is in splitCustom.c. In this file we give examples of how to code rules for regression, classification, survival, and competing risk. Each family can support up to sixteen custom split rules. Specifying splitrule="custom" or splitrule="custom1" will trigger the first split rule for the family defined by the training data set. Multivariate families will need a custom split rule for both regression and classification. In the examples, we demonstrate how the user is presented with the node specific membership. The task is then to define a split statistic based on that membership. Take note of the instructions in splitCustom.c on how to register the custom split rules. It is suggested that the existing custom split rules be kept in place for reference and that the user proceed to develop splitrule="custom2" and so on. The package must be recompiled and installed for the custom split rules to become available.

    • Random splitting: For all families, pure random splitting can be invoked by setting splitrule="random". See below for more details regarding randomized splitting rules.

  3. Improving computational speed

    See the function rfsrc.fast for a fast implementation of rfsrc. In general, the key methods for increasing speed are as follows:

    • Randomized splitting rules

      Computational speed can be significantly improved with randomized splitting invoked by the option nsplit. When nsplit is set to a non-zero positive integer, a maximum of nsplit split points are chosen randomly for each of the candidate splitting variables when splitting a tree node, thus significantly reducing the cost from having to consider all possible split-values. To revert to traditional deterministic splitting (all split values considered) use nsplit=0.

      Randomized splitting for trees has a long history. See for example, Loh and Shih (1997), Dietterich (2000), and Lin and Jeon (2006). Guerts et al. (2006) recently introduced extremely randomized trees using what they call the extra-trees algorithm. We can see that this algorithm essentially corresponds to randomized splitting with nsplit=1. In our experience however this is not always the optimal value for nsplit and may often be too low.

      Finally, for completely randomized (pure random) splitting use splitrule="random". In pure splitting, nodes are split by randomly selecting a variable and randomly selecting its split point (Cutler and Zhao, 2001).

    • Subsampling

      Subsampling can be used to reduce the size of the in-sample data used to grow a tree and therefore can greatly reduce computational load. Subsampling is implemented using options sampsize and samptype. See rfsrc.fast for a fast forest implementation using subsampling.

    • Unique time points

      For large survival problems, users should consider setting ntime to a reasonably small value (such as 100 or 250). This constrains ensemble calculations such as survival functions to a restricted grid of time points.

    • Large number of variables

      The default setting importance="none" turns off variable importance (VIMP) calculations and considerably reduces computational times. Variable importance can always be recovered later using functions vimp or predict. Also consider using max.subtree which calculates minimal depth, a measure of the depth that a variable splits, and yields fast variable selection (Ishwaran, 2010).

  4. Prediction Error

    Prediction error is calculated using OOB data. Performance is measured in terms of mean-squared-error for regression, and misclassification error for classification. A normalized Brier score (relative to a coin-toss) and the AUC (area under the ROC curve) is also provided upon printing a classification forest.

    For survival, prediction error is measured by 1-C, where C is Harrell's (Harrell et al., 1982) concordance index. Prediction error is between 0 and 1, and measures how well the predictor correctly ranks (classifies) two random individuals in terms of survival. A value of 0.5 is no better than random guessing. A value of 0 is perfect.

    When bootstrapping is by.node or none, a coherent OOB subset is not available to assess prediction error. Thus, all outputs dependent on this are suppressed. In such cases, prediction error is only available via classical cross-validation (the user will need to use the predict.rfsrc function).

  5. Variable Importance (VIMP)

    To obtain VIMP use the option importance. Setting this to "permute" or "TRUE" returns permutation VIMP from permuting OOB cases. Choosing "random" replaces permutation with random assignment. Thus when an OOB case is dropped down a tree, the case goes left or right randomly whenever a split is encountered for the target variable. If "anti" is specified, the case is assigned to the opposite split. By default importance="FALSE" and VIMP is not requested.

    VIMP depends upon block.size, an integer value between 1 and ntree, specifying the number of trees in a block used to determine VIMP. When block.size=1, VIMP is calculated by tree. The difference between prediction error under the perturbed predictor and the original predictor is calculated for each tree and averaged over the forest. This yields Breiman-Cutler VIMP (Breiman 2001).

    When block.size="ntree", VIMP is calculated across the forest by comparing the perturbed OOB forest ensemble (using all trees) to the unperturbed OOB forest ensemble (using all trees). Unlike Breiman-Cutler VIMP, ensemble VIMP does not measure the tree average effect of x, but rather its overall forest effect. This is called Ishwaran-Kogalur VIMP (Ishwaran et al. 2008).

    A useful compromise between Breiman-Cutler (BC) and Ishwaran-Kogalur (IK) VIMP can be obtained by setting block.size to a value between 1 and ntree. Smaller values are closer to BC and larger values closer to IK. Smaller generally gives better accuracy, however computational times will be higher because VIMP is calculated over more blocks. Also see imbalanced for imbalanced classification data where a larger block.size works better (O'Brien and Ishwaran, 2019).

    See vimp for a user interface for extracting VIMP and subsampling for calculating confidence intervals for VIMP. Also see holdout.vimp for holdout VIMP, which calculates importance by truly holding out variables.

  6. Multivariate Forests

    Multivariate forests can be specified in two ways:

    rfsrc(Multivar(y1, y2, ..., yd) ~ . , my.data, ...)

    rfsrc(cbind(y1, y2, ..., yd) ~ . , my.data, ...)

    A multivariate normalized composite splitting rule is used to split nodes. The nature of the outcomes will inform the code as to the type of multivariate forest to be grown; i.e. whether it is real-valued, categorical, or a combination of both (mixed). Note that performance measures (when requested) are returned for all outcomes.

  7. Unsupervised Forests

    In the case where no y-outcomes are present, unsupervised forests can be invoked by one of two means:

    rfsrc(data = my.data)

    rfsrc(Unsupervised() ~ ., data = my.data)

    In unsupervised mode, features take turns acting as target y-outcomes and x-variables for splitting. Specifically, mtry x-variables are randomly selected for splitting the node. Then for each mtry feature, ytry variables are selected from the remaining features to act as the target pseduo-responses. Splitting uses the multivariate normalized composite splitting rule.

    The default value of ytry is 1 but can be increased. As illustration, the following equivalent unsupervised calls set mtry=10 and ytry=5:

    rfsrc(data = my.data, ytry = 5, mtry = 10)

    rfsrc(Unsupervised(5) ~ ., my.data, mtry = 10)

    Note that all performance values (error rates, VIMP, prediction) are turned off in unsupervised mode.

  8. Survival, Competing Risks

    1. Survival settings require a time and censoring variable which should be identifed in the formula as the response using the standard Surv formula specification. A typical formula call looks like:

      Surv(my.time, my.status) ~ .

      where my.time and my.status are the variables names for the event time and status variable in the users data set.

    2. For survival forests (Ishwaran et al. 2008), the censoring variable must be coded as a non-negative integer with 0 reserved for censoring and (usually) 1=death (event).

    3. For competing risk forests (Ishwaran et al., 2013), the implementation is similar to survival, but with the following caveats:

      • Censoring must be coded as a non-negative integer, where 0 indicates right-censoring, and non-zero values indicate different event types. While 0,1,2,..,J is standard, and recommended, events can be coded non-sequentially, although 0 must always be used for censoring.

      • Setting the splitting rule to logrankscore will result in a survival analysis in which all events are treated as if they are the same type (indeed, they will coerced as such).

      • Generally, competing risks requires a larger nodesize than survival settings.

  9. Missing data imputation

    Set na.action="na.impute" to impute missing data (both x and y-variables) using the missing data algorithm of Ishwaran et al. (2008). However, see the function impute for an alternate way to do fast and accurate imputation.

    The missing data algorithm can be iterated by setting nimpute to a positive integer greater than 1. When iterated, at the completion of each iteration, missing data is imputed using OOB non-missing terminal node data which is then used as input to grow a new forest. A side side effect of iteration is that missing values in the returned objects xvar, yvar are replaced by imputed values. Also, performance measures such as error rates and VIMP become optimistically biased.

    Records in which all outcome and x-variable information are missing are removed from the forest analysis. Variables having all missing values are also removed.

  10. Allowable data types and factors

    Data types must be real valued, integer, factor or logical -- however all except factors are coerced and treated as if real valued. For ordered x-variable factors, splits are similar to real valued variables. For unordered factors, a split will move a subset of the levels in the parent node to the left daughter, and the complementary subset to the right daughter. All possible complementary pairs are considered and apply to factors with an unlimited number of levels. However, there is an optimization check to ensure number of splits attempted is not greater than number of cases in a node or the value of nsplit.

    For coherence, an immutable map is applied to each factor that ensures factor levels in the training data are consistent with the factor levels in any subsequent test data. This map is applied to each factor before and after the native C library is executed. Because of this, if all x-variables all factors, then computational time will be long in high dimensional problems. Consider converting factors to real if this is the case.

References

Breiman L., Friedman J.H., Olshen R.A. and Stone C.J. (1984). Classification and Regression Trees, Belmont, California.

Breiman L. (2001). Random forests, Machine Learning, 45:5-32.

Cutler A. and Zhao G. (2001). PERT-Perfect random tree ensembles. Comp. Sci. Statist., 33: 490-497.

Dietterich, T. G. (2000). An experimental comparison of three methods for constructing ensembles of decision trees: bagging, boosting, and randomization. Machine Learning, 40, 139-157.

Gray R.J. (1988). A class of k-sample tests for comparing the cumulative incidence of a competing risk, Ann. Statist., 16: 1141-1154.

Geurts, P., Ernst, D. and Wehenkel, L., (2006). Extremely randomized trees. Machine learning, 63(1):3-42.

Harrell et al. F.E. (1982). Evaluating the yield of medical tests, J. Amer. Med. Assoc., 247:2543-2546.

Hothorn T. and Lausen B. (2003). On the exact distribution of maximally selected rank statistics, Comp. Statist. Data Anal., 43:121-137.

Ishwaran H. (2007). Variable importance in binary regression trees and forests, Electronic J. Statist., 1:519-537.

Ishwaran H. and Kogalur U.B. (2007). Random survival forests for R, Rnews, 7(2):25-31.

Ishwaran H., Kogalur U.B., Blackstone E.H. and Lauer M.S. (2008). Random survival forests, Ann. App. Statist., 2:841-860.

Ishwaran H., Kogalur U.B., Gorodeski E.Z, Minn A.J. and Lauer M.S. (2010). High-dimensional variable selection for survival data. J. Amer. Statist. Assoc., 105:205-217.

Ishwaran H., Kogalur U.B., Chen X. and Minn A.J. (2011). Random survival forests for high-dimensional data. Stat. Anal. Data Mining, 4:115-132

Ishwaran H., Gerds T.A., Kogalur U.B., Moore R.D., Gange S.J. and Lau B.M. (2014). Random survival forests for competing risks. Biostatistics, 15(4):757-773.

Ishwaran H. and Malley J.D. (2014). Synthetic learning machines. BioData Mining, 7:28.

Ishwaran H. (2015). The effect of splitting on random forests. Machine Learning, 99:75-118.

Lin, Y. and Jeon, Y. (2006). Random forests and adaptive nearest neighbors. J. Amer. Statist. Assoc., 101(474), 578-590.

Lu M., Sadiq S., Feaster D.J. and Ishwaran H. (2018). Estimating individual treatment effect in observational data using random forest methods. J. Comp. Graph. Statist, 27(1), 209-219

Ishwaran H. and Lu M. (2019). Standard errors and confidence intervals for variable importance in random forest regression, classification, and survival. Statistics in Medicine, 38, 558-582.

LeBlanc M. and Crowley J. (1993). Survival trees by goodness of split, J. Amer. Statist. Assoc., 88:457-467.

Loh W.-Y and Shih Y.-S (1997). Split selection methods for classification trees, Statist. Sinica, 7:815-840.

Mantero A. and Ishwaran H. (2017). Unsupervised random forests.

Mogensen, U.B, Ishwaran H. and Gerds T.A. (2012). Evaluating random forests for survival analysis using prediction error curves, J. Statist. Software, 50(11): 1-23.

O'Brien R. and Ishwaran H. (2019). A random forests quantile classifier for class imbalanced data. Pattern Recognition, 90, 232-249

Segal M.R. (1988). Regression trees for censored data, Biometrics, 44:35-47.

Tang F. and Ishwaran H. (2017). Random forest missing data algorithms. Statistical Analysis and Data Mining, 10, 363-377.

See Also

find.interaction.rfsrc,

holdout.vimp.rfsrc,

imbalanced.rfsrc, impute.rfsrc,

max.subtree.rfsrc,

partial.rfsrc, plot.competing.risk.rfsrc, plot.rfsrc, plot.survival.rfsrc, plot.variable.rfsrc, predict.rfsrc, print.rfsrc,

quantreg.rfsrc,

rfsrc.fast,

stat.split.rfsrc, subsample.rfsrc, synthetic.rfsrc,

tune.rfsrc,

var.select.rfsrc, vimp.rfsrc

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
##------------------------------------------------------------
## survival analysis
##------------------------------------------------------------

## veteran data
## randomized trial of two treatment regimens for lung cancer
data(veteran, package = "randomForestSRC")
v.obj <- rfsrc(Surv(time, status) ~ ., data = veteran, 
                   ntree = 100, block.size = 1)

## print and plot the grow object
print(v.obj)
plot(v.obj)

## plot survival curves for first 10 individuals -- direct way
matplot(v.obj$time.interest, 100 * t(v.obj$survival.oob[1:10, ]),
    xlab = "Time", ylab = "Survival", type = "l", lty = 1)

## plot survival curves for first 10 individuals
## using function "plot.survival" 
plot.survival(v.obj, subset = 1:10)

# }
# NOT RUN {
## fast nodesize optimization for veteran data
## optimal nodesize in survival is larger than other families
## see the function "tune" for more examples
tune.nodesize(Surv(time,status) ~ ., veteran)


## Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) of the liver
data(pbc, package = "randomForestSRC")
pbc.obj <- rfsrc(Surv(days, status) ~ ., pbc)
print(pbc.obj)



##------------------------------------------------------------
## example of imputation in survival analysis
##------------------------------------------------------------

data(pbc, package = "randomForestSRC")
pbc.obj2 <- rfsrc(Surv(days, status) ~ ., pbc,
           nsplit = 10, na.action = "na.impute")


## same as above but we iterate the missing data algorithm
pbc.obj3 <- rfsrc(Surv(days, status) ~ ., pbc,
         na.action = "na.impute", nimpute = 3)

## fast way to impute the data (no inference is done)
## see impute for more details
pbc.imp <- impute(Surv(days, status) ~ ., pbc, splitrule = "random")

##------------------------------------------------------------
## compare RF-SRC to Cox regression
## Illustrates C-index and Brier score measures of performance
## assumes "pec" and "survival" libraries are loaded
##------------------------------------------------------------

if (library("survival", logical.return = TRUE)
    & library("pec", logical.return = TRUE)
    & library("prodlim", logical.return = TRUE))

{
  ##prediction function required for pec
  predictSurvProb.rfsrc <- function(object, newdata, times, ...){
    ptemp <- predict(object,newdata=newdata,...)$survival
    pos <- sindex(jump.times = object$time.interest, eval.times = times)
    p <- cbind(1,ptemp)[, pos + 1]
    if (NROW(p) != NROW(newdata) || NCOL(p) != length(times))
      stop("Prediction failed")
    p
  }

  ## data, formula specifications
  data(pbc, package = "randomForestSRC")
  pbc.na <- na.omit(pbc)  ##remove NA's
  surv.f <- as.formula(Surv(days, status) ~ .)
  pec.f <- as.formula(Hist(days,status) ~ 1)

  ## run cox/rfsrc models
  ## for illustration we use a small number of trees
  cox.obj <- coxph(surv.f, data = pbc.na, x = TRUE)
  rfsrc.obj <- rfsrc(surv.f, pbc.na, ntree = 150)

  ## compute bootstrap cross-validation estimate of expected Brier score
  ## see Mogensen, Ishwaran and Gerds (2012) Journal of Statistical Software
  set.seed(17743)
  prederror.pbc <- pec(list(cox.obj,rfsrc.obj), data = pbc.na, formula = pec.f,
                        splitMethod = "bootcv", B = 50)
  print(prederror.pbc)
  plot(prederror.pbc)

  ## compute out-of-bag C-index for cox regression and compare to rfsrc
  rfsrc.obj <- rfsrc(surv.f, pbc.na)
  cat("out-of-bag Cox Analysis ...", "\n")
  cox.err <- sapply(1:100, function(b) {
    if (b%%10 == 0) cat("cox bootstrap:", b, "\n")
    train <- sample(1:nrow(pbc.na), nrow(pbc.na), replace = TRUE)
    cox.obj <- tryCatch({coxph(surv.f, pbc.na[train, ])}, error=function(ex){NULL})
    if (!is.null(cox.obj)) {
      get.cindex(pbc.na$days[-train], pbc.na$status[-train], predict(cox.obj, pbc.na[-train, ]))
    } else NA
  })
  cat("\n\tOOB error rates\n\n")
  cat("\tRSF            : ", rfsrc.obj$err.rate[rfsrc.obj$ntree], "\n")
  cat("\tCox regression : ", mean(cox.err, na.rm = TRUE), "\n")
}

##------------------------------------------------------------
## competing risks
##------------------------------------------------------------

## WIHS analysis
## cumulative incidence function (CIF) for HAART and AIDS stratified by IDU

data(wihs, package = "randomForestSRC")
wihs.obj <- rfsrc(Surv(time, status) ~ ., wihs, nsplit = 3, ntree = 100)
plot.competing.risk(wihs.obj)
cif <- wihs.obj$cif.oob
Time <- wihs.obj$time.interest
idu <- wihs$idu
cif.haart <- cbind(apply(cif[,,1][idu == 0,], 2, mean),
                   apply(cif[,,1][idu == 1,], 2, mean))
cif.aids  <- cbind(apply(cif[,,2][idu == 0,], 2, mean),
                   apply(cif[,,2][idu == 1,], 2, mean))
matplot(Time, cbind(cif.haart, cif.aids), type = "l",
        lty = c(1,2,1,2), col = c(4, 4, 2, 2), lwd = 3,
        ylab = "Cumulative Incidence")
legend("topleft",
       legend = c("HAART (Non-IDU)", "HAART (IDU)", "AIDS (Non-IDU)", "AIDS (IDU)"),
       lty = c(1,2,1,2), col = c(4, 4, 2, 2), lwd = 3, cex = 1.5)


## illustrates the various splitting rules
## illustrates event specific and non-event specific variable selection
if (library("survival", logical.return = TRUE)) {

  ## use the pbc data from the survival package
  ## events are transplant (1) and death (2)
  data(pbc, package = "survival")
  pbc$id <- NULL

  ## modified Gray's weighted log-rank splitting
  pbc.cr <- rfsrc(Surv(time, status) ~ ., pbc)

  ## log-rank event-one specific splitting
  pbc.log1 <- rfsrc(Surv(time, status) ~ ., pbc, 
              splitrule = "logrank", cause = c(1,0), importance = TRUE)

  ## log-rank event-two specific splitting
  pbc.log2 <- rfsrc(Surv(time, status) ~ ., pbc, 
              splitrule = "logrank", cause = c(0,1), importance = TRUE)

  ## extract VIMP from the log-rank forests: event-specific
  ## extract minimal depth from the Gray log-rank forest: non-event specific
  var.perf <- data.frame(md = max.subtree(pbc.cr)$order[, 1],
                         vimp1 = 100 * pbc.log1$importance[ ,1],
                         vimp2 = 100 * pbc.log2$importance[ ,2])
  print(var.perf[order(var.perf$md), ])

}

## ------------------------------------------------------------
## regression analysis
## ------------------------------------------------------------

## new York air quality measurements
airq.obj <- rfsrc(Ozone ~ ., data = airquality, na.action = "na.impute")

# partial plot of variables (see plot.variable for more details)
plot.variable(airq.obj, partial = TRUE, smooth.lines = TRUE)

## motor trend cars
mtcars.obj <- rfsrc(mpg ~ ., data = mtcars)

## ------------------------------------------------------------
## regression with custom bootstrap
## ------------------------------------------------------------

ntree <- 25
n <- nrow(mtcars)
s.size <- n / 2
swr <- TRUE
samp <- randomForestSRC:::make.sample(ntree, n, s.size, swr)
o <- rfsrc(mpg ~ ., mtcars, bootstrap = "by.user", samp = samp)

## ------------------------------------------------------------
## classification analysis
## ------------------------------------------------------------

## iris data
iris.obj <- rfsrc(Species ~., data = iris)

## wisconsin prognostic breast cancer data
data(breast, package = "randomForestSRC")
breast.obj <- rfsrc(status ~ ., data = breast, block.size=1)
plot(breast.obj)

## ------------------------------------------------------------
## unsupervised analysis
## ------------------------------------------------------------

# two equivalent ways to implement unsupervised forests
mtcars.unspv <- rfsrc(Unsupervised() ~., data = mtcars)
mtcars2.unspv <- rfsrc(data = mtcars)

## ------------------------------------------------------------
## multivariate regression analysis
## ------------------------------------------------------------

mtcars.mreg <- rfsrc(Multivar(mpg, cyl) ~., data = mtcars,
           block.size=1, importance = TRUE)

## extract error rates, vimp, and OOB predicted values for all targets
err <- get.mv.error(mtcars.mreg)
vmp <- get.mv.vimp(mtcars.mreg)
pred <- get.mv.predicted(mtcars.mreg)

## standardized error and vimp
err.std <- get.mv.error(mtcars.mreg, standardize = TRUE)
vmp.std <- get.mv.vimp(mtcars.mreg, standardize = TRUE)


## ------------------------------------------------------------
## mixed outcomes analysis
## ------------------------------------------------------------

mtcars.new <- mtcars
mtcars.new$cyl <- factor(mtcars.new$cyl)
mtcars.new$carb <- factor(mtcars.new$carb, ordered = TRUE)
mtcars.mix <- rfsrc(cbind(carb, mpg, cyl) ~., data = mtcars.new, block.size=1)
print(mtcars.mix, outcome.target = "mpg")
print(mtcars.mix, outcome.target = "cyl")
plot(mtcars.mix, outcome.target = "mpg")
plot(mtcars.mix, outcome.target = "cyl")


## ------------------------------------------------------------
## custom splitting using the pre-coded examples
## ------------------------------------------------------------

## motor trend cars
mtcars.obj <- rfsrc(mpg ~ ., data = mtcars, splitrule = "custom")

## iris analysis
iris.obj <- rfsrc(Species ~., data = iris, splitrule = "custom1")

## WIHS analysis
wihs.obj <- rfsrc(Surv(time, status) ~ ., wihs, nsplit = 3,
                  ntree = 100, splitrule = "custom1")

# }

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