Algorithms

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Solving Linear Mixed model Equations

lmt supports two types of solver for solving MME's: a direct solver and an iterative solver

Iterative solver

The iterative solver uses the preconditioned conjugate gradient method and is lmt's default solver. It does not require the explicit construction of any mixed model equation, and is therefore less resource demanding than the direct solver. That is, many models which cannot be solved using the direct solver can still be solved using the iterative solver. Even for small models the iterative solver usually outperforms the direct solver in terms of total processing time.

Whether the iterative solver has converged in round $$i$$ can be evaluated with convergence criterions $$log_e\left(\sqrt{\frac{||(Cx_i-b)||}{||b||}}\right)<t$$ or $$log_e\left(\sqrt{\frac{||(x_{i}-x_{i-1})||'}{||x_{i-1}||}}\right)<t$$, where $$C$$ is the mixed-model coefficient matrix, $$x_i$$ is the solution vector in round $$i$$, $$b$$ is the right-hand side and $$t$$ is the convergence threshold which defaults to -18.42, which is $$log_e(10^{-9})$$.

Direct solver

The direct solver requires the mixed model coefficient matrix to be build and all Kronecker products to be resolved. This can be quite memory demanding and should therefore be used carefully. The direct solver uses a Cholesky decomposition and forward-backward-substitution to solve the mixed model equation system, where especially the decomposition step can be very resource demanding and time consuming.

Variance component estimation

Gibbs sampling

Single pass Gibbs sampling

lmt's single pass Gibbs sampling algorithm is described in [1]. In short, all location parameters are drawn from their joint conditional posterior distribution. Note that this requires solving the mixed model equation system once per iteration which usually leads to a substantial increase in processing time.

Blocked Gibbs sampling

For random factors lmt's blocked Gibbs sampler draws correlated location parameters within factor level from their joint conditional posterior distribution. Location parameters of fixed factors are drawn in scalar mode from their fully conditional posterior.

Restricted Maximum Likelyhood

MC-EM-REML

lmt provides a monte-carlo expectation-maximisation REML algorithms which uses the preconditioned gradient solver for solving the mixed model equations and a blocked Gibbs sampler to sample the necessary traces[2].

Elements of the inverse of the mixed model coefficient matrix

In principle lmt can generate any element of the inverse mixed model coefficient matrix. However, the user interface is currently limited to the diagonal elements for fixed factors and the diagonal blocks for random factors. These elements can either be sampled or obtained accurately via solving.

Gibbs Sampling

Following the approach of Harville(1999)[3] lmt can sample for fixed factors the diagonal elements of the inverse of the mixed model coefficient matrix, for random factors the diagonal blocks of the inverse of the coefficient matrix where the block size is determined by the dimension of the related $$\Sigma$$ matrix. The blocks are the prediction error co-variance matrices of the factor levels of correlated sub-factors. When sampling prediction error variances lmt can run many Gibbs chains in parallel allowing to exploit multi-core hardware architecture. However, it is recommended to specify not more chains than the number of available real cores excluding hyper-threading technology.

Solving

lmt can obtain elements of the inverse of the coefficient matrix via solving the mixed model equations. This method is currently only supported for the diagonal prediction error co-variance blocks of random factors, where the block size is determined by the dimension of the related $$\Sigma$$ matrix. For this algorithm lmt can utilize either the #Iterative solver or the #Direct solver.

Iterative inbreeding

lmt supports the iterative calculation of inbreeding coefficients as described in VanRaden(1992)[4].

References

  1. D. Sorensen and D. Gianola; Likelihood, Bayesian, and MCMC Methods in Quantitative Genetics; 2002; 584-588
  2. David A. Harville; Making REML computationally feasible for large data sets: use of the Gibbs sampler; Journal of Statistical Computation & Simulation; 2004
  3. David A. Harville; Use of the Gibbs sampler to invert large, possibly sparse, positive definite matrices; Linear Algebra and its Applications; 1999
  4. PM VanRanden; Accounting for Inbreeding and Crossbreeding in Genetic Evaluation of Large Populations; Journal of Dairy Science; 1992