--- title: "Rodents Example" author: "Renata Diaz and Juniper L. Simonis" output: rmarkdown::html_vignette vignette: > %\VignetteIndexEntry{Rodents Example} %\VignetteEngine{knitr::rmarkdown} %\VignetteEncoding{UTF-8} --- ```{r setup, include=FALSE} knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>" ) ``` ```{r, include=FALSE} library(LDATS) vers <- packageVersion("LDATS") today <- Sys.Date() ``` This vignette walks through an example of **`LDATS`** at the command line and was constructed using **`LDATS`** version `r vers` on `r today`. ## Installation To obtain the most recent version of **LDATS**, install and load the most recent version from GitHub: ```{r, eval=FALSE} install.packages("devtools") devtools::install_github("weecology/LDATS") library(LDATS) ``` ## Data For this vignette, we will be using rodent data from the control plots of the [Portal Project](https://github.com/weecology/portaldata), which come with the **LDATS** package (`data(rodents)`). `rodents` contains two data tables, a `document_term_table` and a `document_covariate_table`. The `document_term_table` is a matrix of species (term) counts by sampling period (document). Importantly, the `document_term_table` contains raw counts of individual rodent captures, not catch per unit effort. The LDA models operate on proportions and weight the information from each sampling period according to total catch (document size). Similarly, the TS models use the LDA compositional breakdown and weight the information from each period according to the total catch. We therefore give both models unadjusted data. The values in the `document_term_table` must be integers. The `document_covariate_table` contains the covariates we would like to use for the time series models. In this case, we have a column for `newmoon`, which is the time step for each of our sampling periods. This column can include nonconsecutive time steps (i.e., `2, 4, 5`) if sampling periods are skipped or at unequal intervals, but must be integer-conformable or a date. Although if a date, the assumption is that the timestep is 1 day, which is often not desired behavior. If there is no time column, `LDATS` will assume all time steps are equidistant. We also include columns `sin_year` and `cos_year` so we can account for seasonal dynamics. ```{r} data(rodents) head(rodents$document_term_table, 10) head(rodents$document_covariate_table, 10) ``` ## Stage 1: LDA models We use `LDA_set()` to run replicate LDA models (each with its own seed) with varying numbers of topics (`2:5`) and `select_LDA()` to select the best model. We use the `control` argument to pass controls to the LDA function via a `list`. In this case, we can set `quiet = TRUE` to make the model run quietly. ```{r lda_set, eval =F} lda_model_set <- LDA_set(document_term_table = rodents$document_term_table, topics = c(2:5), nseeds = 10, control = list(quiet = TRUE)) ``` If we do not pass any controls, by default, `quiet = FALSE` (here run with only `2:3` topics and `2` seeds, to keep output short): ```{r lda set not quiet, eval =F} lda_model_set2 <- LDA_set(document_term_table = rodents$document_term_table, topics = c(2:3), nseeds = 2) ``` `LDA_set()` returns a list of LDA models. We use `select_LDA()` to identify the best number of topics and choice of seed from our set of models. By default, we will choose models based on minimum AIC. To use different selection criteria, define the appropriate functions and specify them by passing `list(measurer = [measurer function], selector = [max, min, etc])` to the `control` argument. ```{r load lda model set, include = F} load(file.path('.', 'rodents-example-files', 'lda_model_set.Rds')) rm(lda_model_set2) ``` ```{r select LDA} selected_lda_model <- select_LDA(lda_model_set) ``` We can access the results of the model: ```{r LDA results} # Number of topics: selected_lda_model[[1]]@k # Topic composition of communities at each time step # Columns are topics; rows are time steps head(selected_lda_model[[1]]@gamma) ``` `LDATS` includes flexible plot functionality for LDAs and time series. The top panel illustrates topic composition by species, and the bottom panel shows the proportion of the community made up of each topic over time. For all the available plot options see `?plot.LDA_VEM`. ```{r plot lda, fig.width=7, fig.height=6} plot(selected_lda_model[[1]]) ``` ## Stage 2: TS changepoint models We use `TS_on_LDA()` to run LDATS changepoint models with `0:6` changepoints, and then use `select_TS()` to find the best-fit model of these. Here, `TS_on_LDA()` predicts the `gamma` (the proportion of the community made of up each topic) from our LDA model(s) as a function of `sin_year` and `cos_year` in the `document_covariate_table`. We use `document_weights()` to weight the information from each time step according to the total number of rodents captured at that time step. ```{r ts on lda, eval = F} changepoint_models <- TS_on_LDA(LDA_models = selected_lda_model, document_covariate_table = rodents$document_covariate_table, formulas = ~ sin_year + cos_year, nchangepoints = c(0:1), timename = "newmoon", weights = document_weights(rodents$document_term_table), control = list(nit = 1000)) ``` We can adjust options (default settings can be seen using `TS_control()`) for both TS functions by passing a list to the `control` argument. For a full list see `?TS_control`. Here we illustrate adjusting the number of ptMCMC iterations - the default is 10000, but it is convenient to use fewer iterations for code development. Also, it is important to note that by default the TS functions take the name of the time-step column from the `document_covariate_table` to be `"time"`. To pass a different column name, use the `timename` argument in `TS_on_LDA()`. `select_TS()` will identify the best-fit changepoint model of the models from `TS_on_LDA()`. As with `select_LDA()`, we can adjust the `measurer` and `selector` functions using the `control` argument list. ```{r reload ts, include = F} load(file.path('.', 'rodents-example-files', 'changepoint_models.Rds')) ``` ```{r select ts} selected_changepoint_model <- select_TS(changepoint_models) ``` We can access the results of the selected changepoint model: ```{r cpt results} # Number of changepoints selected_changepoint_model$nchangepoints # Summary of timesteps (newmoon values) for each changepoint selected_changepoint_model$rho_summary # Raw estimates for timesteps for each changepoint # Changepoints are columns head(selected_changepoint_model$rhos) ``` LDATS will plot the results of a changepoint model: ```{r plot cpt, fig.width=7, fig.height=6} plot(selected_changepoint_model) ``` ## Full analysis with `LDA_TS` Finally, we can perform an entire LDATS analysis, including all of the above steps, using the `LDA_TS()` function and passing options to the LDA and TS functions as a `list` to the `control` argument. The default is for `LDA_TS` to weight the time series model based on the document sizes, so we do not need to tell it to do so. ```{r lda_ts, eval = F} lda_ts_results <- LDA_TS(data = rodents, nseeds = 10, topics = 2:5, formulas = ~ sin_year + cos_year, nchangepoints= 0:1, timename = "newmoon", control = list(nit = 1000)) ``` ```{r load ldats results, include = F} load(file.path('.', 'rodents-example-files', 'lda_ts_results.Rds')) ``` `LDA_TS()` returns a list of all the model objects, and we can access their contents as above: ```{r LDA_TS results} names(lda_ts_results) # Number of topics lda_ts_results$`Selected LDA model`$k@k # Number of changepoints lda_ts_results$`Selected TS model`$nchangepoints # Summary of changepoint locations lda_ts_results$`Selected TS model`$rho_summary ``` Finally, we can plot the `LDA_TS` results. ```{r plot LDA_TS results, fig.height = 16, fig.width = 7, echo = F} plot(lda_ts_results) ```