Artículos de revistas
Robust linear mixed models with normal/independent distributions and Bayesian MCMC implementation
Fecha
2003-01-01Registro en:
Biometrical Journal, v. 45, n. 5, p. 573-590, 2003.
0323-3847
10.1002/bimj.200390034
2-s2.0-0042570344
8727897080522289
Autor
Michigan State University
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW)
Institución
Resumen
Linear mixed effects models have been widely used in analysis of data where responses are clustered around some random effects, so it is not reasonable to assume independence between observations in the same cluster. In most biological applications, it is assumed that the distributions of the random effects and of the residuals are Gaussian. This makes inferences vulnerable to the presence of outliers. Here, linear mixed effects models with normal/independent residual distributions for robust inferences are described. Specific distributions examined include univariate and multivariate versions of the Student-t, the slash and the contaminated normal. A Bayesian framework is adopted and Markov chain Monte Carlo is used to carry out the posterior analysis. The procedures are illustrated using birth weight data on rats in a texicological experiment. Results from the Gaussian and robust models are contrasted, and it is shown how the implementation can be used for outlier detection. The thick-tailed distributions provide an appealing robust alternative to the Gaussian process in linear mixed models, and they are easily implemented using data augmentation and MCMC techniques.