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Publication date: 04/21/2023

Image shown hereModel Reports

Use the options in the Models submenu in the Functional Data Explorer red triangle menu to fit models to your data. See Models for the available models. Each time you fit a different type of model to the data, a model report appears. Each model report contains the following reports:

Model Controls

Model Selection

Diagnostic Plots

Function Summaries

Coefficients

Random Coefficients by Function

Functional PCA

Image shown hereModel Controls

The Model Controls report enables you to define parameters of models to compare in the Model Selection report. The appearance of the Model Controls report depends on the type of model that is fit. Model Controls are not available for Wavelets models.

B-Spline and P-Spline Model Controls

When a B-Spline or P-Spline model is fit, you can specify the following parameters:

Number of Knots

Add, remove, or specify a range for the number of knots in each spline. The knots must be non-zero integers.

Note: The maximum number of knots allowed for B-Spline models is one less than the maximum number of observations per function or the number of unique inputs. The maximum number of knots allowed for P-Spline models is two less than the number of unique inputs. If you specify a number larger than the maximum, a warning message appears.

Spline Degree

Add or remove spline degree fits from the Model Selection report.

Fourier Basis Model Controls

When a Fourier Basis model is fit, you can specify the following parameters:

Number of Fourier Pairs

Add, remove, or specify a range for the number of Fourier pairs to compare.

Period

Change the period of the function.

After you specify the model controls, click Go to view the updated models in the Model Selection report.

Tip: To specify the Model Controls prior to fitting a model, press Shift, click the Functional Data Explorer red triangle, and select the desired model. See Models.

Image shown hereModel Selection

The Model Selection report contains an overall prediction plot, a grid of individual prediction plots, a solution path plot, and a table. The grid of individual prediction plots has the same layout and controls as the grid of individual plots in the Data Processing report. At most, there are twenty plots shown at a time. There are drop-down menus and arrows that enable you to view different groups of individual prediction plots.

The prediction plots show the raw data and prediction curves for the current model. If there is a validation set, the predicted curves are not shown for functions that are in the validation set. The curve in the overall prediction plot is a prediction of the mean curve. The curves in the individual prediction plots are prediction curves for each specific function. For B-Spline models, the overall prediction plot also displays the location of the knots. You can change the location of the knots by dragging the blue slider bars to different locations. To update the model reports according to the new knot locations, click the Update Models button. To reset the knots to their default locations, click the Reset Knots button.

For Wavelets models, there is also a Coefficients tab. This tab contains an overall coefficients plot and a grid of individual coefficients plots. The coefficients plots are made up of dashed lines that represent the relative importance of the coefficients within each resolution. The placement of the lines on the plot is determined by the input variable (horizontal axis) and the resolution number (vertical axis). These numbers are located in the column names of the Wavelets Coefficients table. For the individual plots, the color of each line on the plot is determined by the sign of the corresponding coefficient. Blue indicates positive coefficients and red indicates negative coefficients. The length of each line in the plot is determined by the coefficients. The length is the corresponding coefficient scaled by the largest absolute value coefficient within each resolution. Therefore, the largest coefficient has the longest line length and the lines get shorter as the coefficients get smaller. For the mean plot, the coefficients are averaged over each function. The color and length of each line is determined by the averaged and scaled coefficient.

Note: The Coefficients plots are available only for the best fitting wavelets model.

The appearance of the solution path plot and associated table depend on the model type.

B-Spline and P-Spline Models

The solution path plot shows a model selection criterion plotted over the defined number of knots. There is a separate solution path for each spline degree. The Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) is the default fitting criterion. Use the model red triangle option Model Selection to change the selection criterion. The current solution is designated by the dotted vertical line on the solution path plot. By default, the spline degree and number of knots selected corresponds to the model that has the smallest model selection criterion value. To change the current model selection, drag the slider at the top of a vertical line or click a specific spline in the solution path plot or legend. These actions automatically update the prediction plots in the Model Selection report, as well as the information in all other reports.

The table below the solution path plot is the Fit Statistics table, which contains information about the current solution model. It shows the number of knots, the spline degree, the -2 Log Likelihood, the values for the AICc, BIC, and GCV model fitting criteria, and a value for the response standard deviation. The response standard deviation is defined as the residual sigma from the fitted model. When a P-Spline model is selected, the penalty parameter λ (Lambda) is also displayed.

Fourier Models

The solution path plot shows a model selection criterion plotted across the number of Fourier pairs for a defined period. The Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) is the default fitting criterion. Use the model red triangle option Model Selection to change the selection criterion. The current solution is designated by the dotted vertical line in the solution path plot. By default, the slider is placed at the number of Fourier pairs that correspond to the model that has the smallest model selection criterion value. Drag the slider at the top of the dotted vertical line to change the number of Fourier pairs in the current model. Dragging the slider automatically updates the prediction plots in the Model Selection report, as well as the information in all other reports.

The table below the solution path plot is the Fit Statistics table, which contains information about the current solution model. It shows the number of Fourier pairs, the -2 Log Likelihood, the values for the AICc, BIC, and GCV model fitting criteria, and a value for the response standard deviation. The response standard deviation is defined as the residual sigma from the fitted model.

Wavelets Models

The solution path plot shows a model selection criterion plotted across the model number that defines the wavelets model. The Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) is the default fitting criterion. Use the model red triangle option Model Selection to change the selection criterion. The current model selection is designated by the dotted vertical line on the solution path plot. By default, the selected model is the model that has the smallest model selection criterion value.

The table below the solution path plot shows the model numbers, corresponding model names, and current model selection. This table is sorted by the model selection criterion, with the best fitting model at the top. Select different wavelets models by dragging the slider at the top of the dotted vertical line or by selecting a model directly in the table. Selecting a different model automatically updates the prediction plots in the Model Selection report, as well as the information in all other report.

Image shown hereDiagnostic Plots

The Diagnostic Plots report contains the Actual by Predicted plot and the Residual by Predicted plot. These plots help assess how well the current model fits the data. The Diagnostic Plots report is closed by default.

Image shown hereFunction Summaries

Displays summaries from the Functional PCA for each level of the ID variable. The functional principal components associated with eigenvalues that explain more than 1% variation in the data are displayed by default. The mean, standard deviation, median, minimum, maximum, integrated difference, root integrated square error (RISE), and root integrated function square (RIFS) are also shown. The integrated difference and RISE summary values are used to determine how much the ID specific function differs from the overall mean function. The RIFS summary value is used for optimal curve fitting. See Statistical Details for the Function Summaries Report.

Function Summaries Options

The Function Summaries red triangle menu contains the following options:

Customize Function Summaries

Displays a window that enables you to select the number of FPCs and the summary statistics that are shown in the Function Summaries report. If the number of FPCs to be shown is specified, the Functional PCA report is also updated. There is also a checkbox, Save Graphs, that determines whether a graph for each function is included in the data table produced by the Save Summaries option.

Note: The maximum number of FPCs that can be specified for B-Spline, P-Spline, or Fourier models is 10. For Wavelets models or Direct Functional PCA, the maximum number of FPCs that can be specified is 20.

Tip: If you have multiple functional processes, you can customize all Function Summaries reports to show the same summary values by clicking Ctrl and selecting Customize Function Summaries.

Save Summaries

Saves the summary statistics specified in the Function Summaries report to a new data table. The name of the new data table describes the model fit. This data table contains formula columns for the eigenfunctions, mean function, prediction function, and conditional prediction function. If the Save Graphs option is selected in the Customize Function Summaries window, there is also a column that contains the image of a graph of the raw data and the specified model fit for each function. In the data table, there is a profiler script that launches the prediction profilers for the prediction and conditional prediction formulas. These formulas are functions of the input variable, the ID variable, and the eigenfunctions.

Tip: For Wavelets models, the wavelet coefficients are also saved to the data table that is created using the Save Summaries option.

Control Chart Builder

Analyzes the functional principal components using the Control Chart Builder. An individual chart and Limit Summaries table is created for each functional principal component in the Function Summaries table. See “Control Chart Builder” in Quality and Process Methods.

Image shown hereCoefficients

Displays the estimated coefficients for the specified model.

For basis function models, the estimated basis function coefficients and their standard deviations are shown. These coefficients are common across all levels of the ID variable and are fixed estimates in the mixed model framework. To view standard errors and confidence intervals for the coefficients, right-click in the table and select Columns.

For Wavelets models, the estimated wavelet coefficients are shown for each level of the ID variable. There is a column for the father wavelet and then a series of columns for the remainder of the coefficients. Each coefficient column is identified by the corresponding resolution and location on the input domain. The coefficients table contains a sparse representation of the wavelet coefficients that is found using thresholding (Donoho, 1995).

Image shown hereRandom Coefficients by Function

Displays the estimated random coefficients for each basis function and functional process combination. These are unique to each level of the ID variable and are random effects estimates in the mixed model framework. The Random Coefficients by Function report is not show for wavelets models.

Image shown hereFunctional PCA

Functional principal components analysis (functional PCA) is performed on the fitted functional model. The Functional PCA report lists the eigenvalues that correspond to each functional principal component (FPC) in order from largest to smallest. The percent of variation accounted for by each FPC and the cumulative percent is listed and shown in a bar chart. There is a graph of the mean function as well as a graph for each shape function. These are the values of the eigenfunctions.

You can perform model selection in the Functional PCA report to refine the selected number of functional principal components. There is a solution path plot that shows the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) plotted versus the number of FPCs. The current number of FPCs is designated by the dotted vertical line in the solution path plot. It is possible that models with different numbers of FPCs might have similar fits. Therefore, the solution path plot provides zones, which are intervals of values of the BIC statistic. There is a green zone and a yellow zone. The green zone contains values in the interval of the minimum BIC to the minimum BIC plus four and the yellow zone contains values in the interval of the minimum BIC plus four to the minimum BIC plus 10. By default, the model with the smallest number of FPCs within the green zone is selected. You can drag the slider at the top of the vertical line to change the number of FPCs. Dragging the slider automatically updates the other information in the Functional PCA report.

Note: Narrow zones relative to the full y-axis scale may be difficult to view on your plot. Zoom in on the y-axis to better visualize the zones.

When Direct Functional PCA is performed, there is also an overall prediction plot and a grid of individual prediction plots. The grid of individual prediction plots has the same layout and controls as the grid of individual plots in the Data Processing report. At most, there are twenty plots shown at a time and there are drop-down menus and arrows that enable you to view different groups of individual prediction plots. Updating the number of FPCs automatically updates the prediction plots as well.

The prediction plots show the raw data and prediction curves that correspond to the current model. If there is a validation set, the predicted curves are not shown for functions that are in the validation set. The curve in the overall prediction plot is a prediction of the mean curve, given the specified number of FPCs. The curves in the individual prediction plots are prediction curves for each specific function, given the specified number of FPCs.

Note: The Functional PCA report is not shown if only a single function is modeled. Otherwise, if JMP is unable to perform Functional PCA, an error message appears in the Functional PCA report.

The following options are available in the Functional PCA red triangle menu:

Diagnostic Plots

Shows or hides the Actual by Predicted and the Residual by Predicted plots. Use these plots help assess how well the model fits the data, given the selected number of functional principal components.

Score Plot

Shows or hides a score plot of the FPC scores. Use the lists under Select Component to specify which FPCs are plotted on each axis of the Score Plot. If there is only one FPC, the FPC scores are plotted on the line y = x and the lists to change the components are not shown. Score plots are useful for detecting outliers. In the case of FPC scores, the Score Plot is useful for detecting levels of the ID variable that have outlier functions. If you select a point in the score plot, the FPC Profiler is set to the scores for that function.

Tip: Hover over a point in the score plot to view a prediction plot of the fitted curve for that level of the ID variable.

FPC Profiler

Shows or hides a profiler of the FPC scores. The FPC Profiler includes a column for the input variable and a column for each FPC score. If a target function is specified, there are additional button options above the profiler graphs. You can optimize the target function and show or hide the target profilers. If you select Show Target Profilers, two additional profilers are added to the report. One measures the difference from the target function, and the other measures the integrated error from the target function. For more information about FPC Profiler red triangle menu options, see Profiler in Profilers.

Tip: Use the Reset button to reset all of the FPC scores to 0 in the profiler.

Customize Number of FPC’s

Specifies the number of FPC scores to show in the Functional PCA. Specifying the number of FPC scores in this option also updates the Function Summaries report. To view the mean model, set the number of FPC’s to 0.

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