Chapter 4 Brief Introduction to STAN
The engine used for running the Bayesian analyses covered in this course is
STAN
, as well as the rstan
package that allows it to interface with R.
STAN
requires some programming from the users, but the benefit is that it
allows users to fit a lot of different kinds of models. The goal of this lecture
is not to make you an expert of STAN
; I myself only have used maybe just 1 or
2% of the power of STAN
. Instead, the goal is to give you a brief introduction
with some sample codes, so that you can study further by yourself, and estimate
models that no frequentist estimation exists yet.
4.1 STAN
STAN
(http://mc-stan.org/) is itself a programming language, just like R.
Strictly speaking it is not only for Bayesian methods, as you can actually do
penalized maximum likelihood and automatic differentiation; however, it is most
commonly used as an MCMC sampler for Bayesian analyses. It is written in C++,
which makes it much faster than R (R is actually quite slow as a computational
language). You can actually write a STAN
program without calling R or other
software, although eventually you may want to use statistical software to
post-process the posterior samples after running MCMC. There are interfaces of
STAN
for different programs, including R, Python, MATLAB, Julia, Stata, and
Mathematica, and for us we will be using the RStan
interface.
4.1.1 STAN
code
In STAN
, you need to define a model using the STAN
language. Below is
an example for the Poisson model, which is saved with the file name
"poisson_model.stan"
.
data {
int<lower=0> N; // number of observations
int<lower=0> y[N]; // data array (counts);
}
parameters {
real log_lambda; // log of rate parameter
}
model {
y ~ poisson_log(log_lambda);
// prior
log_lambda ~ normal(0, 5);
}
generated quantities {
real lambda = exp(log_lambda);
int yrep[N];
for (i in 1:N) {
yrep[i] = poisson_log_rng(log_lambda);
}
}
In STAN
, anything after //
denotes comments and will be ignored by the
program, and in each blocks (e.g., data {}
) a statement needs to be ended by a
semicolon (;
). There are several blocks in the above STAN
code:
data
: The data for input forSTAN
is usually not only a data set, but include other information, including sample size, number of predictors, and prior scales. Each type of data has an input type, such asint
= integer,real
= numbers with decimal places,matrix
= 2-dimensional data of real numbers,vector
= 1-dimensional data of real numbers, andarray
= 1- to many-dimensional data. For exampley[N]
is a one-dimensional array of integers. you can set the lower and upper bounds so thatSTAN
can check the input data
parameters
: The parameters to be estimatedtransformed parameters
: optional variables that are transformation of the model parameters. It is usually used for more advanced models to allow for more efficient MCMC sampling.model
: It includes definition of priors for each parameter, and the likelihood for the data. There are many possible distributions that can be used inSTAN
.generated quantities
: Any quantities that are not part of the model but can be computed from the parameters for every iteration. Examples include posterior generated samples, effect sizes, and log-likelihood (for fit computation).
4.2 RStan
STAN
is written in C++, which is a compiled language. This is different from
programs like R, which you can input a command and get results right away. In
contrast, a STAN
program needs to be converted to something that can be
executed in your computer. The benefit, however, is that the programs can be run
much faster after the compilation process.
To feed data from R to STAN
, and import output from STAN
to R, you will use
the rstan
package
(https://github.com/stan-dev/rstan/wiki/RStan-Getting-Started). Then, follow the
following steps:
We will continue with the red card example:
redcard_dat <- readr::read_csv("../data/redcard_data.zip") %>%
group_by(player) %>%
summarise(rater_dark = (mean(rater1) + mean(rater2)) / 2,
yellowCards = sum(yellowCards),
redCards = sum(redCards))
4.2.1 Assembling data list in R
First, you need to assemble a list of data for STAN
input, which should match
the specific STAN
program. In the STAN
program we define two components
(N
and y
) for data, so we need seven elements in an R list:
4.2.2 Call rstan
># Loading required package: StanHeaders
># rstan (Version 2.19.3, GitRev: 2e1f913d3ca3)
># For execution on a local, multicore CPU with excess RAM we recommend calling
># options(mc.cores = parallel::detectCores()).
># To avoid recompilation of unchanged Stan programs, we recommend calling
># rstan_options(auto_write = TRUE)
>#
># Attaching package: 'rstan'
># The following object is masked from 'package:tidyr':
>#
># extract
4.2.3 Summarize the results
After you call the stan
function in R, it will compile the STAN
program,
which usually takes a minute or so. Then it starts sampling. You can now see
a summary of the results by printing the results:
># Inference for Stan model: poisson_model.
># 4 chains, each with iter=2000; warmup=1000; thin=1;
># post-warmup draws per chain=1000, total post-warmup draws=4000.
>#
># mean se_mean sd 2.5% 25% 50% 75% 97.5% n_eff Rhat
># lambda 27.67 0 0.12 27.42 27.59 27.67 27.75 27.89 1156 1
># log_lambda 3.32 0 0.00 3.31 3.32 3.32 3.32 3.33 1155 1
>#
># Samples were drawn using NUTS(diag_e) at Fri Mar 6 10:07:20 2020.
># For each parameter, n_eff is a crude measure of effective sample size,
># and Rhat is the potential scale reduction factor on split chains (at
># convergence, Rhat=1).
And you can also use the shinystan
package to visualize the results:
4.3 Resources
STAN
is extremely powerful and can fit almost any statistical models, but the
price is that it takes more effort to code the model. To learn more about
STAN
, please check out http://mc-stan.org/documentation/ for the manual,
examples of some common models, and case studies (which includes more complex
models like item response theory). See
https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/rstan/vignettes/rstan.html for a
vignettes for working with the rstan
package.
As you see, fitting simple models in STAN
may sometimes be more work, but as
we go further we will use the brms
program that simplify the process for many
commonly used models, such as regression and multilevel models. On the other
hand, for truly complex models, STAN
is actually a lifesaver as it would be
extremely hard to fit some of those models with other approaches.