Accompanying simulated data for "Go multivariate: recommendations on multilevel hidden Markov models with categorical data of varying complexity"
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-03-13 收录
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https://zenodo.org/record/6385196
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The multilevel hidden Markov model (MHMM) is a promising vehicle to investigate latent dynamics over time in social and behavioral processes. By including continuous individual random effects, the model accommodates variability between individuals, providing individual-specific trajectories and facilitating the study of individual differences. However, the performance of the MHMM has not been sufficiently explored. Currently, there are no practical guidelines on the sample size needed to obtain reliable estimates related to categorical data characteristics We performed an extensive simulation to assess the effect of the number of dependent variables (1-4), the number of individuals (5-90), and the number of observations per individual (100-1600) on the estimation performance of group-level parameters and between-individual variability on a Bayesian MHMM with categorical data of various levels of complexity. We found that using multivariate data generally alleviates the sample size needed and improves the stability of the results. Regarding the estimation of group-level parameters, the number of individuals and observations largely compensate for each other. Meanwhile, only the former drives the estimation of between-individual variability. We conclude with guidelines on the sample size necessary based on the complexity of the data and the study objectives of the practitioners.
This repository contains data generated for the manuscript: "Go multivariate: recommendations on multilevel hidden Markov models with categorical data of varying complexity". It comprehends: (1) model outputs (maximum a posteriori estimates) for each repetition (n=100) of each scenario (n=324) of the main simulation, (2) complete model outputs (including estimates for 4000 MCMC iterations) for two chains of each repetition (n=3) of each scenario (n=324). Please note that the empirical data used in the manuscript is not available as part of this repository. A subsample of the data used in the empirical example are openly available as an example data set in the R package mHMMbayes on CRAN. The full data set is available on request from the authors.
创建时间:
2022-03-26



