Suman Rakshit, Greg McSwiggan, Gopalan Nair, Adrian Baddeley
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Variable selection using penalised likelihoods for point patterns on a linear network
Motivated by the analysis of a comprehensive database of road traffic accidents, we investigate methods of variable selection for spatial point process models on a linear network. The original data may include explanatory spatial covariates, such as road curvature, and ‘mark’ variables attributed to individual accidents, such as accident severity. The treatment of mark variables is new. Variable selection is applied to the canonical covariates, which may include spatial covariate effects, mark effects and mark-covariate interactions. We approximate the likelihood of the point process model by that of a generalised linear model, in such a way that spatial covariates and marks are both associated with canonical covariates. We impose a convex penalty on the log likelihood, principally the elastic-net penalty, and maximise the penalised loglikelihood by cyclic coordinate ascent. A simulation study compares the performances of the lasso, ridge regression and elastic-net methods of variable selection on their ability to select variables correctly, and on their bias and standard error. Standard techniques for selecting the regularisation parameter γ often yielded unsatisfactory results. We propose two new rules for selecting γ which are designed to have better performance. The methods are tested on a small dataset on crimes in a Chicago neighbourhood, and applied to a large dataset of road traffic accidents in Western Australia.
期刊介绍:
The Australian & New Zealand Journal of Statistics is an international journal managed jointly by the Statistical Society of Australia and the New Zealand Statistical Association. Its purpose is to report significant and novel contributions in statistics, ranging across articles on statistical theory, methodology, applications and computing. The journal has a particular focus on statistical techniques that can be readily applied to real-world problems, and on application papers with an Australasian emphasis. Outstanding articles submitted to the journal may be selected as Discussion Papers, to be read at a meeting of either the Statistical Society of Australia or the New Zealand Statistical Association.
The main body of the journal is divided into three sections.
The Theory and Methods Section publishes papers containing original contributions to the theory and methodology of statistics, econometrics and probability, and seeks papers motivated by a real problem and which demonstrate the proposed theory or methodology in that situation. There is a strong preference for papers motivated by, and illustrated with, real data.
The Applications Section publishes papers demonstrating applications of statistical techniques to problems faced by users of statistics in the sciences, government and industry. A particular focus is the application of newly developed statistical methodology to real data and the demonstration of better use of established statistical methodology in an area of application. It seeks to aid teachers of statistics by placing statistical methods in context.
The Statistical Computing Section publishes papers containing new algorithms, code snippets, or software descriptions (for open source software only) which enhance the field through the application of computing. Preference is given to papers featuring publically available code and/or data, and to those motivated by statistical methods for practical problems.