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This function describes several functions that have been superseded or deprecated. They are kept here for compatibility with old code that used biogrowth. We recommend to migrate to the new version of the functions (they are linked within the help pages).
The biogrowth package includes the function
predict_isothermal_growth()
to make predictions under
static conditions. The calculations are based on primary models
(i.e. without secondary models). This function has 3 arguments:
model_name
: a character vector indicating the primary
model. Valid values are those returned by
primary_model_data
.times
: a numeric vector of storage times to make the
predictions.model_pars
: a named list defining the values of the
model parameters.check
: boolean specifying whether to make some validity
checks of model parameters (TRUE
by default).For instance, to make predictions using the modified Gompertz model we would define
This model has 4 model parameters: mu
,
lambda
, C
and logN0
(retrieved
using primary_model_data("modGompertz)
). All this
information must be defined in a list or named vector:
Finally, we have to define the storage times for which the prediction is calculated. For instance, we can define 1000 points uniformly distributed between 0 and 200.
Once we have defined the arguments, we can call the function
predict_isothermal_growth()
to get the model predictions.
This function makes several checks of the validity of the model
parameters before doing the calculations (they can be turned of passing
check = FALSE
).
This function returns an instance of IsothermalGrowth
with the results of the simulation. It has three items:
simulation
: A tibble with the results of the
simulation.model
: The name of the model used for making the
calculations.pars
: Vector of model parameters used for the
calculations.We can retrieve the results of the simulation from the
simulation
item
static_prediction$simulation
#> # A tibble: 1,000 × 2
#> time logN
#> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 0 2.00
#> 2 0.200 2.00
#> 3 0.400 2.00
#> 4 0.601 2.00
#> 5 0.801 2.00
#> 6 1.00 2.00
#> 7 1.20 2.00
#> 8 1.40 2.00
#> 9 1.60 2.00
#> 10 1.80 2.00
#> # ℹ 990 more rows
In order to ease interpretation, biogrowth includes a plot S3 method for this class.
The function uses gpplot, so it can be edited using layers as usual in the ggplot2 package. For instance,
plot(static_prediction) +
xlab("Storage time (h)") +
ylab("Microbial count (log CFU/ml)") +
theme_gray()
The function includes additional arguments to edit the aesthetics of
the plot. Please check the hepl page of
plot.IsothermalGrowth
for a full list of arguments.
The biogrowth package can also be used for
simulating growth under dynamic environmental conditions using the
predict_dynamic_growth()
function. For this, this function
combines primary and secondary growth models. It has 7 arguments:
times
: Numeric vector of time points for the
calculations.env_conditions
: A tibble describing the variation of
the environmental conditions.primary_pars
: A named list describing the model
parameters of the primary model.secondary_models
: A nested list defining the secondary
model(s)....
: Additional arguments passed to the numeric solver
of the differential equation.check
: Whether to do some validity checks of model
parameters (TRUE
by default).formula
: A one-sided formula
describing
the x variable in env_conditions
.The dynamic environmental conditions are defined using a tibble. It
must have a defining the elapsed time and as many additional columns as
needed for each environmental factor. By default, the column defining
the time must be called time
, although this can be changed
using the formula
argument. For the simulations, the value
of the environmental conditions at time points not included in
env_conditions
is calculated by linear interpolation.
In our simulation we will consider two environmental factors:
temperature and pH. We can define their variation using this tibble. To
illustrate the use of the formula
argument, we will use
Time
for the column describing the elapsed time.
Then, the simulations would consider this temperature profile
And this pH profile
We could define smoother profiles using additional rows. For
time points outside of the range defined in env_conditions
,
the value at the closes extreme is used (rule=2 from approx
function).
For dynamic conditions, biogrowth uses the Baranyi
growth model as primary model. This model requires the definition of two
model parameters: the specific growth rate at optimum conditions
(mu_opt
) and the maximum population size
(Nmax
). Moreover, the initial values of the population size
(N0
) and the theoretical substance \(Q\) (Q0
) must be defined. Note
that \(Q_0\) is related to the duration
of the lag phase under isothermal conditions by the identity \(\lambda = \ln \left( 1 + 1/q_0
\right)/\mu_{max}\). For the
predict_dynamic_growth()
function, they all must be defined
in a single list:
The next step is the definition of the secondary models. As already
described above, biogrowth describes the variation of
\(\mu\) with temperature based on the
gamma concept. Therefore, we need to define one secondary model per
environmental condition. This must be done using a list. We define a
list per environmental condition that defines the type of gamma model as
well as the model parameters. The function
secondary_model_data()
can aid in the definition of the
secondary models.
For instance, we will define a gamma-type model for temperature as
defined by Zwietering et al. (1992). This is done by including an item
called model
in the list and assigning it the value
"Zwietering"
. Then, we define the values of the model
parameters. In this case, we need the minimum (xmin
) and
optimum (xopt
) cardinal values, as well as the order of the
model (n
) (this information can be retrieved using
secondary_model_data
). We define them using individual
entries in the list:
Next, we will define a CPM model for the effect of pH. Note that the
model selection is for illustration purposes, not based on any
scientific knowledge. First of all, we need to set the item
model
to "CPM"
. Then, we need to define the
model parameters (note this model also needs xmax
).
The final step for the definition of the gamma-type secondary model
is gathering all the individual models together in a single list and
assigning them to environmental factors. Each element on the list must
be named using the same column names as in env_conditions
.
Before, we had used the column names temperature
and
pH
. Thus
The final argument is the time points where to make the calculations. We can use a numeric vector with 1000 points between 0 and 50 for this:
Once we have defined every argument, we can call the
predict_dynamic_growth()
function. Because we are using
Time
to define the elapsed time in
env_conditions
, we must also define the .~Time
in the formula argument.
dynamic_prediction <- predict_dynamic_growth(my_times,
my_conditions, my_primary,
my_secondary,
formula = . ~ Time)
This function returns a list of class DynamicGrowth
with
several items:
simulation
: A tibble with the results of the
simulation.gammas
: A tibble describing the variation of each gamma
factor through the simulation.env_conditions
: Environmental conditions used for the
simulations.primary_pars
: Primary model parameters used for the
simulations.sec_models
: Secondary model parameters used for the
simulations.The results of the simulation can be retrieved from the
simulation
item:
dynamic_prediction$simulation
#> # A tibble: 1,000 × 4
#> time Q N logN
#> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 0 0.001 1 0
#> 2 0.0501 0.001 1 0
#> 3 0.100 0.001 1 0
#> 4 0.150 0.001 1 0
#> 5 0.200 0.001 1 0
#> 6 0.250 0.001 1 0
#> 7 0.300 0.001 1 0
#> 8 0.350 0.001 1 0
#> 9 0.400 0.001 1 0
#> 10 0.450 0.001 1 0
#> # ℹ 990 more rows
We can also visualize the simulation using the S3 method for plot:
The argument add_factor
of the plot method can be used
to plot the variation of a single environmental factor through storage.
For that, one has to pass the name of the desired factor to the
function. Note that this name must be identical to the one used for the
columns in env_conditions
. For instance, we can add the
plot of temperature
The function includes several arguments to edit the aesthetics of the
plot. A list of every argument can be found in the help page of
plot.DynamicGrowth
. The function returns a
ggplot
object, so it can be further edited using
layers.
It is usually of interest to calculate the time required for the
population to reach a given size. The biogrowth package
includes the function time_to_logcount()
for this purpose.
This function has 2 arguments:
model
: A model returned by
predict_dynamic_growth()
or
predict_isothermal_growth()
.log_count
: target population size.For instance, we can use this function to estimate the time required to reach a population size of 2.5 log CFU/ml for the static prediction we did earlier:
Or the time required to reach 5 log CFU/ml in the dynamic prediction:
If the value of log_count
was outside the range of the
simulations, time_to_logcount
returns NA
:
Note that the calculations are based on linear interpolation of the simulated growth curve. Therefore, its accuracy is strongly dependent on the number of time points used for the simulation. It is recommended to plot the growth curve before doing this calculation. If the curve is not smooth in the area close to the target population size, the simulation should be repeated increasing the number of time points.
The function fit_isothermal_growth()
can be used to
estimate the parameters of primary growth models from data obtained
under static conditions. This function has 7 arguments:
fit_data
defines the data used for model fitting.model_name
defines the primary model to use (according
to primary_model_data()
).starting_point
defines the initial values of the model
parameters (according to primary_model_data()
).known_pars
defines parameters that are considered known
and are not fitted to the data....
can be used to pass additional arguments to the
modFit()
function from the FME package
(e.g. lower and upper bounds for the model parameters).check
states whether to make some validity checks of
the model parameters.formula
defines the names of the x and y variables of
the primary model.The data used for model fitting is defined using the
fit_data
argument. It must be a tibble with one column
defining the elapsed time (time
by default), and another
one defining the decimal logarithm of the population size
(logN
by default). For instance, we can use the following
tibble, where the elapsed time uses the default column name
(time
) and the logarithm of the population size uses the
name log_size
.
In case non-default names are used, they must be defined using the
formula
argument. The left handside of the equation defines
the y-variable, and the right handside the x-variable of the primary
model. For the tibble my_data
, it would be defined as
The primary model is defined using model_name
. For
instance, we will use the Baranyi model in this example:
The fit_isothermal_growth()
function uses non-linear
regression (through the modFit()
function of the
FME package), so it requires initial values for every
model parameter to fit. In the case of the Baranyi model, the model
parameters are: logN0
, mu
, lambda
and logNmax
(retrieved using
primary_model_data("Baranyi")
). The
fit_isothermal_growth()
function enables to fix any model
parameter before model fit using the known_pars
argument.
This can be of interest, as growth models usually have issues related to
parameter identifiability. For instance, we can fix the specific growth
rate to 0.2 (no particular reason for this, just as a demonstration)
And fit the remaining model parameters
Once every model parameter has been defined, we can call the
fit_isothermal_growth()
function. The fitting is done based
on the residuals of the logarithm of the population size.
This function returns a list of class FitIsoGrowth
with
several items:
data
: data used for model fittingmodel
: name of the primary modelstarting_point
: starting point used for model
fittingknown
: fixed model parametersfit
: object returned by modFit()
best_prediction
: an instance of
IsothermalGrowth
corresponding to the fitted model.The FitIsoGrowth
class includes several S3 methods to
help analyzing the results. The statistical information of the fit can
be retrieved using summary()
summary(static_fit)
#>
#> Parameters:
#> Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
#> logNmax 7.99600 0.06980 114.56 7.62e-05 ***
#> lambda 24.64154 0.74220 33.20 0.000906 ***
#> logN0 2.05084 0.09201 22.29 0.002007 **
#> ---
#> Signif. codes: 0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
#>
#> Residual standard error: 0.09879 on 2 degrees of freedom
#>
#> Parameter correlation:
#> logNmax lambda logN0
#> logNmax 1.00000 0.05788 0.01589
#> lambda 0.05788 1.00000 0.76437
#> logN0 0.01589 0.76437 1.00000
Besides summary
, it also includes methods for
residuals
, coef
, vcov
,
deviance
, fitted
and predict
to
analize the model.
It also includes a plot()
method to visually compare the
data and the fitted curve
The method accepts additional arguments to edit the aesthetics of the
plot. A complete list of arguments can be found in the help page of
plot. This plot can be edited passing additional arguments to
plot.FitIsoGrowth`.
Note this method returns an object of class ggplot
.
Hence, it can be edited using additional layers.
The function fit_dynamic_growth()
can be used to
estimate the parameters of both the primary and the secondary model
based on a growth experiment obtained under dynamic conditions. This
function has 8 arguments:
fit_data
: data used for model fitting.env_conditions
: variation of the environmental
conditions during the experiment.starting_point
: initial value of the model
parameters.known_pars
: known model parameters (i.e. not
fitted).sec_model_names
: type of secondary model for each
environmental factor....
: additional arguments passed to
modFit
.check
: whether to do some validity checks of the model
parameters (TRUE
by default).formula
: a formula
defining the x and y
variables of the primary model.The arguments env_conditions
and fit_data
are tibbles that describe, respectively, the experimental design and the
observations. The biogrowth package includes two
example datasets to illustrate the input requirements for this
function.
The tibble passed to the argument env_conditions
must
have a column defining the elapsed time (time
by default)
and as many additional columns as environmental factors. The
fit_dynamic_growth()
function is totally flexible with
respect to the number of factors or the way they are named. The only
requirement is that the definition of every argument is consistent. In
the case of example_env_conditions
, this dataset considers
two factors: temperature and water activity (aw
).
head(example_env_conditions)
#> # A tibble: 3 × 3
#> time temperature aw
#> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 0 20 0.99
#> 2 5 30 0.95
#> 3 15 35 0.9
Note that for the calculations this function joins the data points by linear interpolation, as shown in this plot:
The tibble passed to the argument fit_data
must have one
column defining the elapsed time (time
by default) and one
defining the logarithm of the population size (logN
by
default). Different column names can be defined using the
formula
argument. For instance,
formula=log_size ~ Time
would mean that the elapsed time is
called “Time” and the logarithm of the population size is called
“log_size”. Note that the name of the column describing the elapsed time
in fit_data
must be identical to the one in
env_conditions
.
head(example_dynamic_growth)
#> # A tibble: 6 × 2
#> time logN
#> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 0 0.0670
#> 2 0.517 -0.00463
#> 3 1.03 -0.0980
#> 4 1.55 -0.0986
#> 5 2.07 0.111
#> 6 2.59 -0.0465
The type of secondary model for each environmental factor is defined
by the argument sec_model_names
. This argument is a named
vector where the names refer to the environmental factor and the value
to the type of model. Supported models can be retrieved using
secondary_model_data()
. In this example we will use
cardinal models for both environmental factors. Note that the names of
this vector must be identical to the columns in
env_conditions
.
As already mentioned, growth models usually have to deal with
parameter identifiability issues. For that reason, the
fit_dynamic_growth()
function enables to fit or fix any
model parameter. This distinction is made using the arguments
known_pars
(fixed parameters) and
starting_point
(fitted parameters). Note that every
parameter of the primary and secondary model must be in either of these
arguments without duplication.
This function uses the Baranyi primary model. It has two variables
that need initial values (N0
and Q0
) and one
primary model parameter (Nmax
). The specific growth rate is
described using the gamma concept. This requires the definition of its
value under optimal conditions (mu_opt
) as well as the
cardinal parameters for each environmental factor. They must be defined
as factor
+_
+parameter name
. For
instance, the minimum water activity for growth must be written as
aw_xmin
.
In this example we will consider the model parameters of the primary
model as known. For the secondary model for water activity, we will only
consider the optimum value for growth as unknown. Finally, for the
effect of temperature, we will consider the order and xmax
are known:
known_pars <- list(Nmax = 1e4, # Nmax for primary model
N0 = 1e0, Q0 = 1e-3, # Initial values of the primary model
mu_opt = 4, # mu_opt of the gamma model
temperature_n = 1, temperature_xmax = 40, # Secondary model for temperature
aw_xmax = 1, aw_xmin = .9, aw_n = 1 # Secondary model for water activity
)
Then, the remaining model parameters must be defined in
starting_points
. Due to the use of non-linear regression
for model fitting, it is required to define initial values for these
parameters. They can be defined based on previous experience or
preliminary numerical simulations.
Once every model parameter has been defined, we can call the
fit_dynamic_growth()
function.
my_dyna_fit <- fit_dynamic_growth(example_dynamic_growth, example_env_conditions,
my_start,
known_pars,
sec_model_names)
The function does some checks of the validity of the model parameters
(can be turned off using check=FALSE
), raising errors if
the model definition does not follow the requirements of the functions.
If the fitting was successful, it returns an instance of
FitDynamicGrowth
with 7 items:
fit_results
: object returned by
modFit()
.best_prediction
: an instance of
DynamicGrowth
with the prediction corresponding to the
fitted model.data
: data used to fit the model.env_conditions
: data used to describe the environmental
conditions.starting
: starting values used for parameter
estimation.known
: model parameters considered known.sec_models
: type of secondary model for each
environmental factor.FitDynamicGrowth
includes an S3 method for summary that
returns the statistical information of the fit.
summary(my_dyna_fit)
#>
#> Parameters:
#> Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
#> temperature_xmin 26.43222 3.46804 7.622 3.38e-08 ***
#> temperature_xopt 33.85373 10.90575 3.104 0.00444 **
#> aw_xopt 0.99147 0.05579 17.773 < 2e-16 ***
#> ---
#> Signif. codes: 0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
#>
#> Residual standard error: 0.1478 on 27 degrees of freedom
#>
#> Parameter correlation:
#> temperature_xmin temperature_xopt aw_xopt
#> temperature_xmin 1.0000 -0.9897 0.9762
#> temperature_xopt -0.9897 1.0000 -0.9971
#> aw_xopt 0.9762 -0.9971 1.0000
Besides summary
, it also includes methods for
residuals
, coef
, vcov
,
deviance
, fitted
and predict
to
analyze the fitted model. Moreover, it includes a plo
method to compare the model predictions against the data used for the
fit:
The variation of the environmental factor can be plotted alongside
the previous plot. For that, the name of the environmental factor must
be passed to add_factor
. Note that the value passed must be
identical to the one defined in the previous arguments. The function
provides additional arguments to edit the aesthetics of the plot (a full
list can be retrieved from the help page of
plot.FitDynamicGrowth
). The function returns an instance of
ggplot
, so it can be edited using additional layers.
The function fit_multiple_growth()
can be used to fit
one growth model to data gathered in various experiments performed under
dynamic conditions. It has several arguments:
starting_point
starting values of the model parameters
to fit.experiment_data
a nested list describing the
experimental data and environmental conditions.known_pars
vector of parameters that are fixed
(i.e. not fitted).sec_model_names
definition of the secondary models for
each condition....
additional arguments passed to
FME::modFit
.check
whether to do validity checks of the model
parameters (TRUE
by default).formula
defines the x and y variables of the primary
model.The data to use for the fit is described using the
experiment_data
argument. It is a nested list with as many
elements as experiments. The dataset multiple_experiments
serves as a convenient example for this function.
Each experiment is described using a list with two elements:
data
and conditions
. The element
data
describe the observed variation in the population size
using the same convention as fit_data
in
fit_dynamic_growth()
.
The element conditions
describes the (dynamic)
environmental conditions during storage. It follows the same
requirements as env_conditions
in
fit_dynamic_growth()
. Although the function is flexible
regarding the number of environmental factors or the column names, they
must be consistent for every element in the list.
As already mentioned, for every simulation, the values of environmental conditions at times not included in the data frame are calculated by linear interpolation, as illustrated in the next plot.
multiple_experiments[[1]]$conditions %>%
pivot_longer(-time, names_to = "condition", values_to = "value") %>%
ggplot() +
geom_line(aes(x = time, y = value)) +
facet_wrap("condition", scales = "free")
The secondary models are defined using sec_model_names
,
following the same convention as in
predict_dynamic_growth()
. This argument is a named vector
whose names are identical to those in the experimental data and whose
values corresponds to valid identifiers according to
seccondary_model_data()
. For this example, we will use a
CPM model for both pH and temperature (for no particular scientific
reason).
The next step is the definition of model parameters. This is done
using the starting_point
(for parameters to estimate) and
known_pars
(for known parameters) arguments, which are
lists. Every parameter of both the primary and secondary models must be
included in either of these arguments. The format for parameter
definition is identical to the one of
fit_dynamic_inactivation
.
For this example, we will only fit the maximum specific growth rate and the optimum temperature for growth (for no particular scientific reason).
known <- list(Nmax = 1e8, N0 = 1e0, Q0 = 1e-3,
temperature_n = 2, temperature_xmin = 20, temperature_xmax = 35,
pH_n = 2, pH_xmin = 5.5, pH_xmax = 7.5, pH_xopt = 6.5)
start <- list(mu_opt = .8, temperature_xopt = 30)
Once every argument has been defined, we can call the
fit_multiple_growth()
function. To aid convergence, we will
define upper and lower limits for the parameter estimates (see the help
page of modFit
).
global_fit <- fit_multiple_growth(start, multiple_experiments, known, sec_names,
lower = c(.5, 25),
upper = c(1, 33))
This function does several validity checks of the model parameters
(can be turned off passing check=FALSE
), raising errors if
there is any mismatch between the model definition and the requirements
of the functions. If the fit was successful, it returns an instance of
FitMultipleDynamicGrowth
with several elements.
fit_results
: object returned by
modFit
.best_prediction
: instance of DynamicGrowth
with the prediction of the fitted model.data
: data used for model fitting.starting
: starting guesses of the model
parameters.known
: fixed model parameters.sec_models
: names of the secondary models for each
factor.It includes several S3 methods for visualization and statistical
analysis. The statistical information can be accessed using
summary
summary(global_fit)
#>
#> Parameters:
#> Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)
#> mu_opt 0.54196 0.01222 44.35 <2e-16 ***
#> temperature_xopt 30.62395 0.18727 163.53 <2e-16 ***
#> ---
#> Signif. codes: 0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
#>
#> Residual standard error: 0.4282 on 48 degrees of freedom
#>
#> Parameter correlation:
#> mu_opt temperature_xopt
#> mu_opt 1.0000 0.8837
#> temperature_xopt 0.8837 1.0000
Besides summary
, it includes methods for
residuals
, coef
, vcov
,
deviance
, fitted
and predict
.
Moreover, the predictions of the fitted model can be compared against
the data using plot
.
This function generates an individual plot for each experiment. Any
environmental factor can be included in the plot by passing the name of
the factor to the add_factor
argument. Note that the name
must be identical to the one used for model definition.
The function includes additional arguments to edit several aesthetics
of the plot. A full list of arguments can be found in the help page of
plot.FitDynamicGrowth
. The function returns an object of
class ggplot
, so it can be edited further using additional
layers.
Numerical algorithms based on Markov Chains have been suggested as an
alternative to non-linear regression for dynamic models. For that
reason, biogrowth includes the function
fit_MCMC_growth()
that uses the interface included in the
FME package to the Adaptive Monte Carlo algorithm by
Haario et al. (2006). The arguments and the requirements of this
function are identical to those of fit_dynamic_growth()
.
The only difference is that this function has the additional argument
niter
, which defines the number of samples from the Markov
Chain. Hence, we will repeat the previous code to define the model
parameters and the data.
data("example_dynamic_growth")
data("example_env_conditions")
sec_model_names <- c(temperature = "CPM",
aw= "CPM")
known_pars <- list(Nmax = 1e4, # Primary model
N0 = 1e0, Q0 = 1e-3, # Initial values of the primary model
mu_opt = 4, # mu_opt of the gamma model
temperature_n = 1, temperature_xmax = 40, # Secondary model for temperature
aw_xmax = 1, aw_xmin = .9, aw_n = 1 # Secondary model for water activity
)
my_start <- list(temperature_xmin = 25,
temperature_xopt = 35,
aw_xopt = .95)
Then, we can call the fit_MCMC_growth()
using these
arguments plus the argument niter
that we will set to
100.
my_MCMC_fit <- fit_MCMC_growth(example_dynamic_growth, example_env_conditions,
my_start,
known_pars,
sec_model_names,
niter = 100)
#> number of accepted runs: 11 out of 100 (11%)
This function returns an instance of
FitDynamicGrowthMCMC
with 7 entries:
fit_results
: object returned by
modMCMC()
.best_prediction
: an instance of
DynamicGrowth
with the prediction corresponding to the
fitted model.env_conditions
: a tibble with the environmental
conditions used for the simulations.data
: data used to fit the model.starting
: starting values used for parameter
estimation.known
: model parameters considered known.sec_models
: type of secondary model for each
environmental factor.This class implements several S3 methods to aid in the the
visualization of the results. A call to summary()
returns
the statistics of the Markov Chain.
summary(my_MCMC_fit)
#> temperature_xmin temperature_xopt aw_xopt
#> mean 28.593017 29.18511 0.95229867
#> sd 1.153866 2.75905 0.04211481
#> min 25.000000 23.98215 0.89319936
#> max 30.014105 35.00000 1.00398728
#> q025 27.525191 27.13896 0.90590805
#> q050 28.151510 29.99620 0.97542279
#> q075 29.750979 30.80494 0.98933934
Moreover, it includes methods for residuals
,
coef
, vcov
, deviance
,
fitted
and predict
. It also includes a
plot
method to compare the data against the fitted
model.
As well as for fit_dynamic_growth()
, the environmental
conditions can be added to the plot using the add_factor
argument. Other aesthetics can be edited passing additional arguments to
plot
(a full list can be found in the help page of
plot.FitDynamicGrowthMCMC
).
Following the same logic as with the fit_MCMC_growth()
function, fit_multiple_growth_MCMC()
serves as an
alternative to fit_multiple_growth()
that uses an MCMC
fitting algorithm instead of non-linear regression. The arguments of
this function are identical to those of
fit_multiple_growth()
with the addition of
niter
, which defines the number of iterations from the MCMC
sample.
Therefore, the definition of the data to use for the fit is identical.
As well as the model definition.
## For each environmental factor, we need to defined a model
sec_names <- c(temperature = "CPM", pH = "CPM")
## Any model parameter can be fixed
known <- list(Nmax = 1e8, N0 = 1e0, Q0 = 1e-3,
temperature_n = 2, temperature_xmin = 20, temperature_xmax = 35,
pH_n = 2, pH_xmin = 5.5, pH_xmax = 7.5, pH_xopt = 6.5)
## The rest require starting values for model fitting
start <- list(mu_opt = .8, temperature_xopt = 30)
Then, the function can be called. Note that the MCMC algorithm is
stochastic, so we will set the seed before fitting to grant
reproducibility. Additionally, we will define upper and lower bounds for
this function by passing the arguments lower
and
upper
to modMCMC
. For further ways to edit the
fitting, please check the help page of modMCMC()
.
set.seed(12412)
global_MCMC <- fit_multiple_growth_MCMC(start, multiple_experiments, known, sec_names,
niter = 100,
lower = c(.2, 29), # lower limits of the model parameters
upper = c(1.6, 34)) # upper limits of the model parameters
#> number of accepted runs: 14 out of 100 (14%)
This function returns a list of class
FitMultipleDynamicGrowthMCMC
with the same entries as
FitMultipleDynamicGrowth
. It also implements S3 methods to
inspect the parameter estimates
summary(global_MCMC)
#> mu_opt temperature_xopt
#> mean 0.54824071 30.3830315
#> sd 0.08199758 0.7297392
#> min 0.45625004 29.0379803
#> max 0.80000000 33.1855454
#> q025 0.47736567 29.6356637
#> q050 0.51539399 30.0434791
#> q075 0.57479388 31.1219113
Or to plot the predictions of the fitted model against the data.
Any environmental factor can be included in the plot using the
add_factor
argument. Also, the aesthetics of the plot can
be edited passing additional arguments to plot
(see the
help page of plot.FitMultipleGrowthMCMC
).
The function predict_MCMC_growth()
makes stochastic
predictions based on parameter distributions estimated using
fit_MCMC_growth()
or
fit_multiple_growth_MCMC()
. This function has 5
arguments:
MCMCfit
an instance of
FitDynamicGrowthMCMC
returned by
fit_MCMC_growth()
, or an instance of
FitMultipleGrowthMCMC
returned by
fit_multiple_growth_MCMC()
.times
vector of time points for the calculations.env_conditions
tibble describing the (dynamic)
environmental conditions.niter
number of samples for the Monte Carlo
calculations.newpars
can be used to use different parameter values
to those used for model fitting.For this first example, we will use the same data we used previously
to illustrate the use of the fit_MCMC_growth()
function.
The environmental conditions were defined by
example_env_conditions
example_env_conditions
#> # A tibble: 3 × 3
#> time temperature aw
#> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 0 20 0.99
#> 2 5 30 0.95
#> 3 15 35 0.9
This function estimates the credible intervals based on the quantiles of the predicted population size at each time point. Hence, their precision depends on the number of time points and the number of simulations. If the number of time points is too low, the prediction interval would not be “smooth”. On the other hand, if the number of simulations is too low, the credible interval would vary between repetitions of the same calculation.
As an example, we will use 5 time points uniformly distributed between 0 and 15
and 100 iterations.
Once we have defined every argument, we can call the
predict_MCMC_growth()
function.
This function returns an instance of MCMCgrowth
with 5
entries:
sample
a tibble with the sample of model parameters
used for the simulations.simulations
a tibble with the results of every
individual simulation used.quantiles
a tibble providing the calculated quantiles
(5th, 10th, 50th, 90th, 95th) of the population size for each time
point.model
the instance of FitDynamicGrowthMCMC
used for the predictions.env_conditions
a tibble with the environmental
conditions of the simulations.Hence, the quantiles at each time point can be retrieved from
quantiles
my_MCMC_prediction$quantiles
#> # A tibble: 5 × 7
#> time q50 q10 q90 q05 q95 m_logN
#> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
#> 2 3.75 0 0 0.0000112 0 0.0000112 0.0000280
#> 3 7.5 2.46 1.30 3.23 1.30 3.26 2.23
#> 4 11.2 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00
#> 5 15 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 4 4.00
This class implements an S3 method for plot
to visualize
the prediction interval.
In this plot, the solid line represents the median of the simulations, whereas the two shaded areas represent the space between the 10th and 90th, and 5th and 95th quantiles. As shown in this plot, the prediction interval is far from smooth. The reason for that is the low number of time points used for the calculations. Consequently, we will repeat them using 100 time points instead of 5:
better_prediction <- predict_MCMC_growth(my_MCMC_fit,
seq(0, 15, length = 100),
example_env_conditions,
niter)
If we visualize the new prediction interval
it is now smoother. However, the prediction interval is still odd. Even if it is smooth, there are several inflection points that are hard to justify based on the model equations. They are the result of the low number of Monte Carlo samples used for the simulations. Hence, this number should be increased to obtain reliable intervals (not done in this vignette due to excessive compilation time).
By default, the predict_MCMC_growth
function uses every
parameter value estimated from the fit. This can be a limitation for
simulations. For instance, the initial population size of a population
of pathogenic species in an experiment is much higher than the one
usually found in a food product. Also, it could be of interest to
disregard the uncertainty of one parameter estimate. For that reason,
the function includes the newpars
argument, which can be
used to assign a value (disregarding uncertainty) to one or more
parameters. For instance, we could define an initial population size of
10, and a \(aw_{opt}\) of 0.96.
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.