1

I'm trying to estimate a multinom() model, and then grab the model data.frame.

Outside a function, this works fine. But when I try to do so within a function, the data.frame() step throws error.

Below is sample code that should isolate the problem:

library(MASS)
library(nnet)

# create data
df <- survey
df$Exer  <- relevel(df$Exer, ref="None")    

# estimate within wrapper function -- throws error
estimator <- function(fmla, data){  
  mod1 <- multinom(fmla, data)  
  mod1$mod <- model.frame(mod1,data)
  return(mod1)
}
x <- estimator(Exer~Sex+Smoke+Age, data=df)

The last line produces this:

 Error in stats::model.frame(formula = fmla, data = data) : 
  object 'fmla' not found  

When I run traceback(), I then get this:

6: stats::model.frame(formula = fmla, data = data)
5: eval(expr, envir, enclos)
4: eval(oc, env)
3: model.frame.multinom(mod1, data)
2: model.frame(mod1, data) at #3
1: estimator(Exer ~ Sex + Smoke + Age, data = df)

Is this a scoping issue? Are there workarounds?

1 Answer 1

1

Formulas track the environment in which they are created. Not all functions behave well when formulas have different environments than the data. A possible work-around would be

estimator <- function(fmla, data){  
  environment(fmla)<-environment()
  mod1 <- multinom(fmla, data)  
  mod1$mod <- model.frame(mod1,data)
  return(mod1)
}
x <- estimator(Exer~Sex+Smoke+Age, data=df)

where we explicitly change the environment of the formula to the local function environment. This gives me

# weights:  21 (12 variable)
initial  value 258.173888 
iter  10 value 215.870042
final  value 215.611365 
converged

Tested with R version 3.1.2, nnet_7.3-8, and MASS_7.3-35

1
  • Thank you, this works great. I'll need to read up on environments to understand it better. If you know of any good tutorials, resources, etc (beyond R source code/documentation) please let me know.
    – Chris
    Sep 1, 2015 at 20:29

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.