7

So, while lag and lead in dplyr are great, I want to simulate a timeseries of something like population growth. My old school code would look something like:

tdf <- data.frame(time=1:5, pop=50)
for(i in 2:5){
  tdf$pop[i] = 1.1*tdf$pop[i-1]
}

which produces

  time    pop
1    1 50.000
2    2 55.000
3    3 60.500
4    4 66.550
5    5 73.205

I feel like there has to be a dplyr or tidyverse way to do this (as much as I love my for loop).

But, something like

tdf <- data.frame(time=1:5, pop=50) %>%
  mutate(pop = 1.1*lag(pop))

which would have been my first guess just produces

  time pop
1    1  NA
2    2  55
3    3  55
4    4  55
5    5  55

I feel like I'm missing something obvious.... what is it?

Note - this is a trivial example - my real examples use multiple parameters, many of which are time-varying (I'm simulating forecasts under different GCM scenarios), so, the tidyverse is proving to be a powerful tool in bringing my simulations together.

4
  • 1
    I think the philosophy of dplyr is pretty rooted in data manipulation, not data creation. There probably is a dplyr way to do this somehow, but I wouldn't recommend it.
    – Curt F.
    Oct 17, 2016 at 21:15
  • I do a fair amount of dynamic modeling also of complex systems where rate of change depends on other parameters that also vary over time with other parameters that also vary with time... Sound similar to your case. While simple dynamics can be vectorised in R, once things get complex loops become the only realistic solution. But then speed can become very slow if you try to do these loops in R. My solution is typically to stick with loops, but do the intensive looping stuff in RCpp. R is great, but its not always the best for everything. Fortunately Rcpp takes the pain out of linking C++ to R
    – dww
    Oct 17, 2016 at 21:34
  • For this case, specifically, the issue is that lag() and lead() don't operate row-by-row, but just shift the index of the column by one. The new pop is just 1.1*c(NA, tdf$pop[-length(pop)].
    – Noam Ross
    Oct 17, 2016 at 21:40
  • I hear you, dww, but, in teaching, one can only go so far and cover so many topics! I think if I introduced RCpp, there might be a riot... Ha!
    – jebyrnes
    Oct 18, 2016 at 18:06

5 Answers 5

9

Reduce (or its purrr variants, if you like) is what you want for cumulative functions that don't already have a cum* version written:

data.frame(time = 1:5, pop = 50) %>%
    mutate(pop = Reduce(function(x, y){x * 1.1}, pop, accumulate = TRUE))

##   time    pop
## 1    1 50.000
## 2    2 55.000
## 3    3 60.500
## 4    4 66.550
## 5    5 73.205

or with purrr,

data.frame(time = 1:5, pop = 50) %>%
    mutate(pop = accumulate(pop, ~.x * 1.1))

##   time    pop
## 1    1 50.000
## 2    2 55.000
## 3    3 60.500
## 4    4 66.550
## 5    5 73.205
6
  • Yes! Although - one question (which is my lack of familiarity with purrr) - if I had multiple timevarying columns - say, gr as growth rate, how would that pass through to accumulate?
    – jebyrnes
    Oct 18, 2016 at 12:59
  • 2
    Assuming you're calculating each individually, use one of the other forms of mutate, i.e. mutate_all, mutate_if, or mutate_at, wrap the function in funs and replace the column name with ., e.g. mutate_all(funs(accumulate(., ~.x * 1.1)))
    – alistaire
    Oct 18, 2016 at 14:36
  • It's disturbing to me that only the first element of pop is needed yet the entire column is set to 50 and replaced. pop could just as well be c(50, 51, -32, 1, 2) or any other vector starting with 50 and you'd get the same result.
    – jtr13
    Nov 2, 2018 at 1:25
  • 1
    @jtr13 Yep. It's actually a reasonably efficient approach (absent vectorization), though, because adding the whole column correctly preallocates memory for Reduce's loop. Bigger picture, Reduce can handle binary functions, where one variable will be the inherited value, and the other (y above) will be the iterated value in the vector. The OP just didn't need that second variable here.
    – alistaire
    Nov 2, 2018 at 14:06
  • 1
    @OmarAbdEl-Naser Rcpp lets you run C++ from R, but doesn't contain lots of precompiled functions. So if you want to translate accumulate2 and your lambda to C++, it's likely faster. Writing it will not be.
    – alistaire
    Jul 23, 2019 at 23:11
5

If the starting value of pop is, say, 50, then pop = 50 * 1.1^(0:4) will give you the next four values. With your code, you could do:

data.frame(time=1:5, pop=50) %>%
  mutate(pop = pop * 1.1^(1:n() - 1))

Or,

base = 50

data.frame(time=1:5) %>%
  mutate(pop = base * 1.1^(1:n()-1))
1
  • 1
    that's nice, but the case where you can get an exact analytical solution is essentially trivial ... (yes, this is the example the OP gave, so it is a legitimate solution - just, I think, not that useful)
    – Ben Bolker
    Oct 17, 2016 at 21:09
5

Purrr's accumulate function can handle time-varying indices, if you pass them to your simulation function as a list with all the parameters in it. However, it takes a bit of wrangling to get this working correctly. The trick here is that accumulate() can work on list as well as vector columns. You can use the tidyr function nest() to group columns into a list vector containing the current population state and parameters, then use accumulate() on the resulting list column. This is a bit complicated to explain, so I've included a demo, simulating logistic growth with either a constant growth rate or a time-varying stochastic growth rate. I also included an example of how to use this to simulate multiple replicates for a given model using dpylr+purrr+tidyr.

library(dplyr)
library(purrr)
library(ggplot2)
library(tidyr)

# Declare the population growth function. Note: the first two arguments
# have to be .x (the prior vector of populations and parameters) and .y,
# the current parameter value and population vector. 
# This example function is a Ricker population growth model. 
logistic_growth = function(.x, .y, growth, comp) {
  pop = .x$pop[1]
  growth = .y$growth[1]
  comp  = .y$comp[1]
  # Note: this uses the state from .x, and the parameter values from .y.
  # The first observation will use the first entry in the vector for .x and .y
  new_pop = pop*exp(growth - pop*comp)
  .y$pop[1] = new_pop
  return(.y)
}

# Starting parameters the number of time steps to simulate, initial population size,
# and ecological parameters (growth rate and intraspecific competition rate)
n_steps  = 100
pop_init = 1
growth = 0.5
comp = 0.05

#First test: fixed growth rates
test1 = data_frame(time = 1:n_steps,pop = pop_init, 
                   growth=growth,comp =comp)


# here, the combination of nest() and group_by() split the data into individual 
# time points and then groups all parameters into a new vector called state.
# ungroup() removes the grouping structure, then accumulate runs the function
#on the vector of states. Finally unnest transforms it all back to a
#data frame
out1 = test1 %>%
  group_by(time)%>%
  nest(pop, growth, comp,.key = state)%>%
  ungroup()%>%
  mutate(
    state = accumulate(state,logistic_growth))%>%
  unnest()

# This is the same example, except I drew the growth rates from a normal distribution
# with a mean equal to the mean growth rate and a std. dev. of 0.1
test2 = data_frame(time = 1:n_steps,pop = pop_init, 
                   growth=rnorm(n_steps, growth,0.1),comp=comp)

out2 = test2 %>%
  group_by(time)%>%
  nest(pop, growth, comp,.key = state)%>%
  ungroup()%>%
  mutate(
    state = accumulate(state,logistic_growth))%>%
  unnest()

# This demostrates how to use this approach to simulate replicates using dplyr
# Note the crossing function creates all combinations of its input values
test3 = crossing(rep = 1:10, time = 1:n_steps,pop = pop_init, comp=comp) %>%
  mutate(growth=rnorm(n_steps*10, growth,0.1))

out3 = test3 %>%
  group_by(rep)%>%
  group_by(rep,time)%>%
  nest(pop, growth, comp,.key = state)%>%
  group_by(rep)%>%
  mutate(
    state = accumulate(state,logistic_growth))%>%
  unnest()

print(qplot(time, pop, data=out1)+
        geom_line() +
        geom_point(data= out2, col="red")+
        geom_line(data=out2, col="red")+
        geom_point(data=out3, col="red", alpha=0.1)+
        geom_line(data=out3, col="red", alpha=0.1,aes(group=rep)))
2

The problem here is that dplyr is running this as a set of vector operations rather than evaluating the term one at a time. Here, 1.1*lag(pop) is being interpreted as "calculate the lagged values for all of pop, then multiple them all by 1.1". Since you set pop=50 lagged values for all the steps were 50.

dplyr does have some helper functions for sequential evaluation; the standard function cumsum, cumprod, etc. work, and a few new ones (see ?cummean) all work within dplyr. In your example, you could simulate the model with:

tdf <- data.frame(time=1:5, pop=50, growth_rate = c(1, rep(1.1,times=4)) %>%
    mutate(pop = pop*cumprod(growth_rate))


time    pop     growth_rate
1       50.000  1.0
2       55.000  1.1
3       60.500  1.1
4       66.550  1.1
5       73.205  1.1

Note that I added growth rate as a column here, and I set the first growth rate to 1. You could also specify it like this:

tdf <- data.frame(time=1:5, pop=50, growth_rate = 1.1) %>%
    mutate(pop = pop*cumprod(lead(growth_rate,default=1))

This makes it explicit that the growth rate column refers to the rate of growth in the current time step from the previous one.

There are limits to how many different simulations you can do this way, but it should be feasible to construct a lot of discrete-time ecological models using some combination of the cumulative functions and parameters specified in columns.

2
  • Hrm - this is close, as one could incorporate other timevarying parameters in cumprod. But still not quite flexible for my end goal.
    – jebyrnes
    Oct 18, 2016 at 12:54
  • True, it's not that flexible. Also, after thinking on it, I realized it would be very difficult (maybe impossible) to add interactions, density-dependence, or nonlinear terms this way. I've used dplyr this way for simulating random walks, but that doesn't require interacting terms, since most of it is generating independent variables and aggregating. Oct 18, 2016 at 17:56
1

What about the map functions, i.e.

tdf <- data_frame(time=1:5)
tdf %>% mutate(pop = map_dbl(.x = tdf$time, .f = (function(x) 50*1.1^x)))
2
  • That's all well and good for a continuous time approximation, but, what if there are time varying parameters? Although I like that purrr is part of the solution here!
    – jebyrnes
    Oct 18, 2016 at 12:53
  • If you can capture the time varying aspect in a function you can easily apply the same logic or perhaps nest map functions.
    – biomiha
    Oct 18, 2016 at 16:11

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