Skip to contents

All the tests were done on an Arch Linux x86_64 machine with an Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU (1.90GHz).

Empirical likelihood computation

We show the performance of computing empirical likelihood with el_mean(). We test the computation speed with simulated data sets in two different settings: 1) the number of observations increases with the number of parameters fixed, and 2) the number of parameters increases with the number of observations fixed.

Increasing the number of observations

We fix the number of parameters at p=10p = 10, and simulate the parameter value and n×pn \times p matrices using rnorm(). In order to ensure convergence with a large nn, we set a large threshold value using el_control().

library(ggplot2)
library(microbenchmark)
set.seed(3175775)
p <- 10
par <- rnorm(p, sd = 0.1)
ctrl <- el_control(th = 1e+10)
result <- microbenchmark(
  n1e2 = el_mean(matrix(rnorm(100 * p), ncol = p), par = par, control = ctrl),
  n1e3 = el_mean(matrix(rnorm(1000 * p), ncol = p), par = par, control = ctrl),
  n1e4 = el_mean(matrix(rnorm(10000 * p), ncol = p), par = par, control = ctrl),
  n1e5 = el_mean(matrix(rnorm(100000 * p), ncol = p), par = par, control = ctrl)
)

Below are the results:

result
#> Unit: microseconds
#>  expr        min          lq        mean      median          uq        max
#>  n1e2    450.840    487.4485    533.0952    524.1315    576.0635    659.008
#>  n1e3   1189.736   1422.4000   1545.3904   1516.6460   1635.3070   2767.607
#>  n1e4  10964.168  12684.0975  14798.1565  15097.9560  16296.4635  19574.591
#>  n1e5 176778.825 213032.0470 248072.9184 239734.9800 266711.7730 391766.340
#>  neval cld
#>    100 a  
#>    100 a  
#>    100  b 
#>    100   c
autoplot(result)
#> Warning: `aes_string()` was deprecated in ggplot2 3.0.0.
#>  Please use tidy evaluation idioms with `aes()`.
#>  See also `vignette("ggplot2-in-packages")` for more information.
#>  The deprecated feature was likely used in the microbenchmark package.
#>   Please report the issue at
#>   <https://github.com/joshuaulrich/microbenchmark/issues/>.
#> This warning is displayed once per session.
#> Call `lifecycle::last_lifecycle_warnings()` to see where this warning was
#> generated.

Increasing the number of parameters

This time we fix the number of observations at n=1000n = 1000, and evaluate empirical likelihood at zero vectors of different sizes.

n <- 1000
result2 <- microbenchmark(
  p5 = el_mean(matrix(rnorm(n * 5), ncol = 5),
    par = rep(0, 5),
    control = ctrl
  ),
  p25 = el_mean(matrix(rnorm(n * 25), ncol = 25),
    par = rep(0, 25),
    control = ctrl
  ),
  p100 = el_mean(matrix(rnorm(n * 100), ncol = 100),
    par = rep(0, 100),
    control = ctrl
  ),
  p400 = el_mean(matrix(rnorm(n * 400), ncol = 400),
    par = rep(0, 400),
    control = ctrl
  )
)
result2
#> Unit: microseconds
#>  expr        min          lq        mean      median          uq        max
#>    p5    716.094    787.9335    832.8968    811.1265    878.2915    950.340
#>   p25   2923.197   2987.3410   3097.0826   3062.2660   3113.0450   6325.586
#>  p100  23737.438  26320.5855  28674.2565  26780.1320  31323.4020  50279.641
#>  p400 272391.641 296403.3345 331842.7315 319247.3075 344874.6160 558702.566
#>  neval cld
#>    100 a  
#>    100 a  
#>    100  b 
#>    100   c
autoplot(result2)

On average, evaluating empirical likelihood with a 100000×10 or 1000×400 matrix at a parameter value satisfying the convex hull constraint takes less than a second.