humanleague is a python and an R package for microsynthesising populations from marginal and (optionally) seed data. The package is implemented in C++ for performance.
The package contains algorithms that use a number of different microsynthesis techniques:
- Iterative Proportional Fitting (IPF)
- Quasirandom Integer Sampling (QIS) (no seed population)
- Quasirandom Integer Sampling of IPF (QISI): A combination of the two techniques whereby the integral population is sampled (without replacement) from a distribution constructed from a dynamic IPF solution.
The latter provides a bridge between deterministic reweighting and combinatorial optimisation, offering advantages of both techniques:
- generates high-entropy integral populations
- can be used to generate multiple populations for sensitivity analysis
- goes some way to address the 'empty cells' issues that can occur in straight IPF
- relatively fast computation time
The algorithms:
- support arbitrary dimensionality* for both the marginals and the seed.
- produce statistical data to ascertain the likelihood/degeneracy of the population (where appropriate).
The package also contains the following utility functions:
- a Sobol sequence generator
- construct a closest integer population from a discrete univariate probability distribution.
- an algorithm for sampling an integer population from a discrete multivariate probability distribution, constrained to the marginal sums in every dimension (see below).
- 'flatten' a multidimensional population into a table: this converts a multidimensional array containing the population count for each state into a table listing individuals and their characteristics.
Version 1.0.1 reflects the work described in the Quasirandom Integer Sampling (QIS) paper.
Requires Python 3.5 or newer.
python3 -m pip install humanleague --user
conda install -c conda-forge humanleague
python setup.py install --user
python setup.py test
Official release:
> install.packages("humanleague")
For a development version
> devtools::install_github("virgesmith/humanleague")
Or, for the legacy version
> devtools::install_github("virgesmith/[email protected]")
Consult the package documentation, e.g.
> library(humanleague)
> ?humanleague
See here, or
>>> import humanleague as hl
>>> help(hl)
Building on the prob2IntFreq
function - which takes a discrete probability distribution and a count, and returns the closest integer population to the distribution that sums to the count - a multidimensional equivalent integerise
is introduced.
In one dimension, for example:
>>> import numpy as np
>>> import humanleague
>>> p=np.array([0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4])
>>> humanleague.prob2IntFreq(p, 11)
{'freq': array([1, 2, 3, 5]), 'rmse': 0.3535533905932736}
produces the optimal (i.e. closest possible) integer population to the discrete distribution.
The integerise
function generalises this problem and applies it to higher dimensions: given an n-dimensional array of real numbers where the 1-d marginal sums in every dimension are integral (and thus the total population is too), it attempts to find an integral array that also satisfies these constraints.
The QISI algorithm is repurposed to this end. As it is a sampling algorithm it cannot guarantee that a solution is found, and if so, whether the solution is optimal. If it fails this does not prove that a solution does not exist for the given input.
>>> a = np.array([[ 0.3, 1.2, 2. , 1.5],
[ 0.6, 2.4, 4. , 3. ],
[ 1.5, 6. , 10. , 7.5],
[ 0.6, 2.4, 4. , 3. ]])
# marginal sums
>> sum(a)
array([ 3., 12., 20., 15.])
>>> sum(a.T)
array([ 5., 10., 25., 10.])
# perform integerisation
>>> r = humanleague.integerise(a)
>>> r["conv"]
True
>>> r["result"]
array([[ 0, 2, 2, 1],
[ 0, 3, 4, 3],
[ 2, 6, 10, 7],
[ 1, 1, 4, 4]])
>>> r["rmse"]
0.5766281297335398
# check marginals are preserved
>>> sum(r["result"]) == sum(a)
array([ True, True, True, True])
>>> sum(r["result"].T) == sum(a.T)
array([ True, True, True, True])