The HPNLMOD Procedure

PROC HPNLMOD Statement

  • PROC HPNLMOD <options>;

The PROC HPNLMOD statement invokes the procedure. Table 56.1 summarizes important options in the PROC HPNLMOD statement by function. These and other options in the PROC HPNLMOD statement are then described fully in alphabetical order.

Table 56.1: PROC HPNLMOD Statement Options

Option

Description

Basic Options

DATA=

Specifies the input data set

OUT=

Specifies the output data set

Output Options

CORR

Specifies the correlation matrix

COV

Specifies the covariance matrix

ECORR

Specifies the correlation matrix of additional estimates

ECOV

Specifies the covariance matrix of additional estimates

DF

Specifies the default degrees of freedom

NOPRINT

Suppresses ODS output

NOITPRINT

Suppresses output about iterations within the optimization process

Optimization Options

ABSCONV=

Tunes an absolute function convergence criterion

ABSFCONV=

Tunes an absolute difference function convergence criterion

ABSGCONV=

Tunes the absolute gradient convergence criterion

FCONV=

Tunes the relative function convergence criterion

GCONV=

Tunes the relative gradient convergence criterion

MAXITER=

Chooses the maximum number of iterations in any optimization

MAXFUNC=

Specifies the maximum number of function evaluations in any optimization

MAXTIME=

Specifies the upper limit seconds of CPU time for any optimization

MINITER=

Specifies the minimum number of iterations in any optimization

TECHNIQUE=

Selects the optimization technique

Tolerance Options

SINGULAR=

Tunes the general singularity criterion

User-Defined Format Options

FMTLIBXML=

Specifies a file reference for a format stream

XMLFORMAT=

Specifies a file name for a format stream


You can specify the following options in the PROC HPNLMOD statement.

ABSCONV=r
ABSTOL=r

specifies an absolute function convergence criterion. For minimization, termination requires $f(\bpsi ^{(k)}) \leq \Argument{r} $, where $\bpsi $ is the vector of parameters in the optimization and $f(\cdot )$ is the objective function. The default value of $\Argument{r}$ is the negative square root of the largest double-precision value, which serves only as a protection against overflow.

ABSFCONV=r <n>
ABSFTOL=r<n>

specifies an absolute difference function convergence criterion. For all techniques except the Nelder-Mead simplex (NMSIMP) technique, termination requires a small change of the function value in successive iterations:

\[ |f(\bpsi ^{(k-1)}) - f(\bpsi ^{(k)})| \leq r \]

Here, $\bpsi $ denotes the vector of parameters that participate in the optimization, and $f(\cdot )$ is the objective function. The same formula is used for the NMSIMP technique, but $\bpsi {(k)}$ is defined as the vertex that has the lowest function value, and $\bpsi ^{(k-1)}$ is defined as the vertex that has the highest function value in the simplex. The default value is $\Argument{r}=0$. The optional integer value $\Argument{n}$ specifies the number of successive iterations for which the criterion must be satisfied before the process can be terminated.

ABSGCONV=r <n>
ABSGTOL=r<n>

specifies an absolute gradient convergence criterion. Termination requires the maximum absolute gradient element to be small:

\[ \max _ j |g_ j(\bpsi ^{(k)})| \leq r \]

Here, $\bpsi $ denotes the vector of parameters that participate in the optimization, and $g_ j(\cdot )$ is the gradient of the objective function with respect to the jth parameter. This criterion is not used by the NMSIMP technique. The default value is $\Argument{r}=$1E$-$5. The optional integer value $\Argument{n}$ specifies the number of successive iterations for which the criterion must be satisfied before the process can be terminated.

ALPHA=$\alpha $

specifies the level of significance $\alpha $ that is used in the construction of $100(1-\alpha )$% confidence intervals. The value must be strictly between 0 and 1; the default value of $\alpha =0.05$ results in 95% intervals. This value is used as the default confidence level for limits that are computed in the "Parameter Estimates" table and is used in the LOWER and UPPER options in the PREDICT statement.

CORR

requests the approximate correlation matrix for the parameter estimates.

COV

requests the approximate covariance matrix for the parameter estimates.

DATA=SAS-data-set

names the SAS data set to be used by PROC HPNLMOD. The default is the most recently created data set.

If PROC HPNLMOD executes in distributed mode, the input data are distributed to memory on the appliance nodes and analyzed in parallel, unless the data are already distributed in the appliance database. In the latter case, PROC HPNLMOD reads the data alongside the distributed database. For more information about the various execution modes, see the section Processing Modes in SAS/STAT 14.1 User's Guide: High-Performance Procedures; for more information about the alongside-the-database model, see the section Alongside-the-Database Execution in SAS/STAT 14.1 User's Guide: High-Performance Procedures.

DF=n

specifies the default number of degrees of freedom to use in the calculation of p-values and confidence limits for additional parameter estimates.

ECORR

requests the approximate correlation matrix for all expressions that are specified in ESTIMATE statements.

ECOV

requests the approximate covariance matrix for all expressions that are specified in ESTIMATE statements.

FCONV=r<n>
FTOL=r<n>

specifies a relative function convergence criterion. For all techniques except NMSIMP, termination requires a small relative change of the function value in successive iterations:

\[ \frac{|f(\bpsi ^{(k)}) - f(\bpsi ^{(k-1)})|}{|f(\bpsi ^{(k-1)})|} \leq r \]

Here, $\bpsi $ denotes the vector of parameters that participate in the optimization, and $f(\cdot )$ is the objective function. The same formula is used for the NMSIMP technique, but $\bpsi ^{(k)}$ is defined as the vertex that has the lowest function value, and $\bpsi ^{(k-1)}$ is defined as the vertex that has the highest function value in the simplex. The default is $\Argument{r}=10^{-\mr{FDIGITS}}$, where FDIGITS is by default $-\log _{10}\{ \epsilon \} $ and $\epsilon $ is the machine precision. The optional integer value $\Argument{n}$ specifies the number of successive iterations for which the criterion must be satisfied before the process can terminate.

FMTLIBXML=file-ref

specifies the file reference for the XML stream that contains the user-defined format definitions. User-defined formats are handled differently in a distributed computing environment than they are handled in other SAS products. For information about how to generate a XML stream for your formats, see the section Working with Formats in SAS/STAT 14.1 User's Guide: High-Performance Procedures.

GCONV=r<n>
GTOL=r<n>

specifies a relative gradient convergence criterion. For all techniques except the conjugate gradient (CONGRA) and NMSIMP techniques, termination requires that the normalized predicted function reduction be small:

\[ \frac{\mb{g}(\bpsi ^{(k)})^\prime [\bH ^{(k)}]^{-1} \mb{g}(\bpsi ^{(k)})}{|f(\bpsi ^{(k)})| } \leq r \]

Here, $\bpsi $ denotes the vector of parameters that participate in the optimization, $f(\cdot )$ is the objective function, and $\mb{g}(\cdot )$ is the gradient. For the CONGRA technique (where a reliable Hessian estimate $\bH $ is not available), the following criterion is used:

\[ \frac{\parallel \mb{g}(\bpsi ^{(k)}) \parallel _2^2 \quad \parallel \mb{s}(\bpsi ^{(k)}) \parallel _2}{\parallel \mb{g}(\bpsi ^{(k)}) - \mb{g}(\bpsi ^{(k-1)}) \parallel _2 |f(\bpsi ^{(k)})| } \leq r \]

This criterion is not used by the NMSIMP technique. The default value is $\Argument{r}=$1E$-$8. The optional integer value $\Argument{n}$ specifies the number of successive iterations for which the criterion must be satisfied before the process can terminate.

MAXFUNC=n
MAXFU=n

specifies the maximum number of function calls in the optimization process. The default values are as follows, depending on the optimization technique (which you specify in the TECHNIQUE= option):

  • TRUREG, NRRIDG, NEWRAP: $\Argument{n}=125$

  • QUANEW, DBLDOG: $\Argument{n}=500$

  • CONGRA: $\Argument{n}=1,000$

  • NMSIMP: $\Argument{n}=3,000$

Optimization can terminate only after completing a full iteration. Therefore, the number of function calls that are actually performed can exceed n.

MAXITER=n
MAXIT=n

specifies the maximum number of iterations in the optimization process. The default values are as follows, depending on the optimization technique (which you specify in the TECHNIQUE= option):

  • TRUREG, NRRIDG, NEWRAP: $\Argument{n}=50$

  • QUANEW, DBLDOG: $\Argument{n}=200$

  • CONGRA: $\Argument{n}=400$

  • NMSIMP: $\Argument{n}=1,000$

These default values also apply when $\Argument{n}$ is specified as a missing value.

MAXTIME=r

specifies an upper limit of $\Argument{r}$ seconds of CPU time for the optimization process. The default value is the largest floating-point double representation of your computer. This time that is specified by r is checked only once at the end of each iteration. Therefore, the actual running time can be longer than r.

MINITER=n
MINIT=n

specifies the minimum number of iterations. The default value is 0. If you request more iterations than are actually needed for convergence to a stationary point, the optimization algorithms can behave strangely. For example, the effect of rounding errors can prevent the algorithm from continuing for the required number of iterations.

NOITPRINT

suppresses the display of the "Iteration History" table.

NOPRINT

suppresses the generation of ODS output.

OUT=SAS-data-set

names the SAS data set to be created when one or more PREDICT statements are specified. A single OUT= data set is created to contain all predicted values when more than one PREDICT statement is specified. An error message is produced if a PREDICT statement is specified and an OUT= data set is not specified. For more information about output data sets in SAS high-performance analytical procedures, see the section Output Data Sets in SAS/STAT 14.1 User's Guide: High-Performance Procedures.

SINGULAR=number

tunes the general singularity criterion that is applied in sweeps and inversions. The default is $1\mr{E}4$ times the machine epsilon; this product is approximately 1E$-$12 on most computers.

TECHNIQUE=keyword
TECH=keyword

specifies the optimization technique for obtaining maximum likelihood estimates. You can choose from the following techniques by specifying the appropriate keyword:

CONGRA

performs a conjugate-gradient optimization.

DBLDOG

performs a version of double-dogleg optimization.

LEVMAR

performs a Levenberg-Marquardt optimization.

NEWRAP

performs a Newton-Raphson optimization that combines a line-search algorithm with ridging.

NMSIMP

performs a Nelder-Mead simplex optimization.

NONE

performs no optimization.

NRRIDG

performs a Newton-Raphson optimization with ridging.

QUANEW

performs a quasi-Newton optimization.

TRUREG

performs a trust-region optimization.

The default value is TECHNIQUE=LEVMAR for least squares regression models and TECHNIQUE=NRRIDG for models where the distribution is specified.

XMLFORMAT=filename

specifies the file name for the XML stream that contains the user-defined format definitions. User-defined formats are handled differently in a distributed computing environment than they are handled in other SAS products. For information about how to generate a XML stream for your formats, see the section Working with Formats in SAS/STAT 14.1 User's Guide: High-Performance Procedures.