Comparing results and performance of NIPALS functions in R

Kevin Wright

2017-10-27

There are at least 5 R packages with a function for performing NIPALS on a matrix that contains missing values: >>>>>>> empca

  1. ade4::nipals
  2. mixOmics::nipals
  3. nipals::nipals
  4. plsdepot::nipals
  5. pcaMethods::nipalsPca and pcaMethods::RnipalsPca.

These functions have slightly different scalings for the returned values, and were written with different coding styles. With careful attention to some of the scaling details of the returned values, packages 1-4 produce the same results. However, there are dramatic differences in speed. (Number 5 was added to the list later and is not included in the comparisons).

There are other R packages with a NIPALS function that do NOT allow missing values (which are not considered here):

  1. mvdalab::pca.nipals

Example data

A small dataset with 2 missing values in the first column will be used to compare the numerical results from the 4 packages.

B <- matrix(c(50, 67, 90, 98, 120,
             55, 71, 93, 102, 129,
             65, 76, 95, 105, 134,
             50, 80, 102, 130, 138,
             60, 82, 97, 135, 151,
             65, 89, 106, 137, 153,
             75, 95, 117, 133, 155), ncol=5, byrow=TRUE)
rownames(B) <- c("G1","G2","G3","G4","G5","G6","G7")
colnames(B) <- c("E1","E2","E3","E4","E5")
 
B2 = B
B2[1,1] = B2[2,1] = NA
B2 <- as.matrix(B2)

same <- function(a,b, tol=1e-3){
  all.equal( abs(a), abs(b), tol=tol, check.attributes=FALSE)
}

Since principal components are only unique up to a change of sign, a small function same() has been defined to take absolute values before calling all.equal. The same() function will be used to compare results from the different functions. In the next 3 sections, the results from the nipals package are compared to the ade4, plsdepot, and mixOmics packages respectively.

ade4

The ade4 package uses a maximum-likelihood scaling of the data which divides by n instead of n-1, so we need to scale the data by hand before using the nipals package. Note: only for ade4 version >= 1.7-10.

library(ade4)
made <- ade4::nipals(B2, nf=5, rec=TRUE, niter=500, tol=1e-9)

B2a <- apply(B2, 2, function(x) {
  n <- sum(!is.na(x))
  x <- x - mean(x, na.rm=TRUE)
  x <- x / ( sd(x, na.rm=TRUE) * sqrt((n-1) / n ))
})

mnip <- nipals::nipals(B2a, ncomp=5, center=FALSE, scale=FALSE, 
                       fitted=TRUE, maxiter=500, tol=1e-9, gramschmidt=FALSE)

The eigenvalues reported by ade4 are the squared singular values divided by \(n-1\).

# data
same(B2a, as.matrix(made$tab))
# TRUE

# eigenvalues, ade4 uses squared singular values / n-1
mnip$eig
# [1] 5.2913781 2.2555596 1.1651281 0.2590878 0.1563175
made$eig
# [1] 4.666454778 0.847924398 0.226254436 0.011187921 0.004072542
same(mnip$eig ^ 2 / (nrow(B2a)-1), made$eig)
# TRUE

# P loadings
same(mnip$loadings, made$c1)
# TRUE

# T scores. For nipals, sweep IN the eigenvalues
same( sweep(mnip$scores, 2, mnip$eig, "*"), made$li)
# TRUE

plsdepot

library(plsdepot)
mpls <- plsdepot::nipals(B2, comps=5)
library(nipals)
mnip <- nipals::nipals(B2a, ncomp=5, maxiter=100, tol=1e-6, gramschmidt=FALSE)

The plsdepot package reports squared singular values.

# eigenvalues
mnip$eig
# [1] 4.8762167 2.0442757 1.0728055 0.2369607 0.1432779
mpls$values[,1]
# [1] 3.963172007 0.696484184 0.191839875 0.009366425 0.003421661
same(mnip$eig, sqrt(mpls$values[,1] * 6) )
# TRUE

# P loadings
mnip$loadings
mpls$loadings
same(mnip$loadings, mpls$loadings, tol=1e-2 )
# TRUE

# T scores
mnip$scores
mpls$scores
same( sweep(mnip$scores, 2, mnip$eig, "*"), mpls$scores)
# TRUE

mixOmics

library(mixOmics)
library(nipals)
mnip <- nipals::nipals(B2, gramschmidt=FALSE)
mmix <- mixOmics::nipals(scale(B2), ncomp=5)
# eigenvalues
mnip$eig
mmix$eig
same(mnip$eig, mmix$eig)
# TRUE

# P loadings
mnip$loadings
mmix$p
same(mnip$loadings, mmix$p, tol=1e-2)
# TRUE

# T scores
mnip$scores
mmix$t
same(mnip$scores, mmix$t, tol=1e-2)
# TRUE

Speed comparison

For the purpose of comparing performance of the functions, we simulate a 100 x 100 matrix and insert one missing value.

set.seed(43)
Bbig <- matrix(rnorm(100*100), nrow=100)
Bbig2 <- Bbig
Bbig2[1,1] <- NA

The ade4::nipals function uses for loops to loop over the columns of X, which results in very slow execution even when calculating only 1 principal component.

system.time(ade4::nipals(Bbig2, nf=1)) # Only 1 PC!
##  user  system elapsed 
## 42.09    0.00   42.14 

The plsdepot::nipals function is fast enough that all 100 PCs can be calculated.

system.time(plsdepot::nipals(Bbig2, comps=1)) # Only 1 PC !
#   user  system elapsed 
#    0.5     0.0     0.5
system.time(plsdepot::nipals(Bbig2, comps=100)) # 100 PCs
#   user  system elapsed 
#  30.19    0.00   30.18 

The mixOmics::nipals function uses the crossprod function and a few other tricks to improve performance.

system.time(mixOmics::nipals(scale(Bbig2), ncomp=100)) # 100 PCs
#   user  system elapsed 
#  20.70    0.00   20.81 

The nipals::nipals function was optimized through extensive testing and is about 5 times faster! Note that Gram-Scmidt is turned off in order to make a fair comparison with other functions.

system.time(nipals::nipals(Bbig2, ncomp=100, gramschmidt=FALSE)) # 100 PCs
#   user  system elapsed 
#   2.93    0.00    2.93

When Gram-Schmidt is turned on (which is the default setting), the function is a bit slower.

system.time(nipals::nipals(Bbig2, ncomp=100, gramschmidt=TRUE)) # 100 PCs
#   user  system elapsed 
#    3.6     0.0     3.6 

The nipals::empca function results here are VERY tentative:

system.time(empca(Bbig2, ncomp=100, gramschmidt=FALSE)) # 100 PCs
#   user  system elapsed 
#   1.03    0.00    1.03 
system.time(empca(Bbig2, ncomp=100, gramschmidt=TRUE)) # 100 PCs
#   user  system elapsed 
#  10.44    0.00   10.45