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Partially Missing At Random and Ignorable Inferences for Parameter Subsets with Missing Data

Partially Missing At Random and Ignorable Inferences for Parameter Subsets with Missing Data. Roderick Little. Outline. Inference with missing data: Rubin's (1976) paper on conditions for ignoring the missing-data mechanism Rubin’s standard conditions are sufficient but not necessary: example

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Partially Missing At Random and Ignorable Inferences for Parameter Subsets with Missing Data

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  1. Partially Missing At Random and Ignorable Inferences for Parameter Subsets with Missing Data Roderick Little Rennes 2015

  2. Outline • Inference with missing data: Rubin's (1976) paper on conditions for ignoring the missing-data mechanism • Rubin’s standard conditions are sufficient but not necessary: example • Propose definitions of partially MAR, ignorability for likelihood (and Bayes) inference for subsets of parameters (Little and Zanganeh, 2013) • Application: Subsample ignorable methods for regression with missing covariates (Little and Zhang, 2011) • Joint work with Nanhua Zhang, Sahar Zanganeh Rennes 2015

  3. v Rennes 2015

  4. Rubin (1976 Biometrika) • Landmark paper (5000+ citations, after being rejected by many journals!) • I wrote my first referee’s report (11 pages!), and an obscure discussionon ancillarity • Modeled the missing data mechanism by treating missingness indicators as random variables, assigning them a distribution • Sufficient conditions under which missing data mechanism can be ignored for likelihood and frequentist inference about parameters • Focus here on likelihood, Bayes Rennes 2015

  5. Ignoring the mechanism • Full likelihood: • Likelihood ignoring mechanism: • Missing data mechanism can be ignored for likelihood inference when Rennes 2015

  6. Rubin’s sufficient conditions for ignoring the mechanism • Missing data mechanism can be ignored for likelihood inference when • (a) the missing data are missing at random (MAR): • (b) distinctness of the parameters of the data model and the missing-data mechanism: • MAR is the key condition: without (b), inferences are valid but not fully efficient Rennes 2015

  7. More on Rubin (1976) • Seaman et al. (2013) propose a more complex but precise notation • Distinguish between “direct” likelihood inference and “frequentist likelihood inference • “Realized MAR” sufficient for direct likelihood inference – R depends only on realized observed data • “Everywhere MAR” sufficient for frequentist likelihood inference: MAR condition needs to hold for observed values in future repeated sampling • Rubin (1976) uses term “always MAR”. See also Mealli and Rubin (2015, forthcoming) Rennes 2015

  8. “Sufficient for ignorable” is not the same as “ignorable” • These definitions have come to define ignorability (e.g. Little and Rubin 2002) • However, Rubin (1976) described (a) and (b) as the "weakest simple and general conditions under which it is always appropriate to ignore the process that causes missing data". • These conditions are not necessary for ignoring the mechanism in all situations. Rennes 2015

  9. Or whole population N Example 1: Nonresponse with auxiliary data 0 0 0 1 1 ? ? ? ? Not linked Rennes 2015

  10. MAR, ignorability for parameter subsets • MAR and ignorability are defined in terms of the complete set of parameters in the data model for D • It would be useful to have a definition of MAR that applies to subsets of parameters of substantive interest. • Example:inference for regression parameters might be “partially MAR” when parameters for a model for full data are not. Rennes 2015

  11. MAR, ignorability for parameter subsets Rennes 2015

  12. MAR, ignorability for parameter subsets Rennes 2015

  13. Partial MAR given a function of mechanism Rennes 2015

  14. Example 1: Auxiliary Survey Data 0 0 0 1 1 ? ? ? ? Not linked Rennes 2015

  15. Ex. 2: MNAR Monotone Bivariate Data 0 0 0 1 1 ? ? Rennes 2015

  16. More generally… Rennes 2015

  17. Application: missing data in covariates Target: regression of Y on X, Z; missing data on X IL methods include information for the regression in the incomplete cases (particularly intercept and coefficients of Z)and are valid assuming MAR: Pr(X missing)= g(Z, Y) ? BUT:if Pr(X missing)= g(Z, X) CC analysis is consistent, but IL methods (or weighted CC) are inconsistent since mechanism is not MAR Simulations favoring IL often generate data under MAR, hence are biased against CC Rennes 2015

  18. More general missing data in X Could be vector Key: √ denotes observed, ? denotes observed or missing P1 P2 Rennes 2015

  19. Ignorable Likelihood methods Rennes 2015

  20. CC analysis MNAR mechanism: Missingness can depend on missing values of X Follows from (*) Rennes 2015

  21. Extension: missing data on XandY Could be vector Key: √ denotes observed, ? denotes observed or missing P1: covariates complete P2: x incomplete Rennes 2015

  22. SSIL analysis, X and Y missing Rennes 2015

  23. SSIL likelihood, X and Y missing Rennes 2015

  24. Two covariates X, W with different mechanisms SSIL: analyze cases in patterns 1 and 2 P1: covariates complete P2: x obs, w, y may be mis P3: x mis, w, y may be mis Rennes 2015

  25. Subsample Ignorable Likelihood (SSIL) • Target: regression of Y on Z, X, and W • Assume: • By similar proof to previous case, data are SSIL applies IL method (e.g. ML) to the subsample of cases for which X is observed, but W or Y may be incomplete Rennes 2015

  26. Simulation Study • For each of 1000 replications, 5000 observations Z, W, X and Y generated as: • 20-35% of missing values of W and X generated by four mechanisms Rennes 2015

  27. Simulation: missing data mechanisms Rennes 2015

  28. RMSEs*1000 of Estimated Regression Coefficients for Before Deletion (BD), Complete Cases (CC), Ignorable Maximum Likelihood (IML) and Subsample Ignorable Maximum Likelihood (SSIML), under Four Missing Data Mechanisms. Valid: ALL CC IML SSIML ALL CC IML SSIML Rennes 2015

  29. Missing Covariates in Survival Analysis Rennes 2015

  30. How to choose X, W • Choice requires understanding of the mechanism: • Variables that are missing based on their underlying values belong in W • Variables that are MAR belong in X • Collecting data about why variables are missing is obviously useful to get the model right • But this applies to all missing data adjustments… Rennes 2015

  31. Other questions and points • How much is lost from SSIL relative to full likelihood model of data and missing data mechanism? • In some special cases, SSIL is efficient for a pattern-mixture model • In other cases, trade-off between additional specification of mechanism and loss of efficiency from conditional likelihood • MAR analysis applied to the subset does not have to be likelihood-based • E.g. weighted GEE, AIPWEE • Pattern-mixture models (Little, 1993) can also avoid modeling the mechanism Rennes 2015

  32. Conclusions • Defined partial MAR for a subset of parameters • Application to regression with missing covariates: sometimes discarding data is useful! • Subsample ignorable likelihood: apply likelihood method to data, selectively discarding cases based on assumed missing-data mechanism • More efficient than CC • Valid for P-MAR mechanisms where IL, CC are inconsistent Rennes 2015

  33. References Harel, O. and Schafer, J.L. (2009). Partial and Latent Ignorability in missing data problems. Biometrika, 2009, 1-14 Little, R.J.A. (1993). Pattern‑Mixture Models for Multivariate Incomplete Data. JASA, 88, 125-134. Little, R. J. A., and Rubin, D. B. (2002). Statistical Analysis with Missing Data (2nd ed.) Wiley. Little, R.J. and Zangeneh, S.Z. (2013). Missing at random and ignorability for inferences about subsets of parameters with missing data. University of Michigan Biostatistics Working Paper Series. Little, R. J. and Zhang, N. (2011). Subsample ignorable likelihood for regression analysis with missing data. JRSSC, 60, 4, 591–605. Rubin, D. B. (1976). Inference and Missing Data. Biometrika 63, 581-592. Seaman, S., Galati, J., Jackson, D. and Carlin, J. (2013). What Is Meant by “Missing at Random”? Statist. Sci. 28, 2, 257-268. Zhang, N. & Little, R.J. (2014). Lifetime Data Analysis, published online Aug 2014. doi:10.​1007/​s10985-014-9304-x. Rennes 2015

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