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Multicollinearity

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In statistics, multicollinearity or collinearity is a situation where the predictors in a regression model are linearly dependent.

Perfect multicollinearity refers to a situation where the predictive variables have an exact linear relationship. When there is perfect collinearity, the design matrix has less than full rank, and therefore the moment matrix cannot be inverted. In this situation, the parameter estimates of the regression are not well-defined, as the system of equations has infinitely many solutions.

Imperfect multicollinearity refers to a situation where the predictive variables have a nearly exact linear relationship.

Contrary to popular belief, neither the Gauss–Markov theorem nor the more common maximum likelihood justification for ordinary least squares relies on any kind of correlation structure between dependent predictors[1][2][3] (although perfect collinearity can cause problems with some software).

There is no justification for the practice of removing collinear variables as part of regression analysis,[1][4][5][6][7] and doing so may constitute scientific misconduct. Including collinear variables does not reduce the predictive power or reliability of the model as a whole,[6] and does not reduce the accuracy of coefficient estimates.[1]

High collinearity indicates that it is exceptionally important to include all collinear variables, as excluding any will cause worse coefficient estimates, strong confounding, and downward-biased estimates of standard errors.[2]

To address the high collinearity of a dataset, variance inflation factor can be used to identify the collinearity of the predictor variables.

Perfect multicollinearity

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A depiction of multicollinearity.
In a linear regression, the true parameters are which are reliably estimated in the case of uncorrelated and (black case) but are unreliably estimated when and are correlated (red case).

Perfect multicollinearity refers to a situation where the predictors are linearly dependent (one can be written as an exact linear function of the others).[8] Ordinary least squares requires inverting the matrix , where

is an matrix, where is the number of observations, is the number of explanatory variables, and . If there is an exact linear relationship among the independent variables, then at least one of the columns of is a linear combination of the others, and so the rank of (and therefore of ) is less than , and the matrix will not be invertible.

Resolution

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Perfect collinearity is typically caused by including redundant variables in a regression. For example, a dataset may include variables for income, expenses, and savings. However, because income is equal to expenses plus savings by definition, it is incorrect to include all 3 variables in a regression simultaneously. Similarly, including a dummy variable for every category (e.g., summer, autumn, winter, and spring) as well as an intercept term will result in perfect collinearity. This is known as the dummy variable trap.[9]

The other common cause of perfect collinearity is attempting to use ordinary least squares when working with very wide datasets (those with more variables than observations). These require more advanced data analysis techniques like Bayesian hierarchical modeling to produce meaningful results.[citation needed]

Numerical issues

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Sometimes, the variables are nearly collinear. In this case, the matrix has an inverse, but it is ill-conditioned. A computer algorithm may or may not be able to compute an approximate inverse; even if it can, the resulting inverse may have large rounding errors.

The standard measure of ill-conditioning in a matrix is the condition index. This determines if the inversion of the matrix is numerically unstable with finite-precision numbers, indicating the potential sensitivity of the computed inverse to small changes in the original matrix. The condition number is computed by finding the maximum singular value divided by the minimum singular value of the design matrix.[10] In the context of collinear variables, the variance inflation factor is the condition number for a particular coefficient.

Solutions

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Numerical problems in estimating can be solved by applying standard techniques from linear algebra to estimate the equations more precisely:

  1. Standardizing predictor variables. Working with polynomial terms (e.g. , ), including interaction terms (i.e., ) can cause multicollinearity. This is especially true when the variable in question has a limited range. Standardizing predictor variables will eliminate this special kind of multicollinearity for polynomials of up to 3rd order.[11]
  2. Use an orthogonal representation of the data.[12] Poorly-written statistical software will sometimes fail to converge to a correct representation when variables are strongly correlated. However, it is still possible to rewrite the regression to use only uncorrelated variables by performing a change of basis.
    • For polynomial terms in particular, it is possible to rewrite the regression as a function of uncorrelated variables using orthogonal polynomials.

Effects on coefficient estimates

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In addition to causing numerical problems, imperfect collinearity makes precise estimation of variables difficult. In other words, highly correlated variables lead to poor estimates and large standard errors.

As an example, say that we notice Alice wears her boots whenever it is raining and that there are only puddles when it rains. Then, we cannot tell whether she wears boots to keep the rain from landing on her feet, or to keep her feet dry if she steps in a puddle.

The problem with trying to identify how much each of the two variables matters is that they are confounded with each other: our observations are explained equally well by either variable, so we do not know which one of them causes the observed correlations.

There are two ways to discover this information:

  1. Using prior information or theory. For example, if we notice Alice never steps in puddles, we can reasonably argue puddles are not why she wears boots, as she does not need the boots to avoid puddles.
  2. Collecting more data. If we observe Alice enough times, we will eventually see her on days where there are puddles but not rain (e.g. because the rain stops before she leaves home).

This confounding becomes substantially worse when researchers attempt to ignore or suppress it by excluding these variables from the regression (see #Misuse). Excluding multicollinear variables from regressions will invalidate causal inference and produce worse estimates by removing important confounders.

Remedies

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There are many ways to prevent multicollinearity from affecting results by planning ahead of time. However, these methods all require a researcher to decide on a procedure and analysis before data has been collected (see post hoc analysis and Multicollinearity § Misuse).

Regularized estimators

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Many regression methods are naturally "robust" to multicollinearity and generally perform better than ordinary least squares regression, even when variables are independent. Regularized regression techniques such as ridge regression, LASSO, elastic net regression, or spike-and-slab regression are less sensitive to including "useless" predictors, a common cause of collinearity. These techniques can detect and remove these predictors automatically to avoid problems. Bayesian hierarchical models (provided by software like BRMS) can perform such regularization automatically, learning informative priors from the data.

Often, problems caused by the use of frequentist estimation are misunderstood or misdiagnosed as being related to multicollinearity.[3] Researchers are often frustrated not by multicollinearity, but by their inability to incorporate relevant prior information in regressions. For example, complaints that coefficients have "wrong signs" or confidence intervals that "include unrealistic values" indicate there is important prior information that is not being incorporated into the model. When this is information is available, it should be incorporated into the prior using Bayesian regression techniques.[3]

Stepwise regression (the procedure of excluding "collinear" or "insignificant" variables) is especially vulnerable to multicollinearity, and is one of the few procedures wholly invalidated by it (with any collinearity resulting in heavily biased estimates and invalidated p-values).[2]

Improved experimental design

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When conducting experiments where researchers have control over the predictive variables, researchers can often avoid collinearity by choosing an optimal experimental design in consultation with a statistician.

Acceptance

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While the above strategies work in some situations, estimates using advanced techniques may still produce large standard errors. In such cases, the correct response to multicollinearity is to "do nothing".[1] The scientific process often involves null or inconclusive results; not every experiment will be "successful" in the sense of decisively confirmation of the researcher's original hypothesis.

Edward Leamer notes that "The solution to the weak evidence problem is more and better data. Within the confines of the given data set there is nothing that can be done about weak evidence".[3] Leamer notes that "bad" regression results that are often misattributed to multicollinearity instead indicate the researcher has chosen an unrealistic prior probability (generally the flat prior used in OLS).[3]

Damodar Gujarati writes that "we should rightly accept [our data] are sometimes not very informative about parameters of interest".[1] Olivier Blanchard quips that "multicollinearity is God's will, not a problem with OLS";[7] in other words, when working with observational data, researchers cannot "fix" multicollinearity, only accept it.

Misuse

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Variance inflation factors are often misused as criteria in stepwise regression (i.e. for variable inclusion/exclusion), a use that "lacks any logical basis but also is fundamentally misleading as a rule-of-thumb".[2]

Excluding collinear variables leads to artificially small estimates for standard errors, but does not reduce the true (not estimated) standard errors for regression coefficients.[1] Excluding variables with a high variance inflation factor also invalidates the calculated standard errors and p-values, by turning the results of the regression into a post hoc analysis.[14]

Because collinearity leads to large standard errors and p-values, which can make publishing articles more difficult, some researchers will try to suppress inconvenient data by removing strongly-correlated variables from their regression. This procedure falls into the broader categories of p-hacking, data dredging, and post hoc analysis. Dropping (useful) collinear predictors will generally worsen the accuracy of the model and coefficient estimates.

Similarly, trying many different models or estimation procedures (e.g. ordinary least squares, ridge regression, etc.) until finding one that can "deal with" the collinearity creates a forking paths problem. P-values and confidence intervals derived from post hoc analyses are invalidated by ignoring the uncertainty in the model selection procedure.

It is reasonable to exclude unimportant predictors if they are known ahead of time to have little or no effect on the outcome; for example, local cheese production should not be used to predict the height of skyscrapers. However, this must be done when first specifying the model, prior to observing any data, and potentially-informative variables should always be included.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Gujarati, Damodar (2009). "Multicollinearity: what happens if the regressors are correlated?". Basic Econometrics (4th ed.). McGraw−Hill. pp. 363. ISBN 9780073375779.
  2. ^ a b c d Kalnins, Arturs; Praitis Hill, Kendall (13 December 2023). "The VIF Score. What is it Good For? Absolutely Nothing". Organizational Research Methods. doi:10.1177/10944281231216381. ISSN 1094-4281.
  3. ^ a b c d e Leamer, Edward E. (1973). "Multicollinearity: A Bayesian Interpretation". The Review of Economics and Statistics. 55 (3): 371–380. doi:10.2307/1927962. ISSN 0034-6535. JSTOR 1927962.
  4. ^ Giles, Dave (15 September 2011). "Econometrics Beat: Dave Giles' Blog: Micronumerosity". Econometrics Beat. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  5. ^ Goldberger,(1964), A.S. (1964). Econometric Theory. New York: Wiley.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ a b Goldberger, A.S. "Chapter 23.3". A Course in Econometrics. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.
  7. ^ a b Blanchard, Olivier Jean (October 1987). "Comment". Journal of Business & Economic Statistics. 5 (4): 449–451. doi:10.1080/07350015.1987.10509611. ISSN 0735-0015.
  8. ^ James, Gareth; Witten, Daniela; Hastie, Trevor; Tibshirani, Robert (2021). An introduction to statistical learning: with applications in R (Second ed.). New York, NY: Springer. p. 115. ISBN 978-1-0716-1418-1. Retrieved 1 November 2024.
  9. ^ Karabiber, Fatih. "Dummy Variable Trap - What is the Dummy Variable Trap?". LearnDataSci (www.learndatasci.com). Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  10. ^ Belsley, David (1991). Conditioning Diagnostics: Collinearity and Weak Data in Regression. New York: Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-52889-0.
  11. ^ "12.6 - Reducing Structural Multicollinearity | STAT 501". newonlinecourses.science.psu.edu. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  12. ^ a b "Computational Tricks with Turing (Non-Centered Parametrization and QR Decomposition)". storopoli.io. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  13. ^ Gelman, Andrew; Imbens, Guido (3 July 2019). "Why High-Order Polynomials Should Not Be Used in Regression Discontinuity Designs". Journal of Business & Economic Statistics. 37 (3): 447–456. doi:10.1080/07350015.2017.1366909. ISSN 0735-0015.
  14. ^ Gelman, Andrew; Loken, Eric (14 November 2013). "The garden of forking paths" (PDF). Unpublished – via Columbia.


Further reading

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