Antje Niederlein <niederlein-rstat <at> yahoo.de> writes: [snip]
> But what goes wrong if I want to display confidence intervals? I get a > lot of warnings but I simply don't know why... > > confint(fit) > > Has it something to do with constraints for my parameters (lambda > should be > than zero and prop should range from 0 to 1)? Do I have to > put it into the ll-function? > > Is there any general comment on what I'm doing? > You are exactly right, it is caused by violations of the bounds on the parameters. The reason you see warnings when you ask for confidence intervals and not for the original fit is that confint() is computing profile confidence intervals, which force it to evaluate the likelihood function over a much wider range of possibilities. There are four reasonable solutions to your problems: 1. ignore the warnings, as long as they are all of the same type (NaNs/NAs being produced by dbinom or dpois), and as long as the final results look sensible. 2. use method="L-BFGS-B" and set lower and upper bounds on your parameters (this can be a little bit finicky because L-BFGS-B will often try parameters *on* the boundary, and it can't handle NAs or infinities, so you may have to set the lower and upper bounds a little bit in from their theoretical limits (e.g. 0.002 instead of 0). 3. Fit your parameters on the transformed scale (typically logit for probabilities, log for Poisson intensities). This will cause problems if the parameter really lies on the boundary, e.g. if the best estimate of your zero-inflation parameter is zero or very close to it. 4. Use the pscl package, which has reasonably robust and efficient built-in functions for fitting zero-inflated (and hurdle) models. good luck, Ben Bolker ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.