Hamiltonian Monte Carlo method for estimating variance components |
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Authors: | Aisaku Arakawa Takeshi Hayashi Masaaki Taniguchi Satoshi Mikawa Motohide Nishio |
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Institution: | 1. Division of Animal Breeding and Reproduction Research, Institute of Livestock and Grassland Science, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan;2. Division of Basic Research, Institute of Crop Science, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan |
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Abstract: | A Hamiltonian Monte Carlo algorithm is a Markov chain Monte Carlo method, and the method has a potential to improve estimating parameters effectively. Hamiltonian Monte Carlo is based on Hamiltonian dynamics, and it follows Hamilton's equations, which are expressed as two differential equations. In the sampling process of Hamiltonian Monte Carlo, a numerical integration method called leapfrog integration is used to approximately solve Hamilton's equations, and the integration is required to set the number of discrete time steps and the integration stepsize. These two parameters require some amount of tuning and calibration for effective sampling. In this study, we applied the Hamiltonian Monte Carlo method to animal breeding data and identified the optimal tunings of leapfrog integration for normal and inverse chi-square distributions. Then, using real pig data, we revealed the properties of the Hamiltonian Monte Carlo method with the optimal tuning by applying models including variance explained by pedigree information or genomic information. Compared with the Gibbs sampling method, the Hamiltonian Monte Carlo method had superior performance in both models. We have provided the source codes of this method written in the Fortran language at https://github.com/A-ARAKAWA/HMC . |
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Keywords: | genomic selection Gibbs sampling Hamiltonian Monte Carlo leapfrog integration mixed model |
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