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Global identifiability of latent class models with applications to diagnostic test accuracy studies: A Gröbner basis approach
Author(s) -
Duan Rui,
Cao Ming,
Ning Yang,
Zhu Mingfu,
Zhang Bin,
McDermott Aidan,
Chu Haitao,
Zhou Xiaohua,
Moore Jason H.,
Ibrahim Joseph G.,
Scharfstein Daniel O.,
Chen Yong
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
biometrics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.298
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1541-0420
pISSN - 0006-341X
DOI - 10.1111/biom.13133
Subject(s) - identifiability , jacobian matrix and determinant , basis (linear algebra) , mathematics , statistical inference , inference , fisher information , statistical hypothesis testing , probability distribution , computer science , algorithm , statistics , artificial intelligence , geometry
Identifiability of statistical models is a fundamental regularity condition that is required for valid statistical inference. Investigation of model identifiability is mathematically challenging for complex models such as latent class models. Jones et al . used Goodman's technique to investigate the identifiability of latent class models with applications to diagnostic tests in the absence of a gold standard test. The tool they used was based on examining the singularity of the Jacobian or the Fisher information matrix, in order to obtain insights into local identifiability (ie, there exists a neighborhood of a parameter such that no other parameter in the neighborhood leads to the same probability distribution as the parameter). In this paper, we investigate a stronger condition: global identifiability (ie, no two parameters in the parameter space give rise to the same probability distribution), by introducing a powerful mathematical tool from computational algebra: the Gröbner basis. With several existing well‐known examples, we argue that the Gröbner basis method is easy to implement and powerful to study global identifiability of latent class models, and is an attractive alternative to the information matrix analysis by Rothenberg and the Jacobian analysis by Goodman and Jones et al .