The lavaan model syntax describes a latent variable model. The
function lavaanify turns it into a table that represents the full
model as specified by the user. We refer to this table as the parameter table.
A description of the user-specified model. Typically, the model
is described using the lavaan model syntax; see details for more
information. Alternatively, a parameter table (e.g., the output of
lavParseModelString is also accepted.
model.syntax
The model syntax specifying the model. Must be a literal
string.
meanstructure
If TRUE, intercepts/means will be added to
the model both for both observed and latent variables.
int.ov.free
If FALSE, the intercepts of the observed variables
are fixed to zero.
int.lv.free
If FALSE, the intercepts of the latent variables
are fixed to zero.
orthogonal
If TRUE, the exogenous latent variables
are assumed to be uncorrelated.
std.lv
If TRUE, the metric of each latent variable is
determined by fixing their variances to 1.0. If FALSE, the metric
of each latent variable is determined by fixing the factor loading of the
first indicator to 1.0.
fixed.x
If TRUE, the exogenous ‘x’ covariates are considered
fixed variables and the means, variances and covariances of these variables
are fixed to their sample values. If FALSE, they are considered
random, and the means, variances and covariances are free parameters.
parameterization
Currently only used if data is categorical. If
"delta", the delta parameterization is used. If "theta",
the theta parameterization is used.
constraints
Additional (in)equality constraints. See details for
more information.
auto
If TRUE, the default values are used for the auto.*
arguments, depending on the value of model.type.
model.type
Either "sem" or "growth"; only used if
auto=TRUE.
auto.fix.first
If TRUE, the factor loading of the first indicator
is set to 1.0 for every latent variable.
auto.fix.single
If TRUE, the residual variance (if included)
of an observed indicator is set to zero if it is the only indicator of a
latent variable.
auto.var
If TRUE, the residual variances and the variances
of exogenous latent variables are included in the model and set free.
auto.cov.lv.x
If TRUE, the covariances of exogenous latent
variables are included in the model and set free.
auto.cov.y
If TRUE, the covariances of dependent variables
(both observed and latent) are included in the model and set free.
auto.th
If TRUE, thresholds for limited dependent variables
are included in the model and set free.
auto.delta
If TRUE, response scaling parameters for limited
dependent variables are included in the model and set free.
varTable
The variable table containing information about the
observed variables in the model.
ngroups
The number of (independent) groups.
group.equal
A vector of character strings. Only used in
a multiple group analysis. Can be one or more of the following:
"loadings", "intercepts",
"means", "regressions", "residuals" or
"covariances", specifying the pattern of equality
constraints across multiple groups.
group.partial
A vector of character strings containing the labels
of the parameters which should be free in all groups (thereby
overriding the group.equal argument for some specific parameters).
group.w.free
Logical. If TRUE, the group frequencies are
considered to be free parameters in the model. In this case, a
Poisson model is fitted to estimate the group frequencies. If
FALSE (the default), the group frequencies are fixed to their
observed values.
warn
If TRUE, some (possibly harmless) warnings are printed
out.
as.data.frame.
If TRUE, return the list of model parameters
as a data.frame.
debug
If TRUE, debugging information is printed out.
object
Either a list containing the parameter table, as
returned by lavaanify or lavParseModelString, or an
object of class lavaan.
type
Only used in the function lavNames. If type contains
"ov", only observed variable names are returned. If type contains
"lv", only latent variable names are returned. The "ov.x"
and "lv.x" types return exogenous variables only. The "ov.y"
and "lv.y" types return dependent variables only (in the regression
sense, excluding the indicators of latent variables). The
"ov.nox" type returns all observed variables, except the exogenous
ones.
group
Only used in the function lavNames. If NULL,
all groups (if any) are used. If an integer (vector), only names from those
groups are extracted. The group numbers are found in the group
column of the parameter table.
Details
The model syntax consists of one or more formula-like expressions, each one
describing a specific part of the model. The model syntax can be read from
a file (using readLines), or can be specified as a literal
string enclosed by single quotes as in the example below.
Blank lines and comments can be used in between the formulas, and formulas can
be split over multiple lines. Both the sharp (#) and the exclamation (!)
characters can be used to start a comment. Multiple formulas can be placed
on a single line if they are separated by a semicolon (;).
There can be seven types of formula-like expressions in the model syntax:
Latent variable definitions: The "=~" operator can be
used to define (continuous) latent variables. The name of the latent
variable is on the left of the "=~" operator, while the terms
on the right, separated by "+" operators, are the indicators
of the latent variable.
The operator "=~" can be read as “is manifested by”.
Regressions: The "~" operator specifies a regression.
The dependent variable is on the left of a "~" operator and the
independent variables, separated by "+" operators, are on the right.
These regression formulas are similar to the way ordinary linear regression
formulas are used in R, but they may include latent variables. Interaction
terms are currently not supported.
Variance-covariances: The "~~" (‘double tilde’) operator specifies
(residual) variances of an observed or latent variable, or a set of
covariances between one variable, and several other variables (either
observed or latent). Several variables, separated by "+"
operators can appear on the right. This way, several pairwise
(co)variances involving the same left-hand variable can be expressed in a
single expression. The distinction between variances and residual variances
is made automatically.
Intercepts: A special case of a regression formula can be used to
specify an intercept (or a mean) of either an observed or a latent variable.
The variable name is on the left of a "~" operator. On the right is
only the number "1" representing the intercept. Including an intercept
formula in the model automatically implies meanstructure = TRUE. The
distinction between intercepts and means is made automatically.
Thresholds: The "|" operator can be used to define the
thresholds of categorical endogenous variables (on the left hand side
of the operator). By convention, the
thresholds (on the right hand sided, separated by the "+" operator,
are named "t1", "t2", etcetera.
Scaling factors: The "~*~" operator defines a scale factor.
The variable name on the left hand side must be the same as the variable
name on the right hand side. Scale factors are used in the Delta
parameterization, in a multiple group analysis when factor indicators
are categorical.
Formative factors: The "<~" operator can be used to define
a formative factor (on the right hand side of the operator), in a
similar why as a reflexive factor is defined (using the "=~"
operator). This is just syntax sugar to define a phantom latent
variable (equivalent to using "f =~ 0"). And in addition, the
(residual) variance of the formative factor is fixed to zero.
Usually, only a single variable name appears on the left side of an
operator. However, if multiple variable names are specified,
separated by the "+" operator, the formula is repeated for each
element on the left side (as for example in the third regression
formula in the example above). The only exception are scaling factors, where
only a single element is allowed on the left hand side.
In the right-hand side of these formula-like expressions, each element can be
modified (using the "*" operator) by either a numeric constant,
an expression resulting in a numeric constant, an expression resulting
in a character vector, or one
of three special functions: start(), label() and equal().
This provides the user with a mechanism to fix parameters, to provide
alternative starting values, to label the parameters, and to define equality
constraints among model parameters. All "*" expressions are
referred to as modifiers. They are explained in more detail in the
following sections.
Fixing parameters
It is often desirable to fix a model parameter that is otherwise (by default)
free. Any parameter in a model can be fixed by using a modifier resulting
in a numerical constaint. Here are some examples:
Fixing the regression coefficient of the predictor
x2:
y ~ x1 + 2.4*x2 + x3
Specifying an orthogonal (zero) covariance between two latent
variables:
f1 ~~ 0*f2
Specifying an intercept and a linear slope in a growth
model:
i =~ 1*y11 + 1*y12 + 1*y13 + 1*y14
s =~ 0*y11 + 1*y12 + 2*y13 + 3*y14
Instead of a numeric constant, one can use a mathematical function that returns
a numeric constant, for example sqrt(10). Multiplying with NA
will force the corresponding parameter to be free.
Starting values
User-provided starting values can be given by using the special function
start(), containing a numeric constant. For example:
y ~ x1 + start(1.0)*x2 + x3
Note that if a starting value is provided, the parameter is not
automatically considered to be free.
Parameter labels and equality constraints
Each free parameter in a model is automatically given a name (or label).
The name given to a model
parameter consists of three parts, coerced to a single character vector.
The first part is the name of the variable in the left-hand side of the
formula where the parameter was
implied. The middle part is based on the special ‘operator’ used in the
formula. This can be either one of "=~", "~" or "~~". The
third part is the name of the variable in the right-hand side of the formula
where the parameter was implied, or "1" if it is an intercept. The three
parts are pasted together in a single string. For example, the name of the
fixed regression coefficient in the regression formula
y ~ x1 + 2.4*x2 + x3 is the string "y~x2".
The name of the parameter
corresponding to the covariance between two latent variables in the
formula f1 ~~ f2 is the string "f1~~f2".
Although this automatic labeling of parameters is convenient, the user may
specify its own labels for specific parameters simply by pre-multiplying
the corresponding term (on the right hand side of the operator only) by
a character string (starting with a letter).
For example, in the formula f1 =~ x1 + x2 + mylabel*x3, the parameter
corresponding with the factor loading of
x3 will be named "mylabel".
An alternative way to specify
the label is as follows: f1 =~ x1 + x2 + label("mylabel")*x3,
where the label is the argument of special function label();
this can be useful if the label contains a space, or an operator (like "~").
To constrain a parameter
to be equal to another target parameter, there are two ways. If you
have specified your own labels, you can use the fact that
equal labels imply equal parameter values.
If you rely on automatic parameter labels, you
can use the special function equal(). The argument of
equal() is the (automatic or user-specified) name of the target
parameter. For example, in the confirmatory factor analysis example below, the
intercepts of the three indicators of each latent variable are constrained to
be equal to each other. For the first three, we have used the default
names. For the last three, we have provided a custom label for the
y2a intercept.
model <- '
# two latent variables with fixed loadings
f1 =~ 1*y1a + 1*y1b + 1*y1c
f2 =~ 1*y2a + 1*y2b + 1*y2c
# intercepts constrained to be equal
# using the default names
y1a ~ 1
y1b ~ equal("y1a~1") * 1
y1c ~ equal("y1a~1") * 1
# intercepts constrained to be equal
# using a custom label
y2a ~ int2*1
y2b ~ int2*1
y2c ~ int2*1
'
Multiple groups
In a multiple group analysis, modifiers that contain a single constant
must be replaced by a vector, having the same length as the number
of groups. The only exception are numerical constants (for fixing values): if
you provide only a single number, the same number will be used for all groups.
However, it is safer (and cleaner) to specify the same number of elements as
the number of groups. For example, if there are two groups:
In this example, the factor loading of the ‘x2’ indicator is fixed to the
value 0.5 for all groups. However, the factor loadings of the ‘x3’ indicator
are fixed to 0.6 and 0.8 for group 1 and group 2 respectively. The same
logic is used for all modifiers. Note that character vectors can contain
unquoted strings.
Multiple modifiers
In the model syntax, you can specify a variable more than once on the right hand
side of an operator; therefore, several ‘modifiers’ can be applied
simultaneously; for example, if you want to fix the value of a parameter and
also label that parameter, you can use something like:
f1 =~ x1 + x2 + 4*x3 + x3.loading*x3
References
Yves Rosseel (2012). lavaan: An R Package for Structural Equation
Modeling. Journal of Statistical Software, 48(2), 1-36. URL
http://www.jstatsoft.org/v48/i02/.