Bootstrap implementation

Jaime Mosquera

2025-09-08

Computation of standard errors

Objects of maxlogL class (outputs from maxlogL and maxlogLreg) stores the estimated parameters of probability density/mass functions by Maximum Likelihood. The variance-covariance matrix is computed from Fisher information matrix, which is obtained by means of the Inverse Hessian matrix of estimators:

\[\begin{equation} Var(\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}) = \mathcal{J}^{-1}(\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}) = C(\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}), \end{equation}\]

where \(\mathcal{J}(\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}})\) is the observed Fisher Information Matrix. Hence, the standard errors can be calculated as the square root of the diagonal elements of matrix \(C\), as follows:

\[\begin{equation} SE(\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}}) = \sqrt{C_{jj}(\hat{\boldsymbol{\theta}})}, \end{equation}\]

To install the package, type the following commands:

if (!require('devtools')) install.packages('devtools')
devtools::install_github('Jaimemosg/EstimationTools', force = TRUE)

In EstimationTools Hessian matrix is computed in the following way:

Additionally, EstimationTools allows implementation of bootstrap for standard error estimation, even if the Hessian computation does not fail.

Standard Error with maxlogL function

Lets fit the following distribution:

\[ \begin{aligned} X &\sim N(\mu, \:\sigma^2) \\ \mu &= 160 \quad (\verb|mean|) \\ \sigma &= 6 \quad (\verb|sd|) \end{aligned} \]

The following chunk illustrates the fitting with Hessian computation via optim:

library(EstimationTools)

x <- rnorm(n = 10000, mean = 160, sd = 6)
theta_1 <- maxlogL(x = x, dist = 'dnorm', control = list(trace = 1),
                   link = list(over = "sd", fun = "log_link"),
                   fixed = list(mean = 160))
#>   0:     43580.164:  1.00000
#>   1:     32490.318:  2.00000
#>   2:     32261.854:  1.91946
#>   3:     32122.237:  1.76266
#>   4:     32113.373:  1.79628
#>   5:     32113.222:  1.79250
#>   6:     32113.221:  1.79238
#>   7:     32113.221:  1.79238
summary(theta_1)
#> _______________________________________________________________
#> Optimization routine: nlminb 
#> Standard Error calculation: Hessian from optim 
#> _______________________________________________________________
#>        AIC      BIC
#>   64226.44 64226.44
#> _______________________________________________________________
#>    Estimate  Std. Error Z value Pr(>|z|)    
#> sd   6.00375    0.04245   141.4   <2e-16 ***
#> ---
#> Signif. codes:  0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
#> _______________________________________________________________
#> Note: p-values valid under asymptotic normality of estimators 
#> ---

## Hessian
print(theta_1$fit$hessian)
#>          [,1]
#> [1,] 554.8626

## Standard errors
print(theta_1$fit$StdE)
#> [1] 0.04245289
print(theta_1$outputs$StdE_Method)
#> [1] "Hessian from optim"

Note that Hessian was computed with no issues. Now, lets check the aforementioned feature in maxlogL: the user can implement bootstrap algorithm available in bootstrap_maxlogL function. To illustrate this, we are going to create another object theta_2:

# Bootstrap
theta_2 <- maxlogL(x = x, dist = 'dnorm', control = list(trace = 1),
                   link = list(over = "sd", fun = "log_link"),
                   fixed = list(mean = 160))
#>   0:     43580.164:  1.00000
#>   1:     32490.318:  2.00000
#>   2:     32261.854:  1.91946
#>   3:     32122.237:  1.76266
#>   4:     32113.373:  1.79628
#>   5:     32113.222:  1.79250
#>   6:     32113.221:  1.79238
#>   7:     32113.221:  1.79238
bootstrap_maxlogL(theta_2, R = 200)
#> 
#> ...Bootstrap computation of Standard Error. Please, wait a few minutes...
#> 
#>  --> Done <---
summary(theta_2)
#> _______________________________________________________________
#> Optimization routine: nlminb 
#> Standard Error calculation: Bootstrap 
#> _______________________________________________________________
#>        AIC      BIC
#>   64226.44 64226.44
#> _______________________________________________________________
#>    Estimate  Std. Error Z value Pr(>|z|)    
#> sd   6.00375    0.04256   141.1   <2e-16 ***
#> ---
#> Signif. codes:  0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
#> _______________________________________________________________
#> Note: p-values valid under asymptotic normality of estimators 
#> ---

## Hessian
print(theta_2$fit$hessian)
#>          [,1]
#> [1,] 554.8626

## Standard errors
print(theta_2$fit$StdE)
#> [1] 0.04255708
print(theta_2$outputs$StdE_Method)
#> [1] "Bootstrap"

Notice that Standard Errors calculated with optim (\(0.042453\)) and those calculated with bootstrap implementation (\(0.042557\)) are approximately equals, but no identical.