r2mlm
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r2mlm: R Package for Calculating R-Squared in Multilevel Models
r2mlm
The r2mlm package contains functions that compute a framework of total and level-specific R-squared measures for multilevel models, with accompanying plots; these plots allow interpreting and visualizing all of the measures together as an integrated set. The framework of R-squared measures subsumes and analytically relates 10 previously-developed measures as special cases of 5 measures from this framework, as well as provides several new measures. The framework is presented in Rights & Sterba (2019) for evaluating a single fitted multilevel model. The implementation of this framework of measures for comparing multilevel models using R-squared differences is described in Rights & Sterba (2020). The functions in this package allow users to input either model objects obtained from lme4 or nlme, or to manually input model parameter estimates.
Installation
You can install the released version of r2mlm from CRAN with:
install.packages("r2mlm")
And the development version from GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("mkshaw/r2mlm")
Example
Suppose you have a dataset consisting of teachers nested within schools. A researcher could specify a multilevel model with teacher job satisfaction as the outcome, which is predicted by the level-1 predictor teacher salary (here school-mean-centered) and the level-2 predictor student-teacher ratio. Suppose the multilevel model included a random intercept as well as a random slope of teacher salary, and included normally-distributed, homoscedastic level-1 residuals. The researcher could then obtain the following output (see r2mlm function for further details).
library(r2mlm)
#> Loading required package: lme4
#> Loading required package: Matrix
#> Loading required package: nlme
#>
#> Attaching package: 'nlme'
#> The following object is masked from 'package:lme4':
#>
#> lmList
# Generate the model, in this case with lme4:
model <- lmer(satisfaction ~ 1 + salary_c + s_t_ratio + (1 + salary_c | schoolID), data = teachsat, REML = TRUE)
# Adjust plot margins
par(mar = c(6.75, 10.5, 2.625, 10.5))
# Generate R-squared measures for that model:
r2mlm(model)
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#> $Decompositions
#> total within between
#> fixed, within 0.0817367298644048 0.142930358177837 NA
#> fixed, between 0.0650803204186671 NA 0.152008530367315
#> slope variation 0.0376662281262814 0.0658657067175134 NA
#> mean variation 0.363055654986177 NA 0.847991469632685
#> sigma2 0.452461066604469 0.79120393510465 NA
#>
#> $R2s
#> total within between
#> f1 0.0817367298644048 0.142930358177837 NA
#> f2 0.0650803204186671 NA 0.152008530367315
#> v 0.0376662281262814 0.0658657067175134 NA
#> m 0.363055654986177 NA 0.847991469632685
#> f 0.146817050283072 NA NA
#> fv 0.184483278409353 0.20879606489535 NA
#> fvm 0.547538933395531 NA NA
Package Functions
There are two main functions currently available in r2mlm:
-
r2mlm()
, for computing variance explained for a single multilevel model. -
r2mlm_comp()
, for comparing variance explained between two different multilevel models.
In some cases, you might run a multilevel model that will not converge
in nlme
or lme4
, but will converge in another software package
(e.g., HLM, Mplus). If you run your model and obtain the associated
output, you can manually generate R-squared measures using
r2mlm_manual()
or r2mlm_comp_manual()
. For manual entry details, see
the help pages:
?r2mm_manual()
?r2mlm_comp_manual()
Framework Assumptions
This framework of variance explained assumes the following:
- Two-level multilevel linear models (3 or more levels not supported at this time);
- Normal outcome variable;
- Homoscedastic residual variances at both level 1 and level 2.
References
Rights, J. D., & Sterba, S. K. (2019). Quantifying explained variance in multilevel models: An integrative framework for defining R-squared measures. Psychological Methods, 24(3), 309–338. https://doi.org/10.1037/met0000184
Rights, J. D., & Sterba, S. K. (2020). New recommendations on the use of R-squared differences in multilevel model comparisons. Multivariate Behavioral Research. https://doi.org/10.1080/00273171.2019.1660605