disp
Display summary information for diffuse state-space model
Description
disp(
displays
summary information for the diffuse state-space model (Mdl
)dssm
model object) Mdl
.
The display includes the state and observation equations as a system
of scalar equations to facilitate model verification. The display
also includes the coefficient dimensionalities, notation, and initial
state distribution types.
The software displays unknown parameter values using c1
for
the first unknown parameter, c2
for the second
unknown parameter, and so on.
For time-varying models with more than 20 different sets of equations, the software displays the first and last 10 groups in terms of time (the last group is the latest).
disp(___,
displays Name,Value
)Mdl
using
additional options specified by one or more Name,Value
pair
arguments. For example, you can specify the number of digits to display
after the decimal point for model coefficients, or the number of terms
per row for state and observation equations. You can use any of the
input arguments in the previous syntaxes.
Input Arguments
params
— Initial values for unknown parameters
[]
(default) | numeric vector
Initial values for unknown parameters, specified as a numeric vector.
The elements of params
correspond to the
unknown parameters in the state-space model matrices A
, B
, C
,
and D
, and, optionally, the initial state mean Mean0
and
covariance matrix Cov0
.
If you created
Mdl
explicitly (that is, by specifying the matrices without a parameter-to-matrix mapping function), then the software maps the elements ofparams
toNaN
s in the state-space model matrices and initial state values. The software searches forNaN
s column-wise, following the orderA
,B
,C
,D
,Mean0
,Cov0
.If you created
Mdl
implicitly (that is, by specifying the matrices with a parameter-to-matrix mapping function), then you must set initial parameter values for the state-space model matrices, initial state values, and state types within the parameter-to-matrices mapping function.
To set the type of initial state distribution, see dssm
.
Data Types: double
Name-Value Arguments
Specify optional pairs of arguments as
Name1=Value1,...,NameN=ValueN
, where Name
is
the argument name and Value
is the corresponding value.
Name-value arguments must appear after other arguments, but the order of the
pairs does not matter.
Before R2021a, use commas to separate each name and value, and enclose
Name
in quotes.
MaxStateEq
— Maximum number of equations to display
100
(default) | positive integer
Maximum number of equations to display, specified as the comma-separated
pair consisting of 'MaxStateEq'
and a positive
integer. If the maximum number of states among all periods is no larger
than MaxStateEq
, then the software displays the
model equation by equation.
Example: 'MaxStateEq',10
Data Types: double
NumDigits
— Number of digits to display after decimal point
2
(default) | nonnegative integer
Number of digits to display after the decimal point for known
or estimated model coefficients, specified as the comma-separated
pair consisting of 'NumDigits'
and a nonnegative
integer.
Example: 'NumDigits',0
Data Types: double
Period
— Period to display state and observation equations
positive integer
Period to display state and observation equations for time-varying
state-space models, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting
of 'Period'
and a positive integer.
By default, the software displays state and observation equations for all periods.
If Period
exceeds the maximum number of observations
that the model supports, then the software displays state and observation
equations for all periods. If the model has more than 20 different
sets of equations, then the software displays the first and last 10
groups in terms of time (the last group is the latest).
Example: 'Period',120
Data Types: double
PredictorsPerRow
— Number of equation terms to display per row
5
(default) | positive integer
Number of equation terms to display per row, specified as the
comma-separated pair consisting of 'PredictorsPerRow'
and
a positive integer.
Example: 'PredictorsPerRow',3
Data Types: double
Examples
Verify Explicitly Created Diffuse State-Space Model
An important step in state-space model analysis is to ensure that the software interprets the state and observation equation matrices as you intend. Use disp
to help you verify the diffuse state-space model.
Define a diffuse state-space model, where the state equation is an AR(2) model, and the observation equation is the difference between the current and previous state plus the observation error. Symbolically, the state-space model is
Assume the initial state distribution is diffuse.
There are three states: is the AR(2) process, represents , and is the AR(2) model constant.
Define the state-transition matrix.
A = [0.6 0.2 0.5; 1 0 0; 0 0 1];
Define the state-disturbance-loading matrix.
B = [0.3; 0; 0];
Define the measurement-sensitivity matrix.
C = [1 -1 0];
Define the observation-innovation matrix.
D = 0.1;
Specify the state-space model using dssm
. Identify the type of initial state distributions (StateType
) by noting the following:
is an AR(2) process with diffuse initial distribution.
is the same AR(2) process as .
is the constant 1 for all periods.
StateType = [2 2 1];
Mdl = dssm(A,B,C,D,'StateType',StateType);
Mdl
is a dssm
model.
Verify the diffuse state-space model using disp
.
disp(Mdl)
State-space model type: dssm State vector length: 3 Observation vector length: 1 State disturbance vector length: 1 Observation innovation vector length: 1 Sample size supported by model: Unlimited State variables: x1, x2,... State disturbances: u1, u2,... Observation series: y1, y2,... Observation innovations: e1, e2,... State equations: x1(t) = (0.60)x1(t-1) + (0.20)x2(t-1) + (0.50)x3(t-1) + (0.30)u1(t) x2(t) = x1(t-1) x3(t) = x3(t-1) Observation equation: y1(t) = x1(t) - x2(t) + (0.10)e1(t) Initial state distribution: Initial state means x1 x2 x3 0 0 1 Initial state covariance matrix x1 x2 x3 x1 Inf 0 0 x2 0 Inf 0 x3 0 0 0 State types x1 x2 x3 Diffuse Diffuse Constant
Cov0
has infinite variance for the AR(2) states.
Display Diffuse State-Space Model with Initial Values
Create a diffuse state-space model containing two independent, autoregressive states, and where the observations are the deterministic sum of the two states. Symbolically, the system of equations is
Specify the state-transition matrix.
A = [NaN 0; 0 NaN];
Specify the state-disturbance-loading matrix.
B = [NaN 0; 0 NaN];
Specify the measurement-sensitivity matrix.
C = [1 1];
Create the diffuse state-space model by using dssm
. Specify that the first state is stationary and the second is diffuse.
StateType = [0; 2];
Mdl = dssm(A,B,C,'StateType',StateType);
Mdl
is a dssm
model object.
Display the state-space model. Specify initial values for the unknown parameters and the initial state means and covariance matrix as follows:
.
.
params = [0.1; 0.1; 0.2; 0.2]; disp(Mdl,params)
State-space model type: dssm State vector length: 2 Observation vector length: 1 State disturbance vector length: 2 Observation innovation vector length: 0 Sample size supported by model: Unlimited Unknown parameters for estimation: 4 State variables: x1, x2,... State disturbances: u1, u2,... Observation series: y1, y2,... Observation innovations: e1, e2,... Unknown parameters: c1, c2,... State equations: x1(t) = (c1)x1(t-1) + (c3)u1(t) x2(t) = (c2)x2(t-1) + (c4)u2(t) Observation equation: y1(t) = x1(t) + x2(t) Initial state distribution: Initial state means x1 x2 0 0 Initial state covariance matrix x1 x2 x1 0.04 0 x2 0 Inf State types x1 x2 Stationary Diffuse
The software computes the initial state mean and variance of the stationary state using its stationary distribution.
Explicitly Create and Display Time-Varying Diffuse State-Space Model
From periods 1 through 50, the state model is a diffuse AR(2) and a stationary MA(1) model, and the observation model is the sum of the two states. From periods 51 through 100, the state model includes the first AR(2) model only. Symbolically, the state-space model is, for periods 1 through 50,
for period 51,
and for periods 52 through 100,
Specify the state-transition coefficient matrix.
A1 = {[NaN NaN 0 0; 1 0 0 0; 0 0 0 NaN; 0 0 0 0]}; A2 = {[NaN NaN 0 0; 1 0 0 0]}; A3 = {[NaN NaN; 1 0]}; A = [repmat(A1,50,1);A2;repmat(A3,49,1)];
Specify the state-disturbance-loading coefficient matrix.
B1 = {[NaN 0 0 0; 0 0 0 0; 0 0 1 0; 0 0 1 0]}; B2 = {[NaN 0 0 0; 0 0 0 0]}; B3 = {[NaN 0; 0 0]}; B = [repmat(B1,50,1);B2;repmat(B3,49,1)];
Specify the measurement-sensitivity coefficient matrix.
C1 = {[NaN 0 NaN 0]}; C3 = {[NaN 0]}; C = [repmat(C1,50,1);repmat(C3,50,1)];
Specify the observation-disturbance coefficient matrix.
D1 = {NaN}; D3 = {NaN}; D = [repmat(D1,50,1);repmat(D3,50,1)];
Create the diffuse state-space model. Specify that the initial state distributions are diffuse for the states composing the AR model and stationary for those composing the MA model.
StateType = [2; 2; 0; 0];
Mdl = dssm(A,B,C,D,'StateType',StateType);
Mdl
is an dssm
model object.
The model is large and contains a different set of parameters for each period. The software displays state and observation equations for the first 10 and last 10 periods. You can choose which periods to display the equations for using the 'Period'
name-value pair argument.
Display the diffuse state-space model, and use 'Period'
display the state and observation equations for the 50th, 51st, and 52nd periods.
disp(Mdl,'Period',50)
State-space model type: dssm State vector length: Time-varying Observation vector length: 1 State disturbance vector length: Time-varying Observation innovation vector length: 1 Sample size supported by model: 100 Unknown parameters for estimation: 600 State variables: x1, x2,... State disturbances: u1, u2,... Observation series: y1, y2,... Observation innovations: e1, e2,... Unknown parameters: c1, c2,... State equations (in period 50): x1(t) = (c148)x1(t-1) + (c149)x2(t-1) + (c300)u1(t) x2(t) = x1(t-1) x3(t) = (c150)x4(t-1) + u3(t) x4(t) = u3(t) Time-varying transition matrix A contains unknown parameters: c1 c2 c3 c4 c5 c6 c7 c8 c9 c10 c11 c12 c13 c14 c15 c16 c17 c18 c19 c20 c21 c22 c23 c24 c25 c26 c27 c28 c29 c30 c31 c32 c33 c34 c35 c36 c37 c38 c39 c40 c41 c42 c43 c44 c45 c46 c47 c48 c49 c50 c51 c52 c53 c54 c55 c56 c57 c58 c59 c60 c61 c62 c63 c64 c65 c66 c67 c68 c69 c70 c71 c72 c73 c74 c75 c76 c77 c78 c79 c80 c81 c82 c83 c84 c85 c86 c87 c88 c89 c90 c91 c92 c93 c94 c95 c96 c97 c98 c99 c100 c101 c102 c103 c104 c105 c106 c107 c108 c109 c110 c111 c112 c113 c114 c115 c116 c117 c118 c119 c120 c121 c122 c123 c124 c125 c126 c127 c128 c129 c130 c131 c132 c133 c134 c135 c136 c137 c138 c139 c140 c141 c142 c143 c144 c145 c146 c147 c148 c149 c150 c151 c152 c153 c154 c155 c156 c157 c158 c159 c160 c161 c162 c163 c164 c165 c166 c167 c168 c169 c170 c171 c172 c173 c174 c175 c176 c177 c178 c179 c180 c181 c182 c183 c184 c185 c186 c187 c188 c189 c190 c191 c192 c193 c194 c195 c196 c197 c198 c199 c200 c201 c202 c203 c204 c205 c206 c207 c208 c209 c210 c211 c212 c213 c214 c215 c216 c217 c218 c219 c220 c221 c222 c223 c224 c225 c226 c227 c228 c229 c230 c231 c232 c233 c234 c235 c236 c237 c238 c239 c240 c241 c242 c243 c244 c245 c246 c247 c248 c249 c250 Time-varying state disturbance loading matrix B contains unknown parameters: c251 c252 c253 c254 c255 c256 c257 c258 c259 c260 c261 c262 c263 c264 c265 c266 c267 c268 c269 c270 c271 c272 c273 c274 c275 c276 c277 c278 c279 c280 c281 c282 c283 c284 c285 c286 c287 c288 c289 c290 c291 c292 c293 c294 c295 c296 c297 c298 c299 c300 c301 c302 c303 c304 c305 c306 c307 c308 c309 c310 c311 c312 c313 c314 c315 c316 c317 c318 c319 c320 c321 c322 c323 c324 c325 c326 c327 c328 c329 c330 c331 c332 c333 c334 c335 c336 c337 c338 c339 c340 c341 c342 c343 c344 c345 c346 c347 c348 c349 c350 Observation equation (in period 50): y1(t) = (c449)x1(t) + (c450)x3(t) + (c550)e1(t) Time-varying measurement sensitivity matrix C contains unknown parameters: c351 c352 c353 c354 c355 c356 c357 c358 c359 c360 c361 c362 c363 c364 c365 c366 c367 c368 c369 c370 c371 c372 c373 c374 c375 c376 c377 c378 c379 c380 c381 c382 c383 c384 c385 c386 c387 c388 c389 c390 c391 c392 c393 c394 c395 c396 c397 c398 c399 c400 c401 c402 c403 c404 c405 c406 c407 c408 c409 c410 c411 c412 c413 c414 c415 c416 c417 c418 c419 c420 c421 c422 c423 c424 c425 c426 c427 c428 c429 c430 c431 c432 c433 c434 c435 c436 c437 c438 c439 c440 c441 c442 c443 c444 c445 c446 c447 c448 c449 c450 c451 c452 c453 c454 c455 c456 c457 c458 c459 c460 c461 c462 c463 c464 c465 c466 c467 c468 c469 c470 c471 c472 c473 c474 c475 c476 c477 c478 c479 c480 c481 c482 c483 c484 c485 c486 c487 c488 c489 c490 c491 c492 c493 c494 c495 c496 c497 c498 c499 c500 Time-varying observation innovation loading matrix D contains unknown parameters: c501 c502 c503 c504 c505 c506 c507 c508 c509 c510 c511 c512 c513 c514 c515 c516 c517 c518 c519 c520 c521 c522 c523 c524 c525 c526 c527 c528 c529 c530 c531 c532 c533 c534 c535 c536 c537 c538 c539 c540 c541 c542 c543 c544 c545 c546 c547 c548 c549 c550 c551 c552 c553 c554 c555 c556 c557 c558 c559 c560 c561 c562 c563 c564 c565 c566 c567 c568 c569 c570 c571 c572 c573 c574 c575 c576 c577 c578 c579 c580 c581 c582 c583 c584 c585 c586 c587 c588 c589 c590 c591 c592 c593 c594 c595 c596 c597 c598 c599 c600 Initial state distribution: Initial state means are not specified. Initial state covariance matrix is not specified. State types x1 x2 x3 x4 Diffuse Diffuse Stationary Stationary
disp(Mdl,'Period',51)
State-space model type: dssm State vector length: Time-varying Observation vector length: 1 State disturbance vector length: Time-varying Observation innovation vector length: 1 Sample size supported by model: 100 Unknown parameters for estimation: 600 State variables: x1, x2,... State disturbances: u1, u2,... Observation series: y1, y2,... Observation innovations: e1, e2,... Unknown parameters: c1, c2,... State equations (in period 51): x1(t) = (c151)x1(t-1) + (c152)x2(t-1) + (c301)u1(t) x2(t) = x1(t-1) Time-varying transition matrix A contains unknown parameters: c1 c2 c3 c4 c5 c6 c7 c8 c9 c10 c11 c12 c13 c14 c15 c16 c17 c18 c19 c20 c21 c22 c23 c24 c25 c26 c27 c28 c29 c30 c31 c32 c33 c34 c35 c36 c37 c38 c39 c40 c41 c42 c43 c44 c45 c46 c47 c48 c49 c50 c51 c52 c53 c54 c55 c56 c57 c58 c59 c60 c61 c62 c63 c64 c65 c66 c67 c68 c69 c70 c71 c72 c73 c74 c75 c76 c77 c78 c79 c80 c81 c82 c83 c84 c85 c86 c87 c88 c89 c90 c91 c92 c93 c94 c95 c96 c97 c98 c99 c100 c101 c102 c103 c104 c105 c106 c107 c108 c109 c110 c111 c112 c113 c114 c115 c116 c117 c118 c119 c120 c121 c122 c123 c124 c125 c126 c127 c128 c129 c130 c131 c132 c133 c134 c135 c136 c137 c138 c139 c140 c141 c142 c143 c144 c145 c146 c147 c148 c149 c150 c151 c152 c153 c154 c155 c156 c157 c158 c159 c160 c161 c162 c163 c164 c165 c166 c167 c168 c169 c170 c171 c172 c173 c174 c175 c176 c177 c178 c179 c180 c181 c182 c183 c184 c185 c186 c187 c188 c189 c190 c191 c192 c193 c194 c195 c196 c197 c198 c199 c200 c201 c202 c203 c204 c205 c206 c207 c208 c209 c210 c211 c212 c213 c214 c215 c216 c217 c218 c219 c220 c221 c222 c223 c224 c225 c226 c227 c228 c229 c230 c231 c232 c233 c234 c235 c236 c237 c238 c239 c240 c241 c242 c243 c244 c245 c246 c247 c248 c249 c250 Time-varying state disturbance loading matrix B contains unknown parameters: c251 c252 c253 c254 c255 c256 c257 c258 c259 c260 c261 c262 c263 c264 c265 c266 c267 c268 c269 c270 c271 c272 c273 c274 c275 c276 c277 c278 c279 c280 c281 c282 c283 c284 c285 c286 c287 c288 c289 c290 c291 c292 c293 c294 c295 c296 c297 c298 c299 c300 c301 c302 c303 c304 c305 c306 c307 c308 c309 c310 c311 c312 c313 c314 c315 c316 c317 c318 c319 c320 c321 c322 c323 c324 c325 c326 c327 c328 c329 c330 c331 c332 c333 c334 c335 c336 c337 c338 c339 c340 c341 c342 c343 c344 c345 c346 c347 c348 c349 c350 Observation equation (in period 51): y1(t) = (c451)x1(t) + (c551)e1(t) Time-varying measurement sensitivity matrix C contains unknown parameters: c351 c352 c353 c354 c355 c356 c357 c358 c359 c360 c361 c362 c363 c364 c365 c366 c367 c368 c369 c370 c371 c372 c373 c374 c375 c376 c377 c378 c379 c380 c381 c382 c383 c384 c385 c386 c387 c388 c389 c390 c391 c392 c393 c394 c395 c396 c397 c398 c399 c400 c401 c402 c403 c404 c405 c406 c407 c408 c409 c410 c411 c412 c413 c414 c415 c416 c417 c418 c419 c420 c421 c422 c423 c424 c425 c426 c427 c428 c429 c430 c431 c432 c433 c434 c435 c436 c437 c438 c439 c440 c441 c442 c443 c444 c445 c446 c447 c448 c449 c450 c451 c452 c453 c454 c455 c456 c457 c458 c459 c460 c461 c462 c463 c464 c465 c466 c467 c468 c469 c470 c471 c472 c473 c474 c475 c476 c477 c478 c479 c480 c481 c482 c483 c484 c485 c486 c487 c488 c489 c490 c491 c492 c493 c494 c495 c496 c497 c498 c499 c500 Time-varying observation innovation loading matrix D contains unknown parameters: c501 c502 c503 c504 c505 c506 c507 c508 c509 c510 c511 c512 c513 c514 c515 c516 c517 c518 c519 c520 c521 c522 c523 c524 c525 c526 c527 c528 c529 c530 c531 c532 c533 c534 c535 c536 c537 c538 c539 c540 c541 c542 c543 c544 c545 c546 c547 c548 c549 c550 c551 c552 c553 c554 c555 c556 c557 c558 c559 c560 c561 c562 c563 c564 c565 c566 c567 c568 c569 c570 c571 c572 c573 c574 c575 c576 c577 c578 c579 c580 c581 c582 c583 c584 c585 c586 c587 c588 c589 c590 c591 c592 c593 c594 c595 c596 c597 c598 c599 c600 Initial state distribution: Initial state means are not specified. Initial state covariance matrix is not specified. State types x1 x2 x3 x4 Diffuse Diffuse Stationary Stationary
disp(Mdl,'Period',52)
State-space model type: dssm State vector length: Time-varying Observation vector length: 1 State disturbance vector length: Time-varying Observation innovation vector length: 1 Sample size supported by model: 100 Unknown parameters for estimation: 600 State variables: x1, x2,... State disturbances: u1, u2,... Observation series: y1, y2,... Observation innovations: e1, e2,... Unknown parameters: c1, c2,... State equations (in period 52): x1(t) = (c153)x1(t-1) + (c154)x2(t-1) + (c302)u1(t) x2(t) = x1(t-1) Time-varying transition matrix A contains unknown parameters: c1 c2 c3 c4 c5 c6 c7 c8 c9 c10 c11 c12 c13 c14 c15 c16 c17 c18 c19 c20 c21 c22 c23 c24 c25 c26 c27 c28 c29 c30 c31 c32 c33 c34 c35 c36 c37 c38 c39 c40 c41 c42 c43 c44 c45 c46 c47 c48 c49 c50 c51 c52 c53 c54 c55 c56 c57 c58 c59 c60 c61 c62 c63 c64 c65 c66 c67 c68 c69 c70 c71 c72 c73 c74 c75 c76 c77 c78 c79 c80 c81 c82 c83 c84 c85 c86 c87 c88 c89 c90 c91 c92 c93 c94 c95 c96 c97 c98 c99 c100 c101 c102 c103 c104 c105 c106 c107 c108 c109 c110 c111 c112 c113 c114 c115 c116 c117 c118 c119 c120 c121 c122 c123 c124 c125 c126 c127 c128 c129 c130 c131 c132 c133 c134 c135 c136 c137 c138 c139 c140 c141 c142 c143 c144 c145 c146 c147 c148 c149 c150 c151 c152 c153 c154 c155 c156 c157 c158 c159 c160 c161 c162 c163 c164 c165 c166 c167 c168 c169 c170 c171 c172 c173 c174 c175 c176 c177 c178 c179 c180 c181 c182 c183 c184 c185 c186 c187 c188 c189 c190 c191 c192 c193 c194 c195 c196 c197 c198 c199 c200 c201 c202 c203 c204 c205 c206 c207 c208 c209 c210 c211 c212 c213 c214 c215 c216 c217 c218 c219 c220 c221 c222 c223 c224 c225 c226 c227 c228 c229 c230 c231 c232 c233 c234 c235 c236 c237 c238 c239 c240 c241 c242 c243 c244 c245 c246 c247 c248 c249 c250 Time-varying state disturbance loading matrix B contains unknown parameters: c251 c252 c253 c254 c255 c256 c257 c258 c259 c260 c261 c262 c263 c264 c265 c266 c267 c268 c269 c270 c271 c272 c273 c274 c275 c276 c277 c278 c279 c280 c281 c282 c283 c284 c285 c286 c287 c288 c289 c290 c291 c292 c293 c294 c295 c296 c297 c298 c299 c300 c301 c302 c303 c304 c305 c306 c307 c308 c309 c310 c311 c312 c313 c314 c315 c316 c317 c318 c319 c320 c321 c322 c323 c324 c325 c326 c327 c328 c329 c330 c331 c332 c333 c334 c335 c336 c337 c338 c339 c340 c341 c342 c343 c344 c345 c346 c347 c348 c349 c350 Observation equation (in period 52): y1(t) = (c452)x1(t) + (c552)e1(t) Time-varying measurement sensitivity matrix C contains unknown parameters: c351 c352 c353 c354 c355 c356 c357 c358 c359 c360 c361 c362 c363 c364 c365 c366 c367 c368 c369 c370 c371 c372 c373 c374 c375 c376 c377 c378 c379 c380 c381 c382 c383 c384 c385 c386 c387 c388 c389 c390 c391 c392 c393 c394 c395 c396 c397 c398 c399 c400 c401 c402 c403 c404 c405 c406 c407 c408 c409 c410 c411 c412 c413 c414 c415 c416 c417 c418 c419 c420 c421 c422 c423 c424 c425 c426 c427 c428 c429 c430 c431 c432 c433 c434 c435 c436 c437 c438 c439 c440 c441 c442 c443 c444 c445 c446 c447 c448 c449 c450 c451 c452 c453 c454 c455 c456 c457 c458 c459 c460 c461 c462 c463 c464 c465 c466 c467 c468 c469 c470 c471 c472 c473 c474 c475 c476 c477 c478 c479 c480 c481 c482 c483 c484 c485 c486 c487 c488 c489 c490 c491 c492 c493 c494 c495 c496 c497 c498 c499 c500 Time-varying observation innovation loading matrix D contains unknown parameters: c501 c502 c503 c504 c505 c506 c507 c508 c509 c510 c511 c512 c513 c514 c515 c516 c517 c518 c519 c520 c521 c522 c523 c524 c525 c526 c527 c528 c529 c530 c531 c532 c533 c534 c535 c536 c537 c538 c539 c540 c541 c542 c543 c544 c545 c546 c547 c548 c549 c550 c551 c552 c553 c554 c555 c556 c557 c558 c559 c560 c561 c562 c563 c564 c565 c566 c567 c568 c569 c570 c571 c572 c573 c574 c575 c576 c577 c578 c579 c580 c581 c582 c583 c584 c585 c586 c587 c588 c589 c590 c591 c592 c593 c594 c595 c596 c597 c598 c599 c600 Initial state distribution: Initial state means are not specified. Initial state covariance matrix is not specified. State types x1 x2 x3 x4 Diffuse Diffuse Stationary Stationary
The software attributes a different set of coefficients for each period. You might experience numerical issues when you estimate such models. To reuse parameters among groups of periods, consider creating a parameter-to-matrix mapping function.
Tips
The software always displays explicitly specified state-space models (that is, models you create without using a parameter-to-matrix mapping function). Try explicitly specifying state-space models first so that you can verify them using
disp
.A parameter-to-matrix function that you specify to create
Mdl
is a black box to the software. Therefore, the software might not display complex, implicitly defined state-space models.
Algorithms
If you implicitly create
Mdl
, and if the software cannot infer locations for unknown parameters from the parameter-to-matrix function, then the software evaluates these parameters using their initial values and displays them as numeric values. This evaluation can occur when the parameter-to-matrix function has a random, unknown coefficient, which is a convenient form for a Monte Carlo study.The software displays the initial state distributions as numeric values. This type of display occurs because, in many cases, the initial distribution depends on the values of the state equation matrices
A
andB
. These values are often a complicated function of unknown parameters. In such situations, the software does not display the initial distribution symbolically. Additionally, ifMean0
andCov0
contain unknown parameters, then the software evaluates and displays numeric values for the unknown parameters.
References
[1] Durbin J., and S. J. Koopman. Time Series Analysis by State Space Methods. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.
Version History
Introduced in R2015b
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