The bridgedist Basics

Bruce J. Swihart

2024-10-18

library(bridgedist)
## The argument `scale` has been replaced with `phi` in this version.
## The top of page 77o in Wang Louis 2003 states phi is not a scale.
## Please start using the `phi` argument now.

Recreate the plot from Wang and Louis (2003) where the Bridge, Normal, and Logistic all have unit variance and mean 0 with ggplot2:

library(reshape2)
library(ggplot2)
xaxis = seq(-4,4,.01)
df = data.frame( xaxis,
                 Bridge = dbridge(xaxis, phi=1/sqrt(1+3/pi^2)),
                 Normal = dnorm(xaxis),
                 Logistic = dlogis(xaxis, scale=sqrt(3/pi^2)))
melt.df <- melt(df, id.vars = "xaxis")
colnames(melt.df) <- c("x", "Distribution", "value")
ggplot(melt.df, aes(x, value, color=Distribution)) + 
  geom_line(size=1.05) + 
  ylab("Probability density function") 
## Warning: Using `size` aesthetic for lines was deprecated in ggplot2 3.4.0.
## ℹ Please use `linewidth` instead.
## This warning is displayed once every 8 hours.
## Call `lifecycle::last_lifecycle_warnings()` to see where this warning was
## generated.
Fig. 1. Probability density functions of the Gaussian, logistic and bridge, for logistic, distributions each with zero mean and unit variance.
Fig. 1. Probability density functions of the Gaussian, logistic and bridge, for logistic, distributions each with zero mean and unit variance.

The implication is that a random variable from a Bridge distribution plus random variable from a standard logistic distribution is a logistic random variable with a scale greater than one (1/phi).

phi <- 0.5
df = data.frame(
                 Bridge = rbridge(1e5, phi=phi),
                 Std_Logistic = rlogis(1e5),
                 BridgePlusStd_Logistic = rbridge(1e5, phi=phi) +  rlogis(1e5),
                 Logistic = rlogis(1e5, scale=1/phi)
)
melt.df <- melt(df)
colnames(melt.df) <- c("Distribution", "value")
ggplot(melt.df, aes(value)) +
  facet_grid(.~Distribution) +
  geom_histogram()
Fig. 2. 10000 random variates in each panel. From left to right: the bridge distribution, the logistic with scale=1, the sum of the previous two, and the logistic with scale=1/phi. Note how similar the third and fourth panel, the application supporting the theory.
Fig. 2. 10000 random variates in each panel. From left to right: the bridge distribution, the logistic with scale=1, the sum of the previous two, and the logistic with scale=1/phi. Note how similar the third and fourth panel, the application supporting the theory.