pdSymm General Positive-Definite Matrix
 Description
This function is a constructor for the pdSymm class, representing a general positive-definite matrix. If the matrix associated with object is of dimension n, it is represented by n*(n+1)/2 unrestricted parameters, using the matrix-logarithm parametrization described in Pinheiro and Bates (1996). When value is numeric(0), an uninitialized pdMat object, a one-sided formula, or a vector of character strings, object is returned as an uninitialized pdSymm object (with just some of its attributes and its class defined) and needs to have its coefficients assigned later, generally using the coef or matrix replacement functions. If value is an initialized pdMat object, object will be constructed from as.matrix(value). Finally, if value is a numeric vector, it is assumed to represent the unrestricted coefficients of the matrix-logarithm parametrization of the underlying positive-definite matrix. 
Usage
pdSymm(value, form, nam, data)
Arguments
| value | an optional initialization value, which can be any of the following: a  | 
| form | an optional one-sided linear formula specifying the row/column names for the matrix represented by  | 
| nam | an optional vector of character strings specifying the row/column names for the matrix represented by object. It must have length equal to the dimension of the underlying positive-definite matrix and unreplicated elements. This argument is ignored when  | 
| data | an optional data frame in which to evaluate the variables named in  | 
Value
a pdSymm object representing a general positive-definite matrix, also inheriting from class pdMat. 
Author(s)
José Pinheiro and Douglas Bates [email protected]
References
Pinheiro, J.C. and Bates., D.M. (1996) "Unconstrained Parametrizations for Variance-Covariance Matrices", Statistics and Computing, 6, 289-296.
Pinheiro, J.C., and Bates, D.M. (2000) "Mixed-Effects Models in S and S-PLUS", Springer.
See Also
as.matrix.pdMat, coef.pdMat, pdClasses, matrix<-.pdMat
Examples
pd1 <- pdSymm(diag(1:3), nam = c("A","B","C"))
pd1
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Licensed under the GNU General Public License.