Error in lsqnonlin() - "Failure in initial objective function evaluation."

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Philip Newell
Philip Newell 2016 年 8 月 13 日
コメント済み: Star Strider 2016 年 8 月 16 日
I'm building a script to generate a non-linear least squares estimation, after prepping my data, I was able to generate the correct results into an array with the following function:
for x = 1:1000
fun = @(x)((leis_psi_minus(x)*(mu*cons_phi(x)+(1-mu)*poll_negphi(x)))/(cons_phi_minus(x)*(rho*leis_psi(x)+(1-rho)*poll_negpsi(x))));
w2(x) = fun(x);
end
where leis_psi_minus, cons_phi, poll_negphi, cons_phi_minus, leis_psi, poll_negpsi are all arrays of data. But when I try to do lsqnonlin(fun,x0), I get:
Error in lsqnonlin (line 196) initVals.F = feval(funfcn{3},xCurrent,varargin{:});
Caused by: Failure in initial objective function evaluation. LSQNONLIN cannot continue.
I haven't used lsqnonlin before, so I'm trying to research if I need to adjust options, but any insight or advice would be greatly appreciated!

回答 (1 件)

Star Strider
Star Strider 2016 年 8 月 13 日
For the optimisation functions, the argument of the objective function is the vector of parameters you want to optimise. (Your anonymous function objective function will get your data vectors from your workspace. It is not necessary to include them as arguments.)
What function did you start with, and what do you want to do with it?
  10 件のコメント
Philip Newell
Philip Newell 2016 年 8 月 15 日
Just an update, apparently I neglected to check whether my data had any NaN values. facepalm
Now I'm working on using a gradient and extending the model - is it possible to use two objective functions to estimate a set of parameters?
Star Strider
Star Strider 2016 年 8 月 16 日
Delete the observations with NaN values. That’s what the Statistics and Machine Learning Toolbox functions do.
Providing your own Jacobian function can speed the regression considerably for large data sets. I don’t know if it improves the ability of the regression to find the global minimum if there are many local minima. The Jacobian you supply is not an objective function. You can include it within your objective function, as described in the lsqnonlin documentation for fun.
You can only fit one objective function at a time, but you can fit as many models (objective functions) as you want. There are ways to compare two models to see which is the best fit, but that requires that both models describe the actual process that created your data with reasonable accuracy. (When I did that, I used the likelihood ratio test to determine if there was a significant difference between them. You have to determine if that is appropriate for your application.) Comparing multiple models (more than two) requires that you take the statistics of multiple comparisons into consideration. This varies with the test you’re doing, so I’ll leave that to you to research.

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