On Wed, 9 Jan 2008, AndyZon wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I have a huge number of categorical variables, say at least 10000, and I
put
> them into a matrix, each column is one variable. The question is: how can I
> make all of the pairwise cross tabulation tables efficiently? The
> straightforward solution is to use for-loops by looping two indexes on the
> table() function, but it was just too slow. Is there a more efficient way
to
> do that? Any guidance will be greatly appreciated.
The totals are merely the crossproducts of a suitably constructed binary
(zero-one) matrix is used to encode the categories. See
'?contr.treatment'
if you cannot grok 'suitably constructed'.
If the categories are all dichotomies coded as 0:1, you can use
res <- crossprod( dat )
to find the totals for the (1,1) cells
If you need the full tables, you can get them from the marginal totals
using
diag( res )
to get the number in each '1' margin and
nrow(dat)
to get the table total from which the numbers in each '0' margin by
subtracting the corresponding '1' margin.
With dichotomous variables, dat has 10000 columns and you will only need
10000^2 integers or about 0.75 Gigabytes to store the 'res'. And it
takes
about 20 seconds to run 1000 rows on my MacBook. Of course, 'res' has a
redundant triangle
This approach generalizes to any number of categories:
To extend this to more than two categories, you will need to do for each
such column what model.matrix(~factor( dat[,i] ) ) does by default
( using 'contr.treatment' ) - construct zero-one codes for all but one
(reference) category.
Note that with 10000 trichotomies, you will have a result with
10000^2 * ( 3-1 )^2
integers needing about 3 Gigabytes, and so on.
HTH,
Chuck
p.s. Why on Earth are you doing this????
>
> Andy
> --
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>
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Charles C. Berry (858) 534-2098
Dept of Family/Preventive Medicine
E mailto:cberry at tajo.ucsd.edu UC San Diego
http://famprevmed.ucsd.edu/faculty/cberry/ La Jolla, San Diego 92093-0901