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PyMARE: Python Meta-Analysis & Regression Engine

A Python library for mixed-effects meta-regression (including meta-analysis).

Latest Version PyPI - Python Version License DOI Documentation Status GitHub CI Codecov

PyMARE is alpha software under heavy development; we reserve the right to make major changes to the API.

Quickstart

Install PyMARE from PyPI:

pip install pymare

Or for the bleeding-edge GitHub version:

pip install git+https://github.com/neurostuff/pymare.git

Suppose we have parameter estimates from 8 studies, along with corresponding variances, and a single (fixed) covariate:

y = np.array([-1, 0.5, 0.5, 0.5, 1, 1, 2, 10]) # study-level estimates
v = np.array([1, 1, 2.4, 0.5, 1, 1, 1.2, 1.5]) # study-level variances
X = np.array([1, 1, 2, 2, 4, 4, 2.8, 2.8]) # a fixed study-level covariate

We can conduct a mixed-effects meta-regression using restricted maximum-likelihood (ReML)estimation in PyMARE using the high-level meta_regression function:

from pymare import meta_regression

result = meta_regression(y, v, X, names=['my_cov'], add_intercept=True,
                         method='REML')
print(result.to_df())

This produces the following output:

         name   estimate        se   z-score     p-val  ci_0.025   ci_0.975
0  intercept  -0.106579  2.993715 -0.035601  0.971600 -5.974153   5.760994
1     my_cov   0.769961  1.113344  0.691575  0.489204 -1.412153   2.952075

Alternatively, we can achieve the same outcome using PyMARE's object-oriented API (which the meta_regression function wraps):

from pymare import Dataset
from pymare.estimators import VarianceBasedLikelihoodEstimator

# A handy container we can pass to any estimator
dataset = Dataset(y, v, X)
# Estimator class for likelihood-based methods when variances are known
estimator = VarianceBasedLikelihoodEstimator(method='REML')
# All estimators expose a fit_dataset() method that takes a `Dataset`
# instance as the first (and usually only) argument.
estimator.fit_dataset(dataset)
# Post-fitting we can obtain a MetaRegressionResults instance via .summary()
results = estimator.summary()
# Print summary of results as a pandas DataFrame
print(result.to_df())

And if we want to be even more explicit, we can avoid the Dataset abstraction entirely (though we'll lose some convenient validation checks):

estimator = VarianceBasedLikelihoodEstimator(method='REML')

# X must be 2-d; this is one of the things the Dataset implicitly handles.
X = X[:, None]

estimator.fit(y, v, X)

results = estimator.summary()

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