WLSMV with some continuous variables

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Lucas Sempe

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Jun 17, 2019, 4:24:43 PM6/17/19
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Dear Lavaan team,

Thanks for all your work! It is invaluable for many of us! My PhD will have to acknowledge this forum too!

I have a technical question of how lavaan deals with continuous data when WLSMV is used. 

I have an SEM were the vast majority of my variables are ordered. Therefore I've chosen a WLSMV estimator. One manifest variable is used in the structural part.

Following Yves presentation (https://personality-project.org/r/tutorials/summerschool.14/rosseel_sem_cat.pdf),  my question: am I correct to assume that stage 1 (estimation of thresholds) is omitted, that stage 2 estimates a polyserial/biserial correlation and finally stage 3 is estimated?

I've read few papers and many posts on why WLSMV is better for ordinal data rather than ML. But should I worry of the opposite (WLSMV not being proper to deal with a continuous variable)?

Thanks a lot, 

Lucas

Terrence Jorgensen

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Jun 17, 2019, 5:39:46 PM6/17/19
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am I correct to assume that stage 1 (estimation of thresholds) is omitted

No, that step still occurs because some variables do have thresholds.  Stage 2 estimates a correlation matrix that contains polychorics among ordered variables as well as polyserials between the ordered and continuous variables (as well as the continuous variable's variance, not fixed to 1 like the ordered variables' variances).  If there are multiple continuous variables, their covariances are also estimated.

?lavCor

WLSMV is appropriate when even a single endogenous variable is ordered/binary.

Terrence D. Jorgensen
Assistant Professor, Methods and Statistics
Research Institute for Child Development and Education, the University of Amsterdam



Lucas Sempe

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Jun 18, 2019, 7:55:59 AM6/18/19
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Hello Terrence, thanks your answer. 

A follow-up question. How the continuous variables are treated under wlsmv?

Thanks, Lucas

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Terrence Jorgensen

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Jun 19, 2019, 5:30:07 AM6/19/19
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How the continuous variables are treated under wlsmv?

I thought I answered that above.  They are treated as continuous.  It might help to be more specific.  WLSMV is not a thing, it is shorthand for 3 things:

estimator = "DWLS"
se
= "robust.sem"
test
= "scaled.shifted" # "mean.var.adjusted" also available, which is what "MV" stands for


You can request estimator = "wls" for models with only continuous variables, but that is the ADF estimator described by Browne (1984), not the 3-stage estimator for models with any ordered variables for which we must assume a latent underlying distribution:

  1. estimate thresholds from 1-way contingency tables
  2. estimate polychoric/serial correlations from thresholds and 2-way tables
  3. fit SEM to polychoric/serial matrix
The robust "MV" correction is to account for the uncertainty of estimates in steps 1 and 2 when fitting the model in step 3.  That is not an issue for (full) WLS/ADF with continuous variables only.

joh4nd

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Jun 12, 2023, 10:47:52 AM6/12/23
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Is it in such cases (WLSMV and, hence, a subset of DWLS estimates) that robust fit criteria are preferred?
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