4.6 Article

Prior sample size extensions for assessing prior impact and prior-likelihood discordance

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/rssb.12414

Keywords

conjugate prior; prior‐ likelihood conflict; weakly informative prior

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation
  2. National Institutes of Health
  3. John Templeton Foundation

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This paper presents a framework for quantifying the contribution of the prior to posterior inference in the presence of prior-likelihood discordance, expanding the classic notion of prior sample size in three directions. The framework is demonstrated using simulated and real data, showing the potential of quantifying the impact of a prior in specific inference problems. The discussion also touches upon conceptual and theoretical issues, such as the use of improper priors and priors with asymptotically non-vanishing influence.
This paper outlines a framework for quantifying the prior's contribution to posterior inference in the presence of prior-likelihood discordance, a broader concept than the usual notion of prior-likelihood conflict. We achieve this dual purpose by extending the classic notion of prior sample size, M, in three directions: (I) estimating M beyond conjugate families; (II) formulating M as a relative notion that is as a function of the likelihood sample size k, M(k), which also leads naturally to a graphical diagnosis; and (III) permitting negative M, as a measure of prior-likelihood conflict, that is, harmful discordance. Our asymptotic regime permits the prior sample size to grow with the likelihood data size, hence making asymptotic arguments meaningful for investigating the impact of the prior relative to that of likelihood. It leads to a simple asymptotic formula for quantifying the impact of a proper prior that only involves computing a centrality and a spread measure of the prior and the posterior. We use simulated and real data to illustrate the potential of the proposed framework, including quantifying how weak is a 'weakly informative' prior adopted in a study of lupus nephritis. Whereas we take a pragmatic perspective in assessing the impact of a prior on a given inference problem under a specific evaluative metric, we also touch upon conceptual and theoretical issues such as using improper priors and permitting priors with asymptotically non-vanishing influence.

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