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root-tutorial-5.34.14-2.fc18.noarch.rpm

// A hypothesis testing example based on number counting  with background uncertainty.


/*
HybridStandardForm

Authors: Kyle Cranmer, Wouter Verkerke, and Sven Kreiss
date  May 2010 Part 1-3 
date  Dec 2010 Part 4-6

A hypothesis testing example based on number counting 
with background uncertainty.

NOTE: This example is like HybridInstructional, but the model is more clearly
generalizable to an analysis with shapes.  There is a lot of flexability
for how one models a problem in RooFit/RooStats.  Models come in a few 
common forms:
  - standard form: extended PDF of some discriminating variable m:
  eg: P(m) ~ S*fs(m) + B*fb(m), with S+B events expected
  in this case the dataset has N rows corresponding to N events
  and the extended term is Pois(N|S+B)

  - fractional form: non-extended PDF of some discriminating variable m:
  eg: P(m) ~ s*fs(m) + (1-s)*fb(m), where s is a signal fraction
  in this case the dataset has N rows corresponding to N events
  and there is no extended term

  - number counting form: in which there is no discriminating variable
  and the counts are modeled directly (see HybridInstructional)
  eg: P(N) = Pois(N|S+B)
  in this case the dataset has 1 row corresponding to N events
  and the extended term is the PDF itself.

Here we convert the number counting form into the standard form by 
introducing a dummy discriminating variable m with a uniform distribution.

This example:
 - demonstrates the usage of the HybridCalcultor (Part 4-6)
 - demonstrates the numerical integration of RooFit (Part 2)
 - validates the RooStats against an example with a known analytic answer
 - demonstrates usage of different test statistics
 - explains subtle choices in the prior used for hybrid methods
 - demonstrates usage of different priors for the nuisance parameters
 - demonstrates usage of PROOF

The basic setup here is that a main measurement has observed x events with an 
expectation of s+b.  One can choose an ad hoc prior for the uncertainty on b,
or try to base it on an auxiliary measurement.  In this case, the auxiliary
measurement (aka control measurement, sideband) is another counting experiment
with measurement y and expectation tau*b.  With an 'original prior' on b, 
called \eta(b) then one can obtain a posterior from the auxiliary measurement
\pi(b) = \eta(b) * Pois(y|tau*b).  This is a principled choice for a prior
on b in the main measurement of x, which can then be treated in a hybrid 
Bayesian/Frequentist way.  Additionally, one can try to treat the two 
measurements simultaneously, which is detailed in Part 6 of the tutorial.

This tutorial is related to the FourBin.C tutorial in the modeling, but
focuses on hypothesis testing instead of interval estimation.

More background on this 'prototype problem' can be found in the 
following papers:

Evaluation of three methods for calculating statistical significance 
when incorporating a systematic uncertainty into a test of the 
background-only hypothesis for a Poisson process
Authors: Robert D. Cousins, James T. Linnemann, Jordan Tucker
http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0702156
NIM  A 595 (2008) 480--501

Statistical Challenges for Searches for New Physics at the LHC
Authors: Kyle Cranmer
http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0511028

 Measures of Significance in HEP and Astrophysics
 Authors: J. T. Linnemann
 http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0312059
*/

#include "RooGlobalFunc.h"
#include "RooRealVar.h"
#include "RooProdPdf.h"
#include "RooWorkspace.h"
#include "RooDataSet.h"
#include "RooDataHist.h"
#include "TCanvas.h"
#include "TStopwatch.h"
#include "TH1.h"
#include "RooPlot.h"
#include "RooMsgService.h"

#include "RooStats/NumberCountingUtils.h"

#include "RooStats/HybridCalculator.h"
#include "RooStats/ToyMCSampler.h"
#include "RooStats/HypoTestPlot.h"

#include "RooStats/NumEventsTestStat.h"
#include "RooStats/ProfileLikelihoodTestStat.h"
#include "RooStats/SimpleLikelihoodRatioTestStat.h"
#include "RooStats/RatioOfProfiledLikelihoodsTestStat.h"
#include "RooStats/MaxLikelihoodEstimateTestStat.h"

using namespace RooFit;
using namespace RooStats;

//////////////////////////////////////////////////
// A New Test Statistic Class for this example.
// It simply returns the sum of the values in a particular
// column of a dataset. 
// You can ignore this class and focus on the macro below
//////////////////////////////////////////////////
class BinCountTestStat : public TestStatistic {
public:
  BinCountTestStat(void) : fColumnName("tmp") {}
  BinCountTestStat(string columnName) : fColumnName(columnName) {}
   
  virtual Double_t Evaluate(RooAbsData& data, RooArgSet& /*nullPOI*/) {
    // This is the main method in the interface
    Double_t value = 0.0;
    for(int i=0; i < data.numEntries(); i++) {
      value += data.get(i)->getRealValue(fColumnName.c_str());
    }
    return value;
      }
  virtual const TString GetVarName() const { return fColumnName; }
  
private:
  string fColumnName;

protected:
  ClassDef(BinCountTestStat,1)
};

ClassImp(BinCountTestStat)

//////////////////////////////////////////////////
// The Actual Tutorial Macro
//////////////////////////////////////////////////

void HybridStandardForm() {
  
  // This tutorial has 6 parts
  // Table of Contents
  // Setup
  //   1. Make the model for the 'prototype problem'
  // Special cases
  //   2. NOT RELEVANT HERE
  //   3. Use RooStats analytic solution for this problem 
  // RooStats HybridCalculator -- can be generalized
  //   4. RooStats ToyMC version of 2. & 3. 
  //   5. RooStats ToyMC with an equivalent test statistic
  //   6. RooStats ToyMC with simultaneous control & main measurement

  // Part 4 takes ~4 min without PROOF.
  // Part 5 takes about ~2 min with PROOF on 4 cores.
  // Of course, everything looks nicer with more toys, which takes longer.


  TStopwatch t;
  t.Start();
  TCanvas *c = new TCanvas;
  c->Divide(2,2);

  ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // P A R T   1  :  D I R E C T   I N T E G R A T I O N 
  //////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // Make model for prototype on/off problem
  // Pois(x | s+b) * Pois(y | tau b )
  // for Z_Gamma, use uniform prior on b.
  RooWorkspace* w = new RooWorkspace("w");
  

  // replace the pdf in 'number couting form' 
  //w->factory("Poisson::px(x[150,0,500],sum::splusb(s[0,0,100],b[100,0,300]))");
  // with one in standard form.  Now x is encoded in event count
  w->factory("Uniform::f(m[0,1])");//m is a dummy discriminanting variable
  w->factory("ExtendPdf::px(f,sum::splusb(s[0,0,100],b[100,0,300]))");
  w->factory("Poisson::py(y[100,0,500],prod::taub(tau[1.],b))"); 
  w->factory("PROD::model(px,py)");
  w->factory("Uniform::prior_b(b)");

  // We will control the output level in a few places to avoid
  // verbose progress messages.  We start by keeping track
  // of the current threshold on messages.
  RooFit::MsgLevel msglevel = RooMsgService::instance().globalKillBelow();

  // Use PROOF-lite on multi-core machines
  ProofConfig* pc = NULL;
  // uncomment below if you want to use PROOF
  pc = new ProofConfig(*w, 4, "workers=4", kFALSE); // machine with 4 cores
  //  pc = new ProofConfig(*w, 2, "workers=2", kFALSE); // machine with 2 cores

  /////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // P A R T   3  :  A N A L Y T I C   R E S U L T
  /////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // In this special case, the integrals are known analytically 
  // and they are implemented in RooStats::NumberCountingUtils

  // analytic Z_Bi
  double p_Bi = NumberCountingUtils::BinomialWithTauObsP(150, 100, 1);
  double Z_Bi = NumberCountingUtils::BinomialWithTauObsZ(150, 100, 1);
  cout << "-----------------------------------------"<<endl;
  cout << "Part 3" << endl;
  std::cout << "Z_Bi p-value (analytic): " << p_Bi << std::endl;
  std::cout << "Z_Bi significance (analytic): " << Z_Bi << std::endl;
  t.Stop();  t.Print(); t.Reset(); t.Start();

  ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // P A R T   4  :  U S I N G   H Y B R I D   C A L C U L A T O R
  ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // Now we demonstrate the RooStats HybridCalculator.
  //
  // Like all RooStats calculators it needs the data and a ModelConfig
  // for the relevant hypotheses.  Since we are doing hypothesis testing
  // we need a ModelConfig for the null (background only) and the alternate 
  // (signal+background) hypotheses.  We also need to specify the PDF, 
  // the parameters of interest, and the observables.  Furthermore, since
  // the parameter of interest is floating, we need to specify which values
  // of the parameter corresponds to the null and alternate (eg. s=0 and s=50)
  //
  // define some sets of variables obs={x} and poi={s}
  // note here, x is the only observable in the main measurement
  // and y is treated as a separate measurement, which is used 
  // to produce the prior that will be used in this calculation
  // to randomize the nuisance parameters.  
  w->defineSet("obs","m");
  w->defineSet("poi","s");

  // create a toy dataset with the x=150
  //  RooDataSet *data = new RooDataSet("d", "d", *w->set("obs"));
  //  data->add(*w->set("obs"));
  RooDataSet* data = w->pdf("px")->generate(*w->set("obs"),150);

  //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // Part 3a : Setup ModelConfigs
  // create the null (background-only) ModelConfig with s=0
  ModelConfig b_model("B_model", w);
  b_model.SetPdf(*w->pdf("px"));
  b_model.SetObservables(*w->set("obs"));
  b_model.SetParametersOfInterest(*w->set("poi"));
  w->var("s")->setVal(0.0);  // important!
  b_model.SetSnapshot(*w->set("poi"));

  // create the alternate (signal+background) ModelConfig with s=50
  ModelConfig sb_model("S+B_model", w);
  sb_model.SetPdf(*w->pdf("px"));
  sb_model.SetObservables(*w->set("obs"));
  sb_model.SetParametersOfInterest(*w->set("poi"));
  w->var("s")->setVal(50.0); // important!
  sb_model.SetSnapshot(*w->set("poi"));


  //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // Part 3b : Choose Test Statistic
  // To make an equivalent calculation we need to use x as the test 
  // statistic.  This is not a built-in test statistic in RooStats
  // so we define it above.  The new class inherits from the 
  // RooStats::TestStatistic interface, and simply returns the value
  // of x in the dataset.

  NumEventsTestStat eventCount(*w->pdf("px"));

  //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // Part 3c : Define Prior used to randomize nuisance parameters
  //
  // The prior used for the hybrid calculator is the posterior
  // from the auxiliary measurement y.  The model for the aux.
  // measurement is Pois(y|tau*b), thus the likleihood function
  // is proportional to (has the form of) a Gamma distribution.
  // if the 'original prior' \eta(b) is uniform, then from
  // Bayes's theorem we have the posterior:
  //  \pi(b) = Pois(y|tau*b) * \eta(b)
  // If \eta(b) is flat, then we arrive at a Gamma distribution.
  // Since RooFit will normalize the PDF we can actually supply
  // py=Pois(y,tau*b) that will be equivalent to multiplying by a uniform.
  // 
  // Alternatively, we could explicitly use a gamma distribution:
  // w->factory("Gamma::gamma(b,sum::temp(y,1),1,0)");
  // 
  // or we can use some other ad hoc prior that do not naturally 
  // follow from the known form of the auxiliary measurement.
  // The common choice is the equivlaent Gaussian:
  w->factory("Gaussian::gauss_prior(b,y, expr::sqrty('sqrt(y)',y))");
  // this corresponds to the "Z_N" calculation.
  //
  // or one could use the analogous log-normal prior
  w->factory("Lognormal::lognorm_prior(b,y, expr::kappa('1+1./sqrt(y)',y))");
  //
  // Ideally, the HybridCalculator would be able to inspect the full
  // model Pois(x | s+b) * Pois(y | tau b ) and be given the original
  // prior \eta(b) to form \pi(b) = Pois(y|tau*b) * \eta(b).
  // This is not yet implemented because in the general case
  // it is not easy to identify the terms in the PDF that correspond
  // to the auxiliary measurement.  So for now, it must be set 
  // explicitly with:
  //  - ForcePriorNuisanceNull()
  //  - ForcePriorNuisanceAlt()
  // the name "ForcePriorNuisance" was chosen because we anticipate
  // this to be auto-detected, but will leave the option open
  // to force to a different prior for the nuisance parameters.

  //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // Part 3d : Construct and configure the HybridCalculator

  HybridCalculator hc1(*data, sb_model, b_model);
  ToyMCSampler *toymcs1 = (ToyMCSampler*)hc1.GetTestStatSampler();
  //  toymcs1->SetNEventsPerToy(1); // because the model is in number counting form
  toymcs1->SetTestStatistic(&eventCount); // set the test statistic
  //  toymcs1->SetGenerateBinned();
  hc1.SetToys(30000,1000); 
  hc1.ForcePriorNuisanceAlt(*w->pdf("py"));
  hc1.ForcePriorNuisanceNull(*w->pdf("py"));
  // if you wanted to use the ad hoc Gaussian prior instead
  //  hc1.ForcePriorNuisanceAlt(*w->pdf("gauss_prior"));
  //  hc1.ForcePriorNuisanceNull(*w->pdf("gauss_prior"));
  // if you wanted to use the ad hoc log-normal prior instead
  //  hc1.ForcePriorNuisanceAlt(*w->pdf("lognorm_prior"));
  //  hc1.ForcePriorNuisanceNull(*w->pdf("lognorm_prior"));

  // enable proof
  // proof not enabled for this test statistic
  //  if(pc) toymcs1->SetProofConfig(pc);     

  // these lines save current msg level and then kill any messages below ERROR
  RooMsgService::instance().setGlobalKillBelow(RooFit::ERROR);
  // Get the result
  HypoTestResult *r1 = hc1.GetHypoTest();
  RooMsgService::instance().setGlobalKillBelow(msglevel); // set it back
  cout << "-----------------------------------------"<<endl;
  cout << "Part 4" << endl;
  r1->Print();
  t.Stop();  t.Print(); t.Reset(); t.Start();

  c->cd(2);
  HypoTestPlot *p1 = new HypoTestPlot(*r1,30); // 30 bins, TS is discrete
  p1->Draw();

  return; // keep the running time sort by default
  ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // P A R T   5  :  U S I N G   H Y B R I D   C A L C U L A T O R   W I T H 
  //                 A N   A L T E R N A T I V E   T E S T   S T A T I S T I C
  /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // 
  // A likelihood ratio test statistics should be 1-to-1 with the count x
  // when the value of b is fixed in the likelihood.  This is implemented
  // by the SimpleLikelihoodRatioTestStat

  SimpleLikelihoodRatioTestStat slrts(*b_model.GetPdf(),*sb_model.GetPdf());
  slrts.SetNullParameters(*b_model.GetSnapshot());
  slrts.SetAltParameters(*sb_model.GetSnapshot());

  // HYBRID CALCULATOR
  HybridCalculator hc2(*data, sb_model, b_model);
  ToyMCSampler *toymcs2 = (ToyMCSampler*)hc2.GetTestStatSampler();
  //  toymcs2->SetNEventsPerToy(1);
  toymcs2->SetTestStatistic(&slrts);
  //  toymcs2->SetGenerateBinned();
  hc2.SetToys(20000,1000); 
  hc2.ForcePriorNuisanceAlt(*w->pdf("py"));
  hc2.ForcePriorNuisanceNull(*w->pdf("py"));
  // if you wanted to use the ad hoc Gaussian prior instead
  //  hc2.ForcePriorNuisanceAlt(*w->pdf("gauss_prior"));
  //  hc2.ForcePriorNuisanceNull(*w->pdf("gauss_prior"));
  // if you wanted to use the ad hoc log-normal prior instead
  //  hc2.ForcePriorNuisanceAlt(*w->pdf("lognorm_prior"));
  //  hc2.ForcePriorNuisanceNull(*w->pdf("lognorm_prior"));

  // enable proof
  if(pc) toymcs2->SetProofConfig(pc);     

  // these lines save current msg level and then kill any messages below ERROR
  RooMsgService::instance().setGlobalKillBelow(RooFit::ERROR);
  // Get the result
  HypoTestResult *r2 = hc2.GetHypoTest();
  cout << "-----------------------------------------"<<endl;
  cout << "Part 5" << endl;
  r2->Print();
  t.Stop();  t.Print(); t.Reset(); t.Start();
  RooMsgService::instance().setGlobalKillBelow(msglevel);

  c->cd(3);
  HypoTestPlot *p2 = new HypoTestPlot(*r2,30); // 30 bins
  p2->Draw();

  return; // so standard tutorial runs faster

  ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  // OUTPUT W/O PROOF (2.66 GHz Intel Core i7)
  ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

  /*
-----------------------------------------
Part 3
Z_Bi p-value (analytic): 0.00094165
Z_Bi significance (analytic): 3.10804
Real time 0:00:00, CP time 0.610

Results HybridCalculator_result: 
 - Null p-value = 0.00103333 +/- 0.000179406
 - Significance = 3.08048 sigma
 - Number of S+B toys: 1000
 - Number of B toys: 30000
 - Test statistic evaluated on data: 150
 - CL_b: 0.998967 +/- 0.000185496
 - CL_s+b: 0.495 +/- 0.0158106
 - CL_s: 0.495512 +/- 0.0158272
Real time 0:04:43, CP time 283.780

  */
  /* With PROOF
-----------------------------------------
Part 5

Results HybridCalculator_result: 
 - Null p-value = 0.00105 +/- 0.000206022
 - Significance = 3.07571 sigma
 - Number of S+B toys: 1000
 - Number of B toys: 20000
 - Test statistic evaluated on data: 10.8198
 - CL_b: 0.99895 +/- 0.000229008
 - CL_s+b: 0.491 +/- 0.0158088
 - CL_s: 0.491516 +/- 0.0158258
Real time 0:02:22, CP time 0.990
  */

  //////////////////////////////////////////
  // Comparison
  ///////////////////////////////////////////
  // LEPStatToolsForLHC
  // https://plone4.fnal.gov:4430/P0/phystat/packages/0703002
  // Uses Gaussian prior
  // CL_b = 6.218476e-04, Significance = 3.228665 sigma
  //
  //////////////////////////////////////////
  // Comparison
  ///////////////////////////////////////////
  // Asymptotics
  // From the value of the profile likelihood ratio (5.0338) 
  // The significance can be estimated using Wilks's theorem
  // significance = sqrt(2*profileLR) = 3.1729 sigma


}