seqHMM (Q28008)

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Mixture Hidden Markov Models for Social Sequence Data and Other Multivariate, Multichannel Categorical Time Series
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seqHMM
Mixture Hidden Markov Models for Social Sequence Data and Other Multivariate, Multichannel Categorical Time Series

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    1.2.4
    9 January 2023
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    1.0.2-1
    19 December 2015
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    1.0.3-1
    30 December 2015
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    1.0.3
    23 December 2015
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    1.0.4
    14 January 2016
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    1.0.5
    24 February 2016
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    1.0.6
    1 August 2016
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    1.0.7
    4 April 2017
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    1.0.8-1
    10 May 2018
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    1.0.8
    8 November 2017
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    1.0.9
    6 November 2018
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    1.0.10
    26 January 2019
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    1.0.11
    9 April 2019
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    1.0.12
    11 April 2019
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    1.0.13
    17 June 2019
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    1.0.14
    22 October 2019
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    1.1.0
    18 June 2021
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    1.1.1
    13 August 2021
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    1.2.0
    18 October 2021
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    1.2.1-1
    25 May 2022
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    1.2.2
    30 November 2022
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    1.2.3
    12 December 2022
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    1.2.5
    12 June 2023
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    1.2.6
    6 July 2023
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    6 July 2023
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    Designed for fitting hidden (latent) Markov models and mixture hidden Markov models for social sequence data and other categorical time series. Also some more restricted versions of these type of models are available: Markov models, mixture Markov models, and latent class models. The package supports models for one or multiple subjects with one or multiple parallel sequences (channels). External covariates can be added to explain cluster membership in mixture models. The package provides functions for evaluating and comparing models, as well as functions for visualizing of multichannel sequence data and hidden Markov models. Models are estimated using maximum likelihood via the EM algorithm and/or direct numerical maximization with analytical gradients. All main algorithms are written in C++ with support for parallel computation. Documentation is available via several vignettes in this page, and the paper by Helske and Helske (2019, <doi:10.18637/jss.v088.i03>).
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