Limit calculation challenge
Last updated on 2024-07-31 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How do I write a Combine datacard for a counting analysis and for a shape analysis?
- How do I incorporate the effects of systematic uncertainties?
- How do I calculate expected and observed limits?
- How do I interpret the resulting limits?
Objectives
- Construct a Combine datacard for a counting analysis, learn to modify systematics.
- Construct a Combine datacard for a shape analysis, learn to modify systematics.
- Calculate limits using Combine with different methods for counting and shape datacards and compare.
- Understand what the limits mean.
The goal of this exercise is to use the Combine
tool to
calculate limits from the results of the \(Z'\) search studied in the previous
exercises. We will use the Zprime_hists_FULL.root
file
generated during the Uncertainties
challenge. We will build various datacards from it, add systematics,
calculate limits on the signal strength and understand the output.
Statistical analysis as a counting experiment
At the end of the https://cms-opendata-workshop.github.io/workshop2024-lesson-event-selection/,
you applied a set of selection criteria to events that would enhance
\(Z'\) signal from SM backgrounds.
Then you obtained the ttbar mass distributions for data, \(Z'\) signal and a set of SM background
processes after this selection. In the Uncertainties
challenge exercise, you learned to obtain variations on these
distributions arising from certain systematic effects. In this first
exercise, we will treat the events surviving the selection as a single
quantity to perform a statistical analysis on a counting experiment. In
other words, we will collapse the mtt
distributions into a
single “number of events” by integrating over all bins. Then we will use
these numbers obtained for all histograms, including those with
systematic variations, to build a counting experiment datacard.
First, start your Combine Docker container and make a working directory:
Download the Zprime_hists_FULL.root
and the python
script to make the datacard:
BASH
wget https://github.com/cms-opendata-workshop/workshop2024-lesson-statistical-inference/raw/main/episodes/Zprime_hists_FULL.root
wget https://github.com/cms-opendata-workshop/workshop2024-lesson-statistical-inference/raw/main/episodes/writecountdatacard.py
You can look into the writecountdatacard.py
script to
see how the datacard is written from the ROOT file. Run the script:
(ignore the output for the moment). Now look into
datacard_counts.txt
and try to answer the following
questions:
Questions
- Which is the background contributing most?
- What can you say when you compare data, total backgrounds, and signal counts?
- Can you understand the effect of the various systematic uncertainties?
- Which systematic is expected to have the overall bigger impact?
- Which process is affected most by systematics?
Now run Combine over this datacard to obtain the limits on our
parameter of interest, signal strength, with the simple
AsymptoticLimits
option:
You will see some error messages concerning the computation of the observed limit, arising from numerical stability issues. In order to avoid this, let’s rerun by limiting the signal strength to be maximum 2:
Look at the output, and try to answer the following:
Questions
- What is the observed limit? What is the expected limit? What are the uncertainties on the expected limit?
- Did our analysis exclude this particular \(Z'\) signal?
- What can you say when you compare the values of the observed limit with the expected limit?
- What does it mean that the observed limit is much lower compared to the expected limit? Does this make sense? Hint: Go back to the datacard and look at the data, background and signal counts.
Observed limit is below the expected boundaries because we have much more MC compared to data. This means there is less room for signal to be accommodated in data, i.e. excluding signal becomes easier. If we had more data, or less backgrounds, there would be more room for signal, and the observed limit would be more consistent with the expected. So hypothetically one could * Increase the data counts, or * Decrease counts in one or more background processes.
The point of this question was to increase the understanding. We never do this in real life!!!
Add uncertainties to the datacard
Now let’s add more uncertainties, both systematic and statistical. Let’s start with adding a classic - the systematic uncertainty due to luminosity measurement:
lumi lnN 1.025 1.025 1.025 1.025 1.025
Now let’s add a statistical uncertainty. Our signal and background yields come from Monte Carlo, and the number of events could be limited, resulting on non-negligible statistical uncertainties. We apply event weights to these MC events so that the resulting rate matches a certain value, e.g. cross section times the luminosity. Statistical uncertainties are particularly relevant if both the yields are small and the event weights are large (i.e. much less actual MC events are available compared to the expected yield). Here is a quote from the Combine documentation on how to take these into account:
“gmN stands for Gamma, and is the recommended choice for the statistical uncertainty in a background determined from the number of events in a control region (or in an MC sample with limited sample size). If the control region or simulated sample contains N events, and the extrapolation factor from the control region to the signal region is α, one shoud put N just after the gmN keyword, and then the value of α in the relevant (bin,process) column. The yield specified in the rate line for this (bin,process) combination should equal Nα.”
Now let’s get back to the output we got from running
writecountdatacard.py
. There you see the number of total
unweighted events, total weighted events and event weight for each
process.
Challenge: Add a statistical uncertainty
Look at the output of writecountdatacard.py
: * Which
process has the largest event weight? * Can you incorporate the
statistical uncertainty for that particular process to the datacard? *
Run Combine and discuss the effect on the limits. * OPTIONAL: You can
add the statistical uncertainties for the other processes as well and
observe their effect on the limits.
statwjets gmN 19 - - - - 15.1622
statsignal gmN 48238 0.0306 - - - -
stattt_semilep gmN 137080 - 0.0382 - - -
stattt_had gmN 817 - - 0.0636 - -
stat_ttlep gmN 6134 - - - 0.0325 -
Improve the limit
- In a count experiment setup, we can consider taking into account a
part of the
mtt
distribution where the signal is dominant. - We can do a shape analysis, which takes into account each bin separately.
Let’s improve the limit in the couting experiment setup by computing total counts considering only the last 25 bins out of the 50 total:
We also added a flag to automatically add the satistical uncertainties :) How did the yields change? Did the limit improve? You can try with different starting bin options to see how the limits change.
Shape analysis
Now we move to a shape analysis, where each bin in the
mtt
distribution is taken into account. Datacards for shape
analyses are built with similar principles as those for counting
analyses, but their syntax is slightly different. Here is the shape
datacard for the \(Z'\)
analysis:
BASH
wget https://github.com/cms-opendata-workshop/workshop2024-lesson-statistical-inference/raw/main/episodes/datacard_shape.txt
Examine it and note the differences in syntax. To run on Combine,
this datacard needs to be accompanied by the
Zprime_hists_FULL.root
file, as the shapes are directly
retrieved from the histograms within.
Run Combine with this datacard. How do the limits compare with respect to the counts case?
We can multiply the signal strength limit with the theoretically predicted cross section for the signal process.