RFCs: Relative Frequency of Citation (RFC)

View source: R/RFCs.R

RFCsR Documentation

Relative Frequency of Citation (RFC)

Description

Calculates the relative frequency of citation (RFC) per species published by Pardo-de-Santayana (2003).

Usage

RFCs(data)

Arguments

data

is an ethnobotany data set with column 1 'informant' and 2 'sp_name' as row identifiers of informants and of species names respectively. The rest of the columns are the identified ethnobotany use categories. The data should be populated with counts of uses per person (should be 0 or 1 values).

Value

Data frame of species and relative frequency of citation (RFC) values.

Warning

Identification for informants and species must be listed by the names 'informant' and 'sp_name' respectively in the data set. The rest of the columns should all represent separate identified ethnobotany use categories. These data should be populated with counts of uses per informant (should be 0 or 1 values).

References

Tardio, Javier, and Manuel Pardo-de-Santayana. 2008. “Cultural Importance Indices: A Comparative Analysis Based on the Useful Wild Plants of Southern Cantabria (Northern Spain) 1.” Economic Botany 62 (1): 24–39.

Examples


#Use built-in ethnobotany data example
RFCs(ethnobotanydata)

#Generate random dataset of three informants uses for four species

eb_data <- data.frame(replicate(10,sample(0:1,20,rep=TRUE)))
names(eb_data) <- gsub(x = names(eb_data), pattern = "X", replacement = "Use_")  
eb_data$informant <- sample(c('User_1', 'User_2', 'User_3'), 20, replace=TRUE)
eb_data$sp_name <- sample(c('sp_1', 'sp_2', 'sp_3', 'sp_4'), 20, replace=TRUE)

RFCs(eb_data)


CWWhitney/ethnobotanyR documentation built on May 1, 2023, 10:13 a.m.