spatialCorrForPointsWeight: Calculate weights based on pairwise distance for geographic...

View source: R/spatialCorrForPointsWeight.r

spatialCorrForPointsWeightR Documentation

Calculate weights based on pairwise distance for geographic points

Description

This function summarizes output from the function spatialCorrForPoints which estimates a null distribution of pairwise distances between points for an observed set of points.

Usage

spatialCorrForPointsWeight(x, pts, fixed = NULL, perc = 95, verbose = FALSE)

Arguments

x

Matrix generated by the function spatialCorrForPoints.

pts

Either a SpatialPoints, SpatialPointsDataFrame, or SpatVector (points) object, or a matrix or data frame with two columns where the first column has values for longitude and the second latitude. Weights will be calculated for each point.

fixed

Either NULL (default) or a SpatialPoints or SpatialPointsDataFrame object, or a matrix or data frame with two columns where the first column has values for longitude and the second latitude. If not NULL, then weights will be calculated for each point in pts given distance to points in fixed.

perc

Numeric value in the range [0, 100], indicates the upper quantile of randomized distance frequencies above which observed distance frequencies are considered significant. Default is 95.

verbose

Logical, if TRUE show information. Default is FALSE.

Details

The idea behind this measure of spatial autocorrelation is that a set of geographic points is "independent" of one another if their pairwise distances are indistinguishable from pairwise distances of the same number of points randomly located across a landscape. Typically a set of points displays clustering (non-independence) across some distances but not all distances. Thus to identify the scale of clustering pairwise distances are tabulated into bins. (I suggest using overlapping bins, e.g., from 0 to 20000 m, 10000 to 30000 m, 20000 to 40000 m, etc. See the example below for how to do this).
The function spatialCorrForPoints first calculates the observed distance distribution and tabulates the frequency of distances into bins. Then, it generates a set of randomly located points equal to the same number of points as in the observed set. It then calculates the randomized distance distribution and tabulates the distances. The randomization is repeated a large number of times (the default is 100). The observed frequency of distances can be compared to the set of random distances using spatialCorrForPointsSummary and spatialCorrForPointsPlot. The default values in those functions assume that clustering occurs if the observed pairwise distance is > the 95th quantile of the null frequency distribution for that bin (i.e., a 1-tailed test), but users can specify a different percentile to demarcate significance. In practice a series of distance bins often show clustering, but the one usually of interest is the first distance bin (the one closest to 0) that has a non-significant difference between observed and expected distances. This is the characteristic diameter of a cluster of points. Points closer than this distance can be considered non-independent of one another.
Alternatively, one can specify a set of points using the fixed argument. In this case, the "observed" pairwise distance distribution is tabulated from the set of pairwise distances between the points specified by argument pts and fixed. The randomized distance distribution is calculated by randomly re-locating points in pts and calculating distances to fixed.
The function spatialCorrForPointsWeight calculates weights for a set of points based on the characteristic scale of spatial autocorrelation.

Value

Numeric vector of values in the range [0, 1].

See Also

spatialCorrForPoints, spatialCorrForPointsSummary, spatialCorrForPointsPlot

Examples

## Not run: 
# create raster of Madagascar
data(mad0)
rast <- raster::raster(mad0, res=c(1/12, 1/12))
rast[] <- 1
rast <- raster::crop(rast, mad0)
mad0rast <- raster::rasterize(mad0, rast)
rast <- rast * mad0rast

# lemur point data
data(lemurs)
fulvus <- lemurs[lemurs$species == 'Eulemur fulvus', c('longitude', 'latitude')]

# create overlapping bins for tabulating pairwise distances
ext <- extent(rast)
southwest <- c(ext@xmin, ext@ymin)
northeast <- c(ext@xmax, ext@ymax)
maxDist <- geosphere::distGeo(southwest, northeast)

binLength <- 60000 # in meters
maxDist <- binLength * ceiling(maxDist / binLength)

breaks <- data.frame(
	lower=seq(0, maxDist - binLength, by=binLength / 2),
	upper=seq(binLength, maxDist, by=binLength / 2)
)

# compare observed pairwise distance distribution to null distribution
# of pairwise values from randomly located points
obsAndNullDistrib <- spatialCorrForPoints(
	pts = fulvus,
	rast = rast,
	breaks = breaks,
	iters = 100,
	verbose = TRUE
)

# summary and plot
sacDist <- spatialCorrForPointsSummary(obsAndNullDistrib)
main <- paste('Characteristic cluster size:', sacDist, 'meters')
spatialCorrForPointsPlot(obsAndNullDistrib, xlab='Distance (m)', main=main)

# calculate weights
weight <- 4 * spatialCorrForPointsWeight(x=obsAndNullDistrib, pts=fulvus)
plot(mad0, main='Point size represents weight')
points(fulvus, pch=1, cex=weight)

## End(Not run)

adamlilith/enmSdm documentation built on Jan. 6, 2023, 11 a.m.