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spatstat (version 1.52-1)

PairPiece: The Piecewise Constant Pairwise Interaction Point Process Model

Description

Creates an instance of a pairwise interaction point process model with piecewise constant potential function. The model can then be fitted to point pattern data.

Usage

PairPiece(r)

Arguments

r

vector of jump points for the potential function

Value

An object of class "interact" describing the interpoint interaction structure of a point process. The process is a pairwise interaction process, whose interaction potential is piecewise constant, with jumps at the distances given in the vector \(r\).

Details

A pairwise interaction point process in a bounded region is a stochastic point process with probability density of the form $$ f(x_1,\ldots,x_n) = \alpha \prod_i b(x_i) \prod_{i < j} h(x_i, x_j) $$ where \(x_1,\ldots,x_n\) represent the points of the pattern. The first product on the right hand side is over all points of the pattern; the second product is over all unordered pairs of points of the pattern.

Thus each point \(x_i\) of the pattern contributes a factor \(b(x_i)\) to the probability density, and each pair of points \(x_i, x_j\) contributes a factor \(h(x_i,x_j)\) to the density.

The pairwise interaction term \(h(u, v)\) is called piecewise constant if it depends only on the distance between \(u\) and \(v\), say \(h(u,v) = H(||u-v||)\), and \(H\) is a piecewise constant function (a function which is constant except for jumps at a finite number of places). The use of piecewise constant interaction terms was first suggested by Takacs (1986).

The function ppm(), which fits point process models to point pattern data, requires an argument of class "interact" describing the interpoint interaction structure of the model to be fitted. The appropriate description of the piecewise constant pairwise interaction is yielded by the function PairPiece(). See the examples below.

The entries of r must be strictly increasing, positive numbers. They are interpreted as the points of discontinuity of \(H\). It is assumed that \(H(s) =1\) for all \(s > r_{max}\) where \(r_{max}\) is the maximum value in r. Thus the model has as many regular parameters (see ppm) as there are entries in r. The \(i\)-th regular parameter \(\theta_i\) is the logarithm of the value of the interaction function \(H\) on the interval \([r_{i-1},r_i)\).

If r is a single number, this model is similar to the Strauss process, see Strauss. The difference is that in PairPiece the interaction function is continuous on the right, while in Strauss it is continuous on the left.

The analogue of this model for multitype point processes has not yet been implemented.

References

Takacs, R. (1986) Estimator for the pair potential of a Gibbsian point process. Statistics 17, 429--433.

See Also

ppm, pairwise.family, ppm.object, Strauss rmh.ppm

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
   PairPiece(c(0.1,0.2))
   # prints a sensible description of itself
   data(cells) 

   
# }
# NOT RUN {
   ppm(cells, ~1, PairPiece(r = c(0.05, 0.1, 0.2)))
   # fit a stationary piecewise constant pairwise interaction process
   
# }
# NOT RUN {
   ppm(cells, ~polynom(x,y,3), PairPiece(c(0.05, 0.1)))
   # nonstationary process with log-cubic polynomial trend
# }

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