Calculates an estimate of the cross-type pair correlation function for a multitype point pattern.
pcfcross(X, i, j, ...,
r = NULL,
kernel = "epanechnikov", bw = NULL, stoyan = 0.15,
correction = c("isotropic", "Ripley", "translate"),
divisor = c("r", "d"))
An object of class "fv"
, see fv.object
,
which can be plotted directly using plot.fv
.
Essentially a data frame containing columns
the vector of values of the argument \(r\) at which the function \(g_{i,j}\) has been estimated
the theoretical value \(g_{i,j}(r) = 1\) for independent marks.
together with columns named
"border"
, "bord.modif"
,
"iso"
and/or "trans"
,
according to the selected edge corrections. These columns contain
estimates of the function \(g_{i,j}\)
obtained by the edge corrections named.
The observed point pattern, from which an estimate of the cross-type pair correlation function \(g_{ij}(r)\) will be computed. It must be a multitype point pattern (a marked point pattern whose marks are a factor).
The type (mark value)
of the points in X
from which distances are measured.
A character string (or something that will be converted to a
character string).
Defaults to the first level of marks(X)
.
The type (mark value)
of the points in X
to which distances are measured.
A character string (or something that will be
converted to a character string).
Defaults to the second level of marks(X)
.
Ignored.
Vector of values for the argument \(r\) at which \(g(r)\) should be evaluated. There is a sensible default.
Choice of smoothing kernel,
passed to density.default
.
Bandwidth for smoothing kernel,
passed to density.default
.
Coefficient for default bandwidth rule; see Details.
Choice of edge correction.
Choice of divisor in the estimation formula:
either "r"
(the default) or "d"
. See Details.
Adrian Baddeley Adrian.Baddeley@curtin.edu.au and Rolf Turner r.turner@auckland.ac.nz
The cross-type pair correlation function
is a generalisation of the pair correlation function pcf
to multitype point patterns.
For two locations \(x\) and \(y\) separated by a distance \(r\),
the probability \(p(r)\) of finding a point of type \(i\) at location
\(x\) and a point of type \(j\) at location \(y\) is
$$
p(r) = \lambda_i \lambda_j g_{i,j}(r) \,{\rm d}x \, {\rm d}y
$$
where \(\lambda_i\) is the intensity of the points
of type \(i\).
For a completely random Poisson marked point process,
\(p(r) = \lambda_i \lambda_j\)
so \(g_{i,j}(r) = 1\).
Indeed for any marked point pattern in which the points of type i
are independent of the points of type j
,
the theoretical value of the cross-type pair correlation is
\(g_{i,j}(r) = 1\).
For a stationary multitype point process, the cross-type pair correlation
function between marks \(i\) and \(j\) is formally defined as
$$
g_{i,j}(r) = \frac{K_{i,j}^\prime(r)}{2\pi r}
$$
where \(K_{i,j}^\prime\) is the derivative of
the cross-type \(K\) function \(K_{i,j}(r)\).
of the point process. See Kest
for information
about \(K(r)\).
The command pcfcross
computes a kernel estimate of
the cross-type pair correlation function between marks \(i\) and
\(j\).
If divisor="r"
(the default), then the multitype
counterpart of the standard
kernel estimator (Stoyan and Stoyan, 1994, pages 284--285)
is used. By default, the recommendations of Stoyan and Stoyan (1994)
are followed exactly.
If divisor="d"
then a modified estimator is used:
the contribution from
an interpoint distance \(d_{ij}\) to the
estimate of \(g(r)\) is divided by \(d_{ij}\)
instead of dividing by \(r\). This usually improves the
bias of the estimator when \(r\) is close to zero.
There is also a choice of spatial edge corrections
(which are needed to avoid bias due to edge effects
associated with the boundary of the spatial window):
correction="translate"
is the Ohser-Stoyan translation
correction, and correction="isotropic"
or "Ripley"
is Ripley's isotropic correction.
The choice of smoothing kernel is controlled by the
argument kernel
which is passed to density
.
The default is the Epanechnikov kernel.
The bandwidth of the smoothing kernel can be controlled by the
argument bw
. Its precise interpretation
is explained in the documentation for density.default
.
For the Epanechnikov kernel with support \([-h,h]\),
the argument bw
is equivalent to \(h/\sqrt{5}\).
If bw
is not specified, the default bandwidth
is determined by Stoyan's rule of thumb (Stoyan and Stoyan, 1994, page
285) applied to the points of type j
. That is,
\(h = c/\sqrt{\lambda}\),
where \(\lambda\) is the (estimated) intensity of the
point process of type j
,
and \(c\) is a constant in the range from 0.1 to 0.2.
The argument stoyan
determines the value of \(c\).
The companion function pcfdot
computes the
corresponding analogue of Kdot
.
Mark connection function markconnect
.
Multitype pair correlation pcfdot
, pcfmulti
.
Pair correlation pcf
,pcf.ppp
.
Kcross
p <- pcfcross(amacrine, "off", "on")
p <- pcfcross(amacrine, "off", "on", stoyan=0.1)
plot(p)
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