Learn R Programming

spatstat.explore (version 3.2-3)

markmarkscatter: Mark-Mark Scatter Plot

Description

Generates the mark-mark scatter plot of a point pattern.

Usage

markmarkscatter(X, rmax, ..., col = NULL, symap = NULL, transform=I, jit=FALSE)

Value

Null.

Arguments

X

A point pattern (object of class "ppp", "pp3", "lpp" or "ppx") with numeric marks.

rmax

Maximum distance between pairs of points which contribute to the plot.

...

Additional arguments passed to plot.ppp to control the scatterplot.

transform

Optional. A function which should be applied to the mark values.

jit

Logical value indicating whether mark values should be randomly perturbed using jitter.

col

Optional. A vector of colour values, or a colourmap to be used to portray the pairwise distance values. Ignored if symap is given.

symap

Optional. A symbolmap to be used to portray the pairwise distance values. Overrides col.

Author

Adrian Baddeley (coded from the description in Ballani et al.)

Details

The mark-mark scatter plot (Ballani et al, 2019) is a scatterplot of the mark values of all pairs of distinct points in X which are closer than the distance rmax. The dots in the scatterplot are coloured according to the pairwise distance between the two spatial points. The plot is augmented by three curves explained by Ballani et al (2019).

If the marks only take a few different values, then it is usually appropriate to apply random perturbation (jitter) to the mark values, by setting jit=TRUE.

References

Ballani, F., Pommerening, A. and Stoyan, D. (2019) Mark-mark scatterplots improve pattern analysis in spatial plant ecology. Ecological Informatics 49, 13--21.

Examples

Run this code
  markmarkscatter(longleaf, 10)

  markmarkscatter(spruces, 10, jit=TRUE)

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab