Performs a Balanced Independent Two-Stage Monte Carlo test of goodness-of-fit for spatial pattern.
bits.test(X, ...,
exponent = 2, nsim=19,
alternative=c("two.sided", "less", "greater"),
leaveout=1, interpolate = FALSE,
savefuns=FALSE, savepatterns=FALSE,
verbose = TRUE)
A hypothesis test (object of class "htest"
which can be printed to show the outcome of the test.
Either a point pattern dataset (object of class "ppp"
,
"lpp"
or "pp3"
) or a fitted point process model
(object of class "ppm"
, "kppm"
, "lppm"
or "slrm"
).
Arguments passed to dclf.test
or
mad.test
or envelope
to
control the conduct of the test.
Useful arguments include fun
to determine the summary
function, rinterval
to determine the range of
\(r\) values used in the test,
and use.theory
described under Details.
Exponent used in the test statistic. Use exponent=2
for the Diggle-Cressie-Loosmore-Ford test, and exponent=Inf
for the Maximum Absolute Deviation test.
Number of replicates in each stage of the test.
A total of nsim * (nsim + 1)
simulated point patterns will be
generated, and the \(p\)-value will be a multiple of 1/(nsim+1)
.
Character string specifying the alternative hypothesis.
The default (alternative="two.sided"
) is that the
true value of the summary function is not equal to the theoretical
value postulated under the null hypothesis.
If alternative="less"
the alternative hypothesis is that the
true value of the summary function is lower than the theoretical value.
Optional integer 0, 1 or 2 indicating how to calculate the deviation between the observed summary function and the nominal reference value, when the reference value must be estimated by simulation. See Details.
Logical value indicating whether to interpolate the distribution of the test statistic by kernel smoothing, as described in Dao and Genton (2014, Section 5).
Logical flag indicating whether to save the simulated function values (from the first stage).
Logical flag indicating whether to save the simulated point patterns (from the first stage).
Logical value indicating whether to print progress reports.
Adrian Baddeley, Andrew Hardegen, Tom Lawrence, Robin Milne, Gopalan Nair and Suman Rakshit. Implemented by Adrian Baddeley Adrian.Baddeley@curtin.edu.au, Rolf Turner rolfturner@posteo.net and Ege Rubak rubak@math.aau.dk.
Performs the Balanced Independent Two-Stage Monte Carlo test proposed by Baddeley et al (2017), an improvement of the Dao-Genton (2014) test.
If X
is a point pattern, the null hypothesis is CSR.
If X
is a fitted model, the null hypothesis is that model.
The argument use.theory
passed to envelope
determines whether to compare the summary function for the data
to its theoretical value for CSR (use.theory=TRUE
)
or to the sample mean of simulations from CSR
(use.theory=FALSE
).
The argument leaveout
specifies how to calculate the
discrepancy between the summary function for the data and the
nominal reference value, when the reference value must be estimated
by simulation. The values leaveout=0
and
leaveout=1
are both algebraically equivalent (Baddeley et al, 2014,
Appendix) to computing the difference observed - reference
where the reference
is the mean of simulated values.
The value leaveout=2
gives the leave-two-out discrepancy
proposed by Dao and Genton (2014).
Dao, N.A. and Genton, M. (2014) A Monte Carlo adjusted goodness-of-fit test for parametric models describing spatial point patterns. Journal of Graphical and Computational Statistics 23, 497--517.
Baddeley, A., Diggle, P.J., Hardegen, A., Lawrence, T., Milne, R.K. and Nair, G. (2014) On tests of spatial pattern based on simulation envelopes. Ecological Monographs 84 (3) 477--489.
Baddeley, A., Hardegen, A., Lawrence, L., Milne, R.K., Nair, G.M. and Rakshit, S. (2017) On two-stage Monte Carlo tests of composite hypotheses. Computational Statistics and Data Analysis 114, 75--87.
Simulation envelopes: bits.envelope
.
Other tests:
dg.test
,
dclf.test
,
mad.test
.
ns <- if(interactive()) 19 else 4
bits.test(cells, nsim=ns)
bits.test(cells, alternative="less", nsim=ns)
bits.test(cells, nsim=ns, interpolate=TRUE)
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab