DiggleGratton(delta=NA, rho)
"interact"
describing the interpoint interaction
structure of a point process.
Note that we use the symbol $\kappa$ where Diggle and Gratton (1984) and Diggle, Gates and Stibbard (1987) use $\beta$, since in spatstat we reserve the symbol $\beta$ for an intensity parameter.
The parameters must all be nonnegative, and must satisfy $\delta \le \rho$.
The potential is inhibitory, i.e.\ this model is only appropriate for regular point patterns. The strength of inhibition increases with $\kappa$. For $\kappa=0$ the model is a hard core process with hard core radius $\delta$. For $\kappa=Inf$ the model is a hard core process with hard core radius $\rho$.
The irregular parameters
$\delta, \rho$ must be given in the call to
DiggleGratton
, while the
regular parameter $\kappa$ will be estimated.
If the lower threshold delta
is missing or NA
,
it will be estimated from the data when ppm
is called.
The estimated value of delta
is the minimum nearest neighbour distance
multiplied by $n/(n+1)$, where $n$ is the
number of data points.
Diggle, P.J. and Gratton, R.J. (1984) Monte Carlo methods of inference for implicit statistical models. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, series B 46, 193 -- 212.
ppm
,
ppm.object
,
Pairwise
ppm(cells ~1, DiggleGratton(0.05, 0.1))
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