Modelling the Spatial Dependence of Multi‐Species Point Patterns
DOI:
10.1002/ece3.71066
Publication Date:
2025-03-12T02:35:21Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACTThe study of the spatial point patterns in ecology, such as the records of the observed locations of trees, shrubs, nests, burrows, or documented animal presence, relies on multivariate point process models. This study aims to compare the efficacy and applicability of two prominent multivariate point process models, the multivariate log Gaussian Cox process (MLGCP), and the saturated pairwise interaction Gibbs point process model (SPIGPP), highlighting their respective strengths and weaknesses when prior knowledge of the underlying mechanisms driving the patterns is lacking. Using synthetic and real datasets, we assessed both models based on their predictive accuracy of the empirical K function. Our analysis revealed that both MLGCP and SPIGPP effectively identify and capture mild to moderate clustering and regulations. MLGCP struggles to capture repulsive associations as they intensify. In contrast, SPIGPP can well estimate both the direction and magnitude of interactions even when the model is misspecified. Both models present unique advantages: MLGCP is particularly effective when there is a need to account for complex, unobserved heterogeneities that vary across space, while SPIGPP is suitable when interactions between points are the primary focus. The choice between these models should be guided by the specific needs of the research question and data characteristics.
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