Discrimination capacity in species distribution models depends on the representativeness of the environmental domain


Autoria(s): Jiménez-Valverde, A.; Acevedo, P.; Barbosa, A.M.; Lobo, J.M.; Real, R.
Data(s)

31/01/2017

31/01/2017

2013

07/10/2016

Resumo

Aim When faced with dichotomous events, such as the presence or absence of a species, discrimination capacity (the ability to separate the instances of presence from the instances of absence) is usually the only characteristic that is assessed in the evaluation of the performance of predictive models. Although neglected, calibration or reliability (how well the estimated probability of presence represents the observed proportion of presences) is another aspect of the performance of predictive models that provides important information. In this study, we explore how changes in the distribution of the probability of presence make discrimination capacity a context-dependent characteristic of models. For the first time,we explain the implications that ignoring the context dependence of discrimination can have in the interpretation of species distribution models.

Identificador

Jiménez-Valverde, A.; Acevedo, P.; Barbosa, A.M.; Lobo, J.M.; Real, R.Discrimination capacity in species distribution models depends on the representativeness of the environmental domain, Global Ecology and Biogeography, 22, 4, 508-516, 2013.

http://hdl.handle.net/10174/20532

Aim When faced with dichotomous events, such as the presence or absence of a species, discrimination capacity (the ability to separate the instances of presence from the instances of absence) is usually the only characteristic that is assessed in the evaluation of the performance of predictive models. Although neglected, calibration or reliability (how well the estimated probability of presence represents the observed proportion of presences) is another aspect of the performance of predictive models that provides important information. In this study, we explore how changes in the distribution of the probability of presence make discrimination capacity a context-dependent characteristic of models. For the first time,we explain the implications that ignoring the context dependence of discrimination can have in the interpretation of species distribution models.

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Idioma(s)

por

Direitos

openAccess

Tipo

article