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JournalISSN: 0021-8901

Journal of Applied Ecology 

Wiley-Blackwell
About: Journal of Applied Ecology is an academic journal published by Wiley-Blackwell. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Population & Species richness. It has an ISSN identifier of 0021-8901. Over the lifetime, 13791 publications have been published receiving 605088 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A manual for the practical study of root-nodule bacteria, and a guide to the collection of and usage of such manuals.
Abstract: A manual for the practical study of root-nodule bacteria , A manual for the practical study of root-nodule bacteria , مرکز فناوری اطلاعات و اطلاع رسانی کشاورزی

4,844 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a theoretical explanation for the observed dependence of kappa on prevalence, and introduce an alternative measure of accuracy, the true skill statistic (TSS), which corrects for this dependence while still keeping all the advantages of Kappa.
Abstract: Summary 1In recent years the use of species distribution models by ecologists and conservation managers has increased considerably, along with an awareness of the need to provide accuracy assessment for predictions of such models. The kappa statistic is the most widely used measure for the performance of models generating presence–absence predictions, but several studies have criticized it for being inherently dependent on prevalence, and argued that this dependency introduces statistical artefacts to estimates of predictive accuracy. This criticism has been supported recently by computer simulations showing that kappa responds to the prevalence of the modelled species in a unimodal fashion. 2In this paper we provide a theoretical explanation for the observed dependence of kappa on prevalence, and introduce into ecology an alternative measure of accuracy, the true skill statistic (TSS), which corrects for this dependence while still keeping all the advantages of kappa. We also compare the responses of kappa and TSS to prevalence using empirical data, by modelling distribution patterns of 128 species of woody plant in Israel. 3The theoretical analysis shows that kappa responds in a unimodal fashion to variation in prevalence and that the level of prevalence that maximizes kappa depends on the ratio between sensitivity (the proportion of correctly predicted presences) and specificity (the proportion of correctly predicted absences). In contrast, TSS is independent of prevalence. 4When the two measures of accuracy were compared using empirical data, kappa showed a unimodal response to prevalence, in agreement with the theoretical analysis. TSS showed a decreasing linear response to prevalence, a result we interpret as reflecting true ecological phenomena rather than a statistical artefact. This interpretation is supported by the fact that a similar pattern was found for the area under the ROC curve, a measure known to be independent of prevalence. 5Synthesis and applications. Our results provide theoretical and empirical evidence that kappa, one of the most widely used measures of model performance in ecology, has serious limitations that make it unsuitable for such applications. The alternative we suggest, TSS, compensates for the shortcomings of kappa while keeping all of its advantages. We therefore recommend the TSS as a simple and intuitive measure for the performance of species distribution models when predictions are expressed as presence–absence maps.

3,518 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
2023132
2022239
2021347
2020336
2019473
2018567