Open Access
MuMIn : multi-model inference, R package version 0.12.0
About:
The article was published on 2009-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 2607 citations till now.read more
Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Thermal tolerance and the global redistribution of animals
TL;DR: This article explored the likely consequences of climate change for the geographical redistribution of terrestrial and marine species at a global scale using a comprehensive data set of thermal tolerance limits, latitudinal range boundaries and latitudinal shift of cold-blooded animals.
Journal ArticleDOI
rptR: repeatability estimation and variance decomposition by generalized linear mixed-effects models
TL;DR: al. as discussed by the authors introduced the R package rptR for the estimation of ICC and R for Gaussian, binomial and Poisson-distributed data, which allows the quantification of coefficients of determination R2 as well as of raw variance components.
Journal ArticleDOI
performance: An R Package for Assessment, Comparison and Testing of Statistical Models
TL;DR: A crucial part of statistical analysis is evaluating a model’s quality and fit, or performance, and investigating the fit of models to data also often involves selecting the best fitting model amongst many competing models.
Journal ArticleDOI
glmulti: An R Package for Easy Automated Model Selection with (Generalized) Linear Models
TL;DR: In this paper, an R package for automated model selection and multi-model inference with glm and related functions is presented. But it is not suitable for large candidate sets by avoiding memory limitation, facilitating parallelization and providing, in addition to exhaustive screening, a compiled genetic algorithm method.
Journal ArticleDOI
Decline of the North American avifauna
Kenneth V. Rosenberg,Kenneth V. Rosenberg,Adriaan M. Dokter,Peter J. Blancher,John R. Sauer,Adam C. Smith,Paul A. Smith,Jessica C. Stanton,Arvind O. Panjabi,Laura Helft,Michael J. Parr,Peter P. Marra,Peter P. Marra +12 more
TL;DR: Using multiple and independent monitoring networks, population losses across much of the North American avifauna over 48 years are reported, including once-common species and from most biomes, demonstrating a continuing avifaunal crisis.