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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Quantifying individual variation in behaviour: mixed-effect modelling approaches

TLDR
An overview of how mixed-effect models can be used to partition variation in, and correlations among, phenotypic attributes into between- and within-individual variance components is provided.
Abstract
Growing interest in proximate and ultimate causes and consequences of between- and within-individual variation in labile components of the phenotype - such as behaviour or physiology - characterizes current research in evolutionary ecology. The study of individual variation requires tools for quantification and decomposition of phenotypic variation into between- and within-individual components. This is essential as variance components differ in their ecological and evolutionary implications. We provide an overview of how mixed-effect models can be used to partition variation in, and correlations among, phenotypic attributes into between- and within-individual variance components. Optimal sampling schemes to accurately estimate (with sufficient power) a wide range of repeatabilities and key (co)variance components, such as between- and within-individual correlations, are detailed. Mixed-effect models enable the usage of unambiguous terminology for patterns of biological variation that currently lack a formal statistical definition (e.g. 'animal personality' or 'behavioural syndromes'), and facilitate cross-fertilisation between disciplines such as behavioural ecology, ecological physiology and quantitative genetics.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Does the tie fit the female? Melanin-based colouration, aggressive personality and reproductive investment in female great tits ( Parus major )

TL;DR: This study explored the functional significance of a well-known melanin-based plumage trait (tie size) in females of a socially monogamous passerine bird, the great tit, and found support for a signalling role of tie size with respects to how close females approached intruders.
Posted ContentDOI

Repeatability analysis improves the reliability of behavioral data

TL;DR: The data analysis revealed that monitoring animal behavior during habituation is important to determine when individual differences of the measurements are stable, and the mixed effect model framework proved to be a powerful tool for estimating repeatability values.
Journal ArticleDOI

A standardized method for quantifying consistent individual differences in schooling behaviour.

TL;DR: This method, which utilizes a school of models, improves on previous methods by removing the unwanted variation that is introduced by live stimulus fish while still providing the physiological experience of schooling to the focal fish.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are behaviour and stress‐related phenotypes in urban birds adaptive?

TL;DR: Results highlight that phenotypic shifts observed in cities do not necessarily result from new selection pressures and could be maladaptive, and hypothesize that divergences in behavioural traits for urban birds could result from the filtering of individuals settling in cities.
References
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Book

Introduction to quantitative genetics

TL;DR: The genetic constitution of a population: Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium and changes in gene frequency: migration mutation, changes of variance, and heritability are studied.
Book

Mixed-Effects Models in S and S-PLUS

TL;DR: Linear Mixed-Effects and Nonlinear Mixed-effects (NLME) models have been studied in the literature as mentioned in this paper, where the structure of grouped data has been used for fitting LME models.
Journal Article

Human biochemical genetics

Grüneberg H
- 01 Jul 1960 - 
TL;DR: For the next few weeks the course is going to be exploring a field that’s actually older than classical population genetics, although the approach it’ll be taking to it involves the use of population genetic machinery.
Book

Multilevel analysis : an introduction to basic and advanced multilevel modeling

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a multilevel regression model to estimate within-and between-group correlations using a combination of within-group correlation and cross-group evidence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generalized linear mixed models: a practical guide for ecology and evolution

TL;DR: The use (and misuse) of GLMMs in ecology and evolution are reviewed, estimation and inference are discussed, and 'best-practice' data analysis procedures for scientists facing this challenge are summarized.
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Trending Questions (1)
How does the non-random distribution of behavioural phenotypes affect ecological and evolutionary processes?

The provided paper does not directly address the non-random distribution of behavioural phenotypes and its effects on ecological and evolutionary processes.