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Occupancy

About: Occupancy is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2757 publications have been published within this topic receiving 68288 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed probabilistic models of patch occupancy for the mountain yellow-legged frog (Rana mus- cosa) using semiparametric logistic regression.
Abstract: Human-caused fragmentation of habitats is threatening an increasing number of animal and plant species, making an understanding of the factors influencing patch occupancy ever more important. The overall goal of the current study was to develop probabilistic models of patch occupancy for the mountain yellow-legged frog (Rana mus- cosa). This once-common species has declined dramatically, at least in part as a result of habitat fragmentation resulting from the introduction of predatory fish. We first describe a model of frog patch occupancy developed using semiparametric logistic regression that is based on habitat characteristics, fish presence/absence, and a spatial location term (the latter to account for spatial autocorrelation in the data). This model had several limitations in- cluding being constrained in its use to only the study area. We therefore developed a more general model that incorporated spatial autocorrelation through the use of an autocovariate term that describes the degree of isolation from neighboring frog populations (autologistic model). After accounting for spatial autocorrelation in patch occupancy, both models in- dicated that the probability of frog presence was strongly influenced by lake depth, elevation, fish presence/absence, substrate characteristics, and the degree of lake isolation. Based on cross-validation procedures, both models provided good fits to the data, but the autologistic model was more useful in predicting patch occupancy by frogs. We conclude by describing a possible application of this model in assessing the likelihood of persistence by frog

125 citations

Patent
21 Dec 2010
TL;DR: In this article, a lighting control system includes detector units that communicate with portable RFID modules, and the detector units control lights within a building, where lighting data, RFID history data and/or occupancy data is transmitted to the central security computer.
Abstract: A lighting control system is disclosed. The lighting control system includes detector units that communicates with portable RFID modules. Based on the identification and/or detected locations of RFID modules, the detector units control lights within a building. The lighting in further embodiments is a building security system, wherein lighting data, RFID history data and/or occupancy data is transmitted to the central security computer. The central security computer is configured to store lighting data, RFID history data and/or occupancy data, sound alarms and/or enable the operation of one or more remote building systems, such as locks, building doors, building cabinets and commuters.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper provides a comprehensive review of the current modeling efforts of occupant behavior, summarizes occupancy models for various applications including building energy performance analysis, building architectural and engineering design, intelligent building operations and building safety design, and presents challenges and areas where future research could be undertaken.
Abstract: People spend more than 90% of their life time in buildings, which makes occupant behavior one of the leading influences of energy consumption in buildings. Occupancy and occupant behavior, which refer to human presence inside buildings and their active interactions with various building system such as lighting, heating, cooling, ventilation, window blinds, and plugs, attract great attention of research with regard to better building design and operation. Due to the stochastic nature of occupant behavior, prior occupancy models vary dramatically in terms of data sampling, spatial and temporal resolution. This paper provides a comprehensive review of the current modeling efforts of occupant behavior, summarizes occupancy models for various applications including building energy performance analysis, building architectural and engineering design, intelligent building operations and building safety design, and presents challenges and areas where future research could be undertaken. In addition, modeling requirement for different applications is analyzed. Furthermore, a few commonly used statistical and data mining models are presented. The purpose of this paper is to provide a modeling reference for future researchers so that a proper method or model can be selected for a specific research purpose.

120 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a comparative study of state-of-the-art means of predicting occupancy for smart heating control applications is provided, focusing on approaches that predict the occupancy state of a home using occupancy schedules.

120 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The hypothesis that climatic constraints on bird distributions are modified by species-specific responses to weather, urbanization and use of supplemental food is tested and it is suggested that resource availability is less important than climate in constraining wintering bird distributions.
Abstract: Summary 1. Ecologists have long been interested in the role of climate in shaping species’ ranges, and in recent years, this relationship has taken on greater significance because of the need for accurate predictions of the effects of climate change on wildlife populations. Bioclimatic relationships, however, are potentially complicated by various environmental factors operating at multiple spatial and temporal scales. Here, we test the hypothesis that climatic constraints on bird distributions are modified by species-specific responses to weather, urbanization and use of supplemental food. 2. Our analyses focused on 18 bird species with data from over 3000 sites across the north-eastern United States and adjacent Canadian provinces. We use hierarchal occupancy modelling to quantify the effects of short-term weather variation and surrounding urbanization on food stress and probabilities of detection, and how these fine-scale changes modify the role that climate has on the distributions of wintering bird populations at regional scales. 3. Examining site occupancy and supplemental food use across the study region, we found that average minimum temperature was an important factor limiting bird distributions, supporting the hypothesis that the occupancy of wintering birds is limited by climatic constraints. We found that 15 of 18 species (83%) were more energetically stressed (had a higher likelihood of visiting a feeder station) as minimum temperature declined from the seasonal average. Because we found these patterns in populations that regularly visit supplemental food sites and were likely not food-limited, we suggest that resource availability is less important than climate in constraining wintering bird distributions. Across a winter season, local within-winter extinction probabilities were lower and colonization probabilities higher at warmer sites supporting the role of climate-mediated range shifts. Importantly, however, these relationships were modified by the degree of urbanization and species’ abilities to persist in human-modified landscapes. 4. Our results suggest that urbanization and behavioural adaptation can modify the role of climate on bird ranges and should be included in future analyses of range shifts because of climate change.

120 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023669
20221,420
2021234
2020217
2019236
2018209