Dissimilarity for partially ranked data and its application to cover-abundance data |
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Authors: | M. B. Dale |
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Affiliation: | (1) CSIRO Division of Tropical Crops and pastures, 306 Carmody Rd., 4067 St. Lucia, Qld., Australia |
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Abstract: | Cover-abundance estimates are commonly employed in phytosociological investigations to record the performance of species. Because the coded values are on an ordinal scale of measure, various authors have suggested that some transformation is necessary before such values can be used for classification and ordination. However, it is not clear that transformation is a sufficient treatment, and it would seem preferable to use ordinal data directly. In this paper we examine such direct use of partial rankings and show that several dissimilarity measures can be defined for this case without invoking any transformations. They include dissimilarity measures associated with various rank correlation measures and with distances between strings; all the measure are variant forms of Hausdorf's interset distance. Certain other kinds of data, such as those employing dominant and subdominant species and the dry-weight-rank estimation of biomass, are also on an ordinal scale and could be analysed using similar techniques.To illustrate the approach, a string dissimilarity measure is used to analyse a set of data from Slovakian grasslands which appear to reflect a simple gradient. The original data were recorded with 10 classes of performance and are analysed using hierarchical and nondeterministic, overlapping, classifications. |
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Keywords: | Distance Hausdorf distance Levenshtein distance Ordered category Rank correlation Similarity String Transformation |
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