Parameter redundancy in discrete state‐space and integrated models |
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Authors: | Diana J Cole Rachel S McCrea |
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Institution: | School of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science, University of Kent, Canterbury, England |
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Abstract: | Discrete state‐space models are used in ecology to describe the dynamics of wild animal populations, with parameters, such as the probability of survival, being of ecological interest. For a particular parametrization of a model it is not always clear which parameters can be estimated. This inability to estimate all parameters is known as parameter redundancy or a model is described as nonidentifiable. In this paper we develop methods that can be used to detect parameter redundancy in discrete state‐space models. An exhaustive summary is a combination of parameters that fully specify a model. To use general methods for detecting parameter redundancy a suitable exhaustive summary is required. This paper proposes two methods for the derivation of an exhaustive summary for discrete state‐space models using discrete analogues of methods for continuous state‐space models. We also demonstrate that combining multiple data sets, through the use of an integrated population model, may result in a model in which all parameters are estimable, even though models fitted to the separate data sets may be parameter redundant. |
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Keywords: | Capture‐recapture Identifiability Joint likelihood Mark‐recovery models Population dynamics |
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