4.6 Article

Parameter landscapes unveil the bias in allometric prediction

Journal

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 1, Issue 1, Pages 69-74

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.2041-210X.2009.00005.x

Keywords

allometry; linear regression; log transformation; power law; scaling

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1. The criteria for choosing the appropriate line-fitting method (LFM) and correction estimator for determining the functional allometric relationship, and for predicting the Y-variable accurately are controversial. A widely accepted criterion for reducing bias in allometric prediction is to minimize the mean squared residual (MSR) on the antilog scale, and a series of correction estimators have been designed precisely to achieve this. 2. Here, using parameter landscapes, we examine the performance of the correction estimators and several LFMs under different data reszidual shapes, sample sizes and coefficients of determination. 3. Predictions from the nonlinear LFM were found to have minimum MSR values (minimum bias), but with obviously skewed frequency distributions of the predicted Y-variable compared with observed data. This implies that using MSR as a bias measure for allometric prediction could be misleading. 4. We introduce a new bias measure, the discrepancy of the frequency distributions of the Y-variable between predicted and observed data, and suggest that the reduced major axis method is the least biased method in most cases, both on the logarithmic and antilog scales. 5. Parameter landscapes clearly illustrate the performance of each LFM and correction estimator, as well as the best solution given specified criteria. We therefore suggest a shift in emphasis from designing more sophisticated LFM or correction estimators (equal to finding the peaks in the parameter landscape) to justifying the measure of bias and performance criterion in allometric prediction.

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