4.7 Article

Combining statistical inference and decisions in ecology

期刊

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
卷 26, 期 6, 页码 1930-1942

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/15-1593.1

关键词

Bayesian risk; Bayes rule; frequentist risk; loss function; optimal posterior estimator; statistical decision theory

资金

  1. U.S. Geological Survey
  2. Alaska Science Center
  3. Colorado State University, Department of Statistics

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Statistical decision theory (SDT) is a sub-field of decision theory that formally incorporates statistical investigation into a decision-theoretic framework to account for uncertainties in a decision problem. SDT provides a unifying analysis of three types of information: statistical results from a data set, knowledge of the consequences of potential choices (i.e., loss), and prior beliefs about a system. SDT links the theoretical development of a large body of statistical methods, including point estimation, hypothesis testing, and confidence interval estimation. The theory and application of SDT have mainly been developed and published in the fields of mathematics, statistics, operations research, and other decision sciences, but have had limited exposure in ecology. Thus, we provide an introduction to SDT for ecologists and describe its utility for linking the conventionally separate tasks of statistical investigation and decision making in a single framework. We describe the basic framework of both Bayesian and frequentist SDT, its traditional use in statistics, and discuss its application to decision problems that occur in ecology. We demonstrate SDT with two types of decisions: Bayesian point estimation and an applied management problem of selecting a prescribed fire rotation for managing a grassland bird species. Central to SDT, and decision theory in general, are loss functions. Thus, we also provide basic guidance and references for constructing loss functions for an SDT problem.

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