2013
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210x.12122
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Compound Poisson‐gamma vs. delta‐gamma to handle zero‐inflated continuous data under a variable sampling volume

Abstract: Summary1. Ecological data such as biomasses often present a high proportion of zeros with possible skewed positive values. The Delta-Gamma (DG) approach, which models separately the presence-absence and the positive biomass, is commonly used in ecology. A less commonly known alternative is the compound Poisson-gamma (CPG) approach, which essentially mimics the process of capturing clusters of biomass during a sampling event.2. Regardless of the approach, the effort involved in obtaining a sample (henceforth ca… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…ε a as belonging to a certain class of complex dynamical systems. Namely, the exponent 1 < p < 2 corresponds to compound Poisson-gamma distributions, which are particularly used to mimic the process of capturing clusters in ecological data such as biomasses [73]. Therewith, the observation of a crossover in the scaling for some deformation curves (Figure 7b) may be indicative of multifractality [74], which is in consistence with multifractal behaviors detected for the PLC effect [17,21,28].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…ε a as belonging to a certain class of complex dynamical systems. Namely, the exponent 1 < p < 2 corresponds to compound Poisson-gamma distributions, which are particularly used to mimic the process of capturing clusters in ecological data such as biomasses [73]. Therewith, the observation of a crossover in the scaling for some deformation curves (Figure 7b) may be indicative of multifractality [74], which is in consistence with multifractal behaviors detected for the PLC effect [17,21,28].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Finally, we implemented a Tweedie distribution as a flexible model for count data that allows for both a large number of zeros and overdispersion, two features ubiquitous in animal population surveys. Because the Tweedie is not a built-in distribution in most Bayesian software packages, we adopted the CPG approach of Lecomte et al (2013). Together these features provide more options for users when fitting Bayesian models to line transect data.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the existence of few zero catches, a Tweedie GAM following a compound Poisson-gamma approach was applied. This avoids multiple-stage modelling of zeroinflated data and allows to model jointly the probability of presence and the non-zero sampled quantity (Shono 2008, Lecomte et al 2013. The smoother function used was a penalized cubic regression spline and model fitting was accomplished using the "mgcv" library (Wood 2006) under the R language environment (R Core Team 2017).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%