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Effects of Temporal Resolution on an Inferential Model of Animal Movement

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, May 2013
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Title
Effects of Temporal Resolution on an Inferential Model of Animal Movement
Published in
PLOS ONE, May 2013
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0057640
Pubmed ID
Authors

Claire M. Postlethwaite, Todd E. Dennis

Abstract

Recently, there has been much interest in describing the behaviour of animals by fitting various movement models to tracking data. Despite this interest, little is known about how the temporal 'grain' of movement trajectories affects the outputs of such models, and how behaviours classified at one timescale may differ from those classified at other scales. Here, we present a study in which random-walk state-space models were fit both to nightly geospatial lifelines of common brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) and synthetic trajectories parameterised from empirical observations. Observed trajectories recorded by GPS collars at 5-min intervals were sub-sampled at periods varying between 10 and 60 min, to approximate the effect of collecting data at lower sampling frequencies. Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo fitting techniques, using information about movement rates and turning angles between sequential fixes, were employed using a Bayesian framework to assign distinct behavioural states to individual location estimates. We found that in trajectories with higher temporal granularities behaviours could be clearly differentiated into 'slow-area-restricted' and 'fast-transiting' states, but for trajectories with longer inter-fix intervals this distinction was markedly less obvious. Specifically, turning-angle distributions varied from being highly peaked around either 0° or 180° at fine temporal scales, to being uniform across all angles at low sampling intervals. Our results highlight the difficulty of comparing model results amongst tracking-data sets that vary substantially in temporal grain, and demonstrate the importance of matching the observed temporal resolution of tracking devices to the timescales of behaviours of interest, otherwise inter-individual comparisons of inferred behaviours may be invalid, or important biological information may be obscured.

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The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 92 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Germany 3 3%
United States 1 1%
Spain 1 1%
Unknown 87 95%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 27 29%
Researcher 20 22%
Student > Master 16 17%
Student > Bachelor 5 5%
Student > Doctoral Student 2 2%
Other 7 8%
Unknown 15 16%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 42 46%
Environmental Science 18 20%
Engineering 5 5%
Social Sciences 3 3%
Linguistics 1 1%
Other 6 7%
Unknown 17 18%