Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2117029130> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2117029130 endingPage "574" @default.
- W2117029130 startingPage "557" @default.
- W2117029130 abstract "ANOSIM, PERMANOVA, and the Mantel test are all resemblance-based permutation methods widely used in ecology. Here, we report the results of the first simulation study, to our knowledge, specifically designed to examine the effects of heterogeneity of multivariate dispersions on the rejection rates of these tests and on a classical MANOVA test (Pillai's trace). Increasing differences in dispersion among groups were simulated under scenarios of changing sample sizes, correlation structures, error distributions, numbers of variables, and numbers of groups for balanced and unbalanced one-way designs. The power of these tests to detect environmental impacts or natural large-scale biogeographic gradients was also compared empirically under simulations based on parameters derived from real ecological data sets. Overall, ANOSIM and the Mantel test were very sensitive to heterogeneity in dispersions, with ANOSIM generally being more sensitive than the Mantel test. In contrast, PERMANOVA and Pillai's trace were largely unaffected by heterogeneity for balanced designs. PERMANOVA was also unaffected by differences in correlation structure, unlike Pillai's trace. For unbalanced designs, however, all of the tests were (1) too liberal when the smaller group had greater dispersion and (2) overly conservative when the larger group had greater dispersion, especially ANOSIM and the Mantel test. For simulations based on real ecological data sets, PERMANOVA was generally, but not always, more powerful than the others to detect changes in community structure, and the Mantel test was usually more powerful than ANOSIM. Both the error distributions and the resemblance measure affected results concerning power. Differences in the underlying construction of these test statistics result in important differences in the nature of the null hypothesis they are testing, their sensitivity to heterogeneity, and their power to detect important changes in ecological communities. For balanced designs, PERMANOVA and PERMDISP can be used to rigorously identify location vs. dispersion effects, respectively, in the space of the chosen resemblance measure. ANOSIM and the Mantel test can be used as more “omnibus” tests, being sensitive to differences in location, dispersion or correlation structure among groups. Unfortunately, none of the tests (PERMANOVA, Mantel, or ANOSIM) behaved reliably for unbalanced designs in the face of heterogeneity." @default.
- W2117029130 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2117029130 creator A5021372986 @default.
- W2117029130 creator A5049228176 @default.
- W2117029130 date "2013-11-01" @default.
- W2117029130 modified "2023-10-14" @default.
- W2117029130 title "PERMANOVA, ANOSIM, and the Mantel test in the face of heterogeneous dispersions: What null hypothesis are you testing?" @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1488156261 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1688204489 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1858058589 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1964217400 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1973158119 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1977577267 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1979999898 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1982380363 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1982508230 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1983482950 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W1993513616 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2020737422 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2033045974 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2033962550 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2048222458 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2053744729 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2055373780 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2056063576 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2056467812 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2058625073 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2063730763 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2064335136 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2067401440 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2071221561 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2072713835 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2073582351 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2080050587 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2082546393 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2087784353 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2099053943 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2102746137 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2113158184 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2117613972 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2118327902 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2120106329 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2127366570 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2128791014 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2131042289 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2147444251 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2149421543 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2163112013 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2167941657 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2172776214 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2327108640 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2329760068 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W2333574983 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W4239601087 @default.
- W2117029130 cites W4242702784 @default.
- W2117029130 doi "https://doi.org/10.1890/12-2010.1" @default.
- W2117029130 hasPublicationYear "2013" @default.
- W2117029130 type Work @default.
- W2117029130 sameAs 2117029130 @default.
- W2117029130 citedByCount "1248" @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302014 @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302015 @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302016 @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302017 @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302018 @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302019 @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302020 @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302021 @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302022 @default.
- W2117029130 countsByYear W21170291302023 @default.
- W2117029130 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2117029130 hasAuthorship W2117029130A5021372986 @default.
- W2117029130 hasAuthorship W2117029130A5049228176 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C104317684 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C105795698 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C161584116 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C18903297 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C19033989 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C191988596 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C33923547 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C55493867 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C68873052 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C104317684 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C105795698 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C161584116 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C18903297 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C19033989 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C191988596 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C33923547 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C55493867 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C68873052 @default.
- W2117029130 hasConceptScore W2117029130C86803240 @default.
- W2117029130 hasIssue "4" @default.
- W2117029130 hasLocation W21170291301 @default.
- W2117029130 hasOpenAccess W2117029130 @default.
- W2117029130 hasPrimaryLocation W21170291301 @default.
- W2117029130 hasRelatedWork W1707586213 @default.