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Statistical modelling of individual animal movement: an overview of key methods and a discussion of practical challenges
Authors:Toby A. Patterson  Alison Parton  Roland Langrock  Paul G. Blackwell  Len Thomas  Ruth King
Affiliation:1.CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere,Hobart,Australia;2.School of Mathematics and Statistics,University of Sheffield,Sheffield,UK;3.Department of Business Administration and Economics,Bielefeld University,Bielefeld,Germany;4.School of Mathematics and Statistics,University of St Andrews,St Andrews,UK;5.School of Mathematics,University of Edinburgh,Edinburgh,UK
Abstract:With the influx of complex and detailed tracking data gathered from electronic tracking devices, the analysis of animal movement data has recently emerged as a cottage industry among biostatisticians. New approaches of ever greater complexity are continue to be added to the literature. In this paper, we review what we believe to be some of the most popular and most useful classes of statistical models used to analyse individual animal movement data. Specifically, we consider discrete-time hidden Markov models, more general state-space models and diffusion processes. We argue that these models should be core components in the toolbox for quantitative researchers working on stochastic modelling of individual animal movement. The paper concludes by offering some general observations on the direction of statistical analysis of animal movement. There is a trend in movement ecology towards what are arguably overly complex modelling approaches which are inaccessible to ecologists, unwieldy with large data sets or not based on mainstream statistical practice. Additionally, some analysis methods developed within the ecological community ignore fundamental properties of movement data, potentially leading to misleading conclusions about animal movement. Corresponding approaches, e.g. based on Lévy walk-type models, continue to be popular despite having been largely discredited. We contend that there is a need for an appropriate balance between the extremes of either being overly complex or being overly simplistic, whereby the discipline relies on models of intermediate complexity that are usable by general ecologists, but grounded in well-developed statistical practice and efficient to fit to large data sets.
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