Journal
ECOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 7, Pages 1746-1758Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/15-1286.1
Keywords
Bayesian analysis; Bayesian predictive information criterion; cross-validation; hierarchical models; North American Breeding Bird Survey
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The analysis of ecological data has changed in two important ways over the last 15 years. The development and easy availability of Bayesian computational methods has allowed and encouraged the fitting of complex hierarchical models. At the same time, there has been increasing emphasis on acknowledging and accounting for model uncertainty. Unfortunately, the ability to fit complex models has outstripped the development of tools for model selection and model evaluation: familiar model selection tools such as Akaike's information criterion and the deviance information criterion are widely known to be inadequate for hierarchical models. In addition, little attention has been paid to the evaluation of model adequacy in context of hierarchical modeling, i.e., to the evaluation of fit for a single model. In this paper, we describe Bayesian cross-validation, which provides tools for model selection and evaluation. We describe the Bayesian predictive information criterion and a Bayesian approximation to the BPIC known as the Watanabe-Akaike information criterion. We illustrate the use of these tools for model selection, and the use of Bayesian cross- validation as a tool for model evaluation, using three large data sets from the North American Breeding Bird Survey.
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