Researchers frequently compare rates of change based on counts (e.g. mortality, germination, infection, recruitment). The estimation of mortality and recruitment rates from tree census data have been discussed elsewhere. However, rather than estimating absolute rates, researchers may often need to determine whether two rates are significantly different. Most biometric texts and computer packages are not very helpful on this question, and guidance is not readily sifted out of the more technical literature. This note is intended to address three related issues: 1) to inform researchers who are not familiar with the appropriate tests, 2) to present an approach that avoids analytical complexity, and 3) to provide some feel for the power of the ...
Analytic procedures suitable for the study of human disease are scattered throughout the statistical...
1. The decomposition of variation in population growth into the relative contributions from differen...
Incidence and remission rates are often estimated from studies that employ a diagnostic test to Indi...
Researchers frequently compare rates of change based on counts (e.g. mortality, germination, infecti...
1.Mortality and recruitment rates are fundamental measures of population dynamics. Ecologists and ot...
1 The methods commonly used to estimate stem turnover rates (i.e. mortality and recruitment) in spec...
The stated aims of the Lecture Notes in Biomathematics allow for work that is "unfinished or tentati...
1. Mathematical proofs show that rate estimates, for example of mortality and recruitment, will decr...
Counting by weighing is a rapid procedure for obtaining N items (e.g., seeds) based on weight rather...
Counting by weighing is a rapid procedure for obtaining N items (e.g., seeds) based on weight rather...
There are a number of key parameters in population dynamics that are difficult to estimate, such as ...
1 Mathematical proofs show that rate estimates, for example of mortality and recruitment, will decre...
ii There are two common methods for comparing disease incidence rates (such as cancer) in two popula...
Variation is present in all measured data, due to variation between individuals (biological variatio...
1. The tempo of evolutionary change through time is among the most heavily studied dimensions of mac...
Analytic procedures suitable for the study of human disease are scattered throughout the statistical...
1. The decomposition of variation in population growth into the relative contributions from differen...
Incidence and remission rates are often estimated from studies that employ a diagnostic test to Indi...
Researchers frequently compare rates of change based on counts (e.g. mortality, germination, infecti...
1.Mortality and recruitment rates are fundamental measures of population dynamics. Ecologists and ot...
1 The methods commonly used to estimate stem turnover rates (i.e. mortality and recruitment) in spec...
The stated aims of the Lecture Notes in Biomathematics allow for work that is "unfinished or tentati...
1. Mathematical proofs show that rate estimates, for example of mortality and recruitment, will decr...
Counting by weighing is a rapid procedure for obtaining N items (e.g., seeds) based on weight rather...
Counting by weighing is a rapid procedure for obtaining N items (e.g., seeds) based on weight rather...
There are a number of key parameters in population dynamics that are difficult to estimate, such as ...
1 Mathematical proofs show that rate estimates, for example of mortality and recruitment, will decre...
ii There are two common methods for comparing disease incidence rates (such as cancer) in two popula...
Variation is present in all measured data, due to variation between individuals (biological variatio...
1. The tempo of evolutionary change through time is among the most heavily studied dimensions of mac...
Analytic procedures suitable for the study of human disease are scattered throughout the statistical...
1. The decomposition of variation in population growth into the relative contributions from differen...
Incidence and remission rates are often estimated from studies that employ a diagnostic test to Indi...