The principle of Maximum Entropy (MaxEnt) promises a novel approach for understanding community assembly. Despite reproducing a variety of observed species abundance patterns, MaxEnt models in ecology have been hampered by disparate model assumptions and interpretations. A recurring challenge is that MaxEnt predictions are highly sensitive to the level of detail used to describe the community being modeled, and there seems to be no reason to prefer one level of detail over another. Here we present of formal unification of two previously developed MaxEnt models which differ in their level of detail, but which are otherwise mathematically similar. The less detailed model, “Maximum Entropy Theory of Ecology” (METE), does not resolve species id...
The maximum entropy principle applies to any thermodynamic system, including biological systems. It ...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
In the first part of the paper we work out the consequences of the fact that Jaynes’ Maximum Entropy...
In the past few decades, ecology has gone through exciting breakthroughs in developing and applying ...
<p>This is a poster I presented at the 2012 Gordon Conference Metabolic Basis of Ecology.</p> <p>Abs...
The Maximum Entropy Theory of Ecology (METE), developed by John Harte, presents an entirely new meth...
Recently there has been growing interest in the use of maximum relative entropy (MaxREnt) as a tool ...
Ecological patterns arise from the interplay of many different processes, and yet the emergence of c...
Ecological patterns arise from the interplay of many different processes, and yet the emergence of c...
In the maximum entropy theory of ecology (METE), the form of a function describing the distribution ...
The maximum entropy theory of ecology (METE) is a unified theory of biodiversity that predicts a lar...
The current climate crisis requires a comprehensive understanding of biodiversity to acknowledge how...
Entropy maximization (EM, also known as MaxEnt) is a general inference procedure that originated in ...
Determining how microbial communities organize and function at the ecosystem level is essential to u...
Determining how microbial communities organize and function at the ecosystem level is essential to u...
The maximum entropy principle applies to any thermodynamic system, including biological systems. It ...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
In the first part of the paper we work out the consequences of the fact that Jaynes’ Maximum Entropy...
In the past few decades, ecology has gone through exciting breakthroughs in developing and applying ...
<p>This is a poster I presented at the 2012 Gordon Conference Metabolic Basis of Ecology.</p> <p>Abs...
The Maximum Entropy Theory of Ecology (METE), developed by John Harte, presents an entirely new meth...
Recently there has been growing interest in the use of maximum relative entropy (MaxREnt) as a tool ...
Ecological patterns arise from the interplay of many different processes, and yet the emergence of c...
Ecological patterns arise from the interplay of many different processes, and yet the emergence of c...
In the maximum entropy theory of ecology (METE), the form of a function describing the distribution ...
The maximum entropy theory of ecology (METE) is a unified theory of biodiversity that predicts a lar...
The current climate crisis requires a comprehensive understanding of biodiversity to acknowledge how...
Entropy maximization (EM, also known as MaxEnt) is a general inference procedure that originated in ...
Determining how microbial communities organize and function at the ecosystem level is essential to u...
Determining how microbial communities organize and function at the ecosystem level is essential to u...
The maximum entropy principle applies to any thermodynamic system, including biological systems. It ...
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here ...
In the first part of the paper we work out the consequences of the fact that Jaynes’ Maximum Entropy...