The book describes and discusses the numerical methods which are successfully being used for analysing ecological data, using a clear and comprehensive approach. These methods are derived from the fields of mathematical physics, parametric and nonparametric statistics, information theory, numerical taxonomy, archaeology, psychometry, sociometry, econometry and others. Compared to the first edition of Numerical Ecology, this second edition includes three new chapters, dealing with the analysis of semiquantitative data, canonical analysis and spatial analysis. New sections have been added to almost all other chapters. There are sections listing available computer programs and packages at the end of several chapters. As in the previous English and French editions, there are numerous examples from the ecological literature, and the choice of methods is facilitated by several synoptic tables.
Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
D.H. Cushing
...The text is well written and very clear, it is so clear that the reader is seduced to read further; I found myself happily reading page after page. The authors are masters of their subject and as they delineate it, from chapter to chapter, they define it. At every corner of the text there is an 'ecological application' and this is useful in revealing the limits and advantages of a method.
Journal of Plankton Research, Volume 21, Number 7
M.J. Anderson
...The first English edition of Numerical Ecology appeared in 1983. It was already an important reference for multi-dimensional analysis in ecology, providing the most comprehensive explanations of matrix algebra, eigenanalysis, measures of association (similarity and dissimilarity), cluster analysis and ordination for ecology. The new edition is much more than this. The last 15 years have seen an explosion of new statistical non-parametric methods, particularly permutation methods, and computer programs that have made the analysis of 'misbehaving' data more possible than ever before. This new edition of Numerical Ecology provides a very impressive overview of these complex new methods. It still provides an (up-dated) summary of the fundamentals of measures of association, clustering and ordination, but it also provides a plethora of new material, consistent with the recent explosion of new methods. It is comprehensive in the sheer quantity of the new methods it covers, such as cluster analysis with spatial contiguity constraints, multivariate Mantel tests for spatial autocorrelation, redundancy analysis and permutation tests for complex linear models. It is, without a doubt, the most extensive current review of the most up-to-date multivariate numerical techniques in experimental ecology. Along with providing understandable introductions to and examples of these new methods, it is a great source to access the primary literature on these topics. This is especially important because many of the numerical methods useful to ecologists come from advances in other fields, such as agriculture, economics, psychology, archaeology, sociology, physics, geology, geography or from other branches of biology, such as genetics, taxonomy, morphometrics.... This book provides a superb line of access for those who approach complex statistics with a weary heart. Have you never understood an eigenvalue before? Look here! It also provides an exceptional up-to-date reference for the experts...This book offers ecologists the means to make the most of their numerical methods, particularly for descriptive multi-dimensional analysis. My prediction: it will take more than ten years for the rest of us to catch up to this book, to explore its information content and the many non-parametric approaches to unique situations. It is a 'must-have' reference for any researcher or graduate student studying multivariate ecological systems.
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, Volume 239
E.K. Duursma
...Considerable appraisal has to be given on the extensiveness of the subjects treated, the clear presentations with i.e. helpful indications in the margin, clear figures and tables, all demonstrating the thoroughness with which the authors have prepared this second English edition. The fact that previous English and French editions, even if much less extensive than the second English edition, were published, shows that students and scientists around the world are interested in in-depth studies of numerical ecology.
Oceanologica Acta
P. Bourgeron
...one of those few books that is worth every page it is written on. It is truly a monumental work, both in its size (853 pages) and thematic content. It is an ambitious and timely overview of the quantitative analysis of ecological data at a time when the increasing availability of computer programs makes choosing among the dizzying number of techniques a confusing task. Clearly, Pierre and Louis Legendre have produced an excellent book on numerical ecology.(...)The book is well produced, with few errors. It will be essential reading for ecologists, whether beginners or seasoned professionals, who conduct quantitative analyses of ecological and environmental data. This book can be used at several levels, from an introduction, to the in-depth teaching/reading of the topics covered.
Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, Vol. 32/2
R.J. Wootton
...This volume made me wish that I taught a course for which it was the recommended textbook. It is a lucid guide to a particular area of quantitative biology. The book is devoted to numerical methods that can be used for the analysis of multidimensional data, particularly the sort of data collected in studies of assemblages of organisms. The outstanding feature of the book is the clarity with which these methods are described. As someone who has fought a losing battle with techniques such as the terrible twins Decorana and Twinspan, this book was a revelation. Anyone who is concerned with analysing fish assemblages and the relationships between assemblage composition and environmental characteristics should find this book valuable....It should sit alongside Underwood's Experiments in Ecology (CUP, 1997) on the desk of any ecologist who undertakes quantitative field studies.
Journal of Fish Biology
J. Podani
...The main message of this review is that this volume should not be absent from the bookshelf of any quantitatively minded community ecologist.
Journal of Classification
The book describes and discusses the numerical methods which are successfully being used for analysing ecological data, using a clear and comprehensive approach. These methods are derived from the fields of mathematical physics, parametric and nonparametric statistics, information theory, numerical taxonomy, archaeology, psychometry, sociometry, econometry and others. Compared to the first edition of Numerical Ecology, this second edition includes three new chapters, dealing with the analysis of semiquantitative data, canonical analysis and spatial analysis. New sections have been added to almost all other chapters. There are sections listing available computer programs and packages at the end of several chapters. As in the previous English and French editions, there are numerous examples from the ecological literature, and the choice of methods is facilitated by several synoptic tables.
Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
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Paperback. Etat : Very Good. Numerical Ecology: Volume 24 (Developments in Environmental Modelling) This book is in very good condition and will be shipped within 24 hours of ordering. The cover may have some limited signs of wear but the pages are clean, intact and the spine remains undamaged. This book has clearly been well maintained and looked after thus far. Money back guarantee if you are not satisfied. See all our books here, order more than 1 book and get discounted shipping. N° de réf. du vendeur 7719-9780444892508
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Paperback. Etat : Very Good. This book is in very good condition and will be shipped within 24 hours of ordering. The cover may have some limited signs of wear but the pages are clean, intact and the spine remains undamaged. This book has clearly been well maintained and looked after thus far. Money back guarantee if you are not satisfied. See all our books here, order more than 1 book and get discounted shipping. N° de réf. du vendeur 6545-9780444892508
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Good copy with small signs of wear, little corner bump. - Contents: Preface xi -- Complex ecological data sets -- Numerical analysis of ecological data -- Autocorrelation and spatial structure -- -Types of spatial structures -- - Tests of statistical significance in the presence of autocorrelation -- - Classical sampling and spatial structure -- Statistical testing by permutation -- -Classical tests of significance -- -Permutation tests -- -Numerical example -- - Remarks on permutation tests -- Computers -- Ecological descriptors -- - Mathematical types of descriptor -- - Intensive -- extensive -- additive -- and non- additive descriptors -- Coding -- - Linear transformation -- -Nonlinear transformations -- - Combining descriptors -- - Ranging and standardization -- - Implicit transformation in association coefficients -- -Normalization -- -Dummy variable (binary) coding -- Missing data -- - Deleting rows or columns -- -Accommodating algorithms to missing data -- - Estimating missing values -- Matrix algebra: a summary -- Matrix algebra -- The ecological data matrix -- Association matrices -- Special matrices -- Vectors and scaling -- Contents -- vi -- Matrix addition and multiplication -- Determinant -- The rank of a matrix -- Matrix inversion -- Eigenvalues and eigenvectors -- -Computation -- - Numerical examples -- Some properties of eigenvalues and eigenvectors -- Singular value decomposition -- Dimensional analysis in ecology -- Dimensional analysis -- Dimensions -- Fundamental principles and the Pi theorem -- The complete set of dimensionless products -- Scale factors and models -- Multidimensional quantitative data -- Multidimensional statistics -- Multidimensional variables and dispersion matrix -- Correlation matrix -- Multinormal distribution -- Principal axes -- Multiple and partial correlations -- -Multiple linear correlation -- -Partial correlation -- - -- statistical significance -- -Interpretation of correlation coefficien -- - Causal modelling using correlations -- Multinormal conditional distribution -- Tests of normality and multinormality -- Multidimensional semiquantitative data -- Nonparametric statistics -- Quantitative -- semiquantitative -- and qualitative multivariates -- One-dimensional nonparametric statistics -- Multidimensional ranking tests -- Multidimensional qualitative data -- General principles -- Information and entropy -- Two-way contingency tables -- Multiway contingency tables -- Contingency tables: correspondence -- Species diversity -- - Diversity -- - Evenness -- equitability -- Ecological resemblance -- The basis for clustering and ordination -- Q and R analyses -- Association coefficients -- Q mode: similarity coefficients -- - Symmetrical binary coefficients -- - Asymmetrical binary coefficients -- -Symmetrical quantitative coefficients -- -Asymmetrical quantitative coefficients -- - Probabilistic coefficients -- Q mode: distance coefficients -- - Metric distances -- -Semimetrics -- R mode: coefficients of dependence -- - Descriptors other than species abundances -- -Species abundances: biological associations -- Choice of a coefficient -- Computer programs and packages -- Cluster analysis -- A search for discontinuities -- Definitions -- The basic model: single linkage clustering -- Cophenetic matrix and ultrametric property -- - Cophenetic matrix -- - Ultrametric property -- The panoply of methods -- -Sequential versus simultaneous algorithms -- -Agglomeration versus division -- -Monothetic versus polythetic methods -- -Hierarchical versus non-hierarchical methods -- -Probabilistic versus non-probabilistic methods -- Hierarchical agglomerative clustering -- -Single linkage agglomerative clustering -- -Complete linkage agglomerative clustering -- -Intermediate linkage clustering -- -Unweighted arithmetic average clustering (UPGMA) -- -Weighted arithmetic average clustering (WPGMA) -- - Unweighted centroid clustering (UPGMC) -- -Weighted centroid clustering (WPGMC) -- -Ward's minimum variance method -- - General agglomerative clustering model -- -Flexible clustering -- - Information analysis -- Reversals -- Hierarchical divisive clustering -- -Monothetic methods -- -Polythetic methods -- ordination space -- -TWINSPAN -- -Division in -- Partitioning by K-means -- Species clustering: biological associations -- - Probabilistic -- -Non-hierarchical complete linkage clustering -- - Indicator species -- clustering -- Seriation -- Clustering statistics -- -Connectedness and isolation -- -Cophenetic correlation and related measures -- Cluster validation -- Cluster representation and choice of a method -- Ordination in reduced space -- Projecting data sets in a few dimensions -- Principal component analysis (PCA) -- -Computing the eigenvectors -- - Computing and representing the principal components -- -Contributions of descriptors -- - Biplots -- -Principal components of a correlation matrix -- -The meaningful components -- -Misuses of principal components -- -Ecological applications -- -Algorithms -- Principal coordinate analysis (PCOA) -- -Computation -- -Numerical example -- -Rationale of the method -- -Negative eigenvalues -- -Ecological applications -- - Algorithms -- Nonmetric multidimensional scaling (MDS) -- Correspondence analysis (CA) -- -Computation -- -Numerical example -- - Interpretation -- -Site x species data tables -- -Arch effect -- -Ecological applications -- -Algorithms -- Factor analysis -- Interpretation of ecological structures -- Ecological structures -- Clustering and ordination -- The mathematics of ecological interpretation -- Regression -- -Simple linear regression: model I -- -Simple linear regression: model II -- - Multiple linear regression -- - Polynomial regression -- -Partial linear regression -- -Nonlinear regression -- -Logistic regression -- - Splines and LOWESS smoothing -- Path analysis -- Matrix comparisons -- -Mantel test -- -More than two matrices -- -ANOSIM test -- - Procrustes analysis -- The -- th-c. 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Etat : Very Good. xv, 853, text figs. . PB. Light creasing to spine. Vg. Second English edition. The book describes and discusses the numerical methods which are successfully being used for analysing ecological data, using a clear and comprehensive approach. These methods are derived from the fields of mathematical physics, parametric and nonparametric statistics, information theory, numerical taxonomy, archaeology, psychometry, sociometry, econometry and others. [9780444892508]. N° de réf. du vendeur S43991
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