Comparison of parametric, orthogonal, and spline functions to model individual lactation curves for milk yield in Canadian Holsteins

Test day records for milk yield of 57,390 first lactation Canadian Holsteins were analyzed with a linear model that included the fixed effects of herd-test date and days in milk (DIM) interval nested within age and calving season. Residuals from this model were analyzed as a new variable and fitted...

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Main Authors: Corrado Dimauro, Nicolò Pietro Paolo Macciotta, Filippo Miglior, Larry R. Schaeffer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2010-11-01
Series:Italian Journal of Animal Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.aspajournal.it/index.php/ijas/article/view/1762
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spelling doaj-31128f14d5614b5eb74ad4e10a4e72eb2020-11-25T02:51:17ZengTaylor & Francis GroupItalian Journal of Animal Science1594-40771828-051X2010-11-0194e87e8710.4081/ijas.2010.e87Comparison of parametric, orthogonal, and spline functions to model individual lactation curves for milk yield in Canadian HolsteinsCorrado DimauroNicolò Pietro Paolo MacciottaFilippo MigliorLarry R. SchaefferTest day records for milk yield of 57,390 first lactation Canadian Holsteins were analyzed with a linear model that included the fixed effects of herd-test date and days in milk (DIM) interval nested within age and calving season. Residuals from this model were analyzed as a new variable and fitted with a five parameter model, fourth-order Legendre polynomials, with linear, quadratic and cubic spline models with three knots. The fit of the models was rather poor, with about 30-40% of the curves showing an adjusted R-square lower than 0.20 across all models. Results underline a great difficulty in modelling individual deviations around the mean curve for milk yield. However, the Ali and Schaeffer (5 parameter) model and the fourth-order Legendre polynomials were able to detect two basic shapes of individual deviations among the mean curve. Quadratic and, especially, cubic spline functions had better fitting performances but a poor predictive ability due to their great flexibility that results in an abrupt change of the estimated curve when data are missing. Parametric and orthogonal polynomials seem to be robust and affordable under this standpoint.http://www.aspajournal.it/index.php/ijas/article/view/1762Test day model, Residuals, Legendre polynomials, Splines
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Corrado Dimauro
Nicolò Pietro Paolo Macciotta
Filippo Miglior
Larry R. Schaeffer
spellingShingle Corrado Dimauro
Nicolò Pietro Paolo Macciotta
Filippo Miglior
Larry R. Schaeffer
Comparison of parametric, orthogonal, and spline functions to model individual lactation curves for milk yield in Canadian Holsteins
Italian Journal of Animal Science
Test day model, Residuals, Legendre polynomials, Splines
author_facet Corrado Dimauro
Nicolò Pietro Paolo Macciotta
Filippo Miglior
Larry R. Schaeffer
author_sort Corrado Dimauro
title Comparison of parametric, orthogonal, and spline functions to model individual lactation curves for milk yield in Canadian Holsteins
title_short Comparison of parametric, orthogonal, and spline functions to model individual lactation curves for milk yield in Canadian Holsteins
title_full Comparison of parametric, orthogonal, and spline functions to model individual lactation curves for milk yield in Canadian Holsteins
title_fullStr Comparison of parametric, orthogonal, and spline functions to model individual lactation curves for milk yield in Canadian Holsteins
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of parametric, orthogonal, and spline functions to model individual lactation curves for milk yield in Canadian Holsteins
title_sort comparison of parametric, orthogonal, and spline functions to model individual lactation curves for milk yield in canadian holsteins
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Italian Journal of Animal Science
issn 1594-4077
1828-051X
publishDate 2010-11-01
description Test day records for milk yield of 57,390 first lactation Canadian Holsteins were analyzed with a linear model that included the fixed effects of herd-test date and days in milk (DIM) interval nested within age and calving season. Residuals from this model were analyzed as a new variable and fitted with a five parameter model, fourth-order Legendre polynomials, with linear, quadratic and cubic spline models with three knots. The fit of the models was rather poor, with about 30-40% of the curves showing an adjusted R-square lower than 0.20 across all models. Results underline a great difficulty in modelling individual deviations around the mean curve for milk yield. However, the Ali and Schaeffer (5 parameter) model and the fourth-order Legendre polynomials were able to detect two basic shapes of individual deviations among the mean curve. Quadratic and, especially, cubic spline functions had better fitting performances but a poor predictive ability due to their great flexibility that results in an abrupt change of the estimated curve when data are missing. Parametric and orthogonal polynomials seem to be robust and affordable under this standpoint.
topic Test day model, Residuals, Legendre polynomials, Splines
url http://www.aspajournal.it/index.php/ijas/article/view/1762
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