The Hermans–Rasson test as a powerful alternative to the Rayleigh test for circular statistics in biology

Abstract Background Circular data are gathered in diverse fields of science where measured traits are cyclical in nature: such as compass directions or times of day. The most common statistical question asked of a sample of circular data is whether the data seems to be drawn from a uniform distribut...

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Main Authors: Lukas Landler, Graeme D. Ruxton, E. Pascal Malkemper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-08-01
Series:BMC Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12898-019-0246-8
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spelling doaj-df5e92316bdd4a54a112ae5633d5cc8a2021-09-02T16:23:47ZengBMCBMC Ecology1472-67852019-08-011911810.1186/s12898-019-0246-8The Hermans–Rasson test as a powerful alternative to the Rayleigh test for circular statistics in biologyLukas Landler0Graeme D. Ruxton1E. Pascal Malkemper2Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP), Vienna Biocenter (VBC)School of Biology, University of St AndrewsResearch Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP), Vienna Biocenter (VBC)Abstract Background Circular data are gathered in diverse fields of science where measured traits are cyclical in nature: such as compass directions or times of day. The most common statistical question asked of a sample of circular data is whether the data seems to be drawn from a uniform distribution or one that is concentrated around one or more preferred directions. The overwhelmingly most-popular test of the null hypothesis of uniformity is the Rayleigh test, even though this test is known to have very low power in some circumstances. Here we present simulation studies evaluating the performance of tests developed as alternatives to the Rayleigh test. Results The results of our simulations demonstrate that a single test, the Hermans and Rasson test is almost as powerful as the Rayleigh test in unimodal situations (when the Rayleigh test does well) but substantially outperforms the Rayleigh test in multimodal situations. Conclusion We recommend researchers switch to routine use of the new Hermans and Rasson test. We also demonstrate that all available tests have low power to detect departures from uniformity involving more than two concentrated regions: we recommend that where researchers suspect such complex departures that they collect substantially-sized samples and apply another recent test due to Pycke that was designed specifically for such complex cases. We provide clear textual descriptions of how to implement each of these recommended tests and encode them in R functions that we provide.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12898-019-0246-8R functionsAnimal navigationMigrationEmlen funnelBehaviourBiostatistics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lukas Landler
Graeme D. Ruxton
E. Pascal Malkemper
spellingShingle Lukas Landler
Graeme D. Ruxton
E. Pascal Malkemper
The Hermans–Rasson test as a powerful alternative to the Rayleigh test for circular statistics in biology
BMC Ecology
R functions
Animal navigation
Migration
Emlen funnel
Behaviour
Biostatistics
author_facet Lukas Landler
Graeme D. Ruxton
E. Pascal Malkemper
author_sort Lukas Landler
title The Hermans–Rasson test as a powerful alternative to the Rayleigh test for circular statistics in biology
title_short The Hermans–Rasson test as a powerful alternative to the Rayleigh test for circular statistics in biology
title_full The Hermans–Rasson test as a powerful alternative to the Rayleigh test for circular statistics in biology
title_fullStr The Hermans–Rasson test as a powerful alternative to the Rayleigh test for circular statistics in biology
title_full_unstemmed The Hermans–Rasson test as a powerful alternative to the Rayleigh test for circular statistics in biology
title_sort hermans–rasson test as a powerful alternative to the rayleigh test for circular statistics in biology
publisher BMC
series BMC Ecology
issn 1472-6785
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Abstract Background Circular data are gathered in diverse fields of science where measured traits are cyclical in nature: such as compass directions or times of day. The most common statistical question asked of a sample of circular data is whether the data seems to be drawn from a uniform distribution or one that is concentrated around one or more preferred directions. The overwhelmingly most-popular test of the null hypothesis of uniformity is the Rayleigh test, even though this test is known to have very low power in some circumstances. Here we present simulation studies evaluating the performance of tests developed as alternatives to the Rayleigh test. Results The results of our simulations demonstrate that a single test, the Hermans and Rasson test is almost as powerful as the Rayleigh test in unimodal situations (when the Rayleigh test does well) but substantially outperforms the Rayleigh test in multimodal situations. Conclusion We recommend researchers switch to routine use of the new Hermans and Rasson test. We also demonstrate that all available tests have low power to detect departures from uniformity involving more than two concentrated regions: we recommend that where researchers suspect such complex departures that they collect substantially-sized samples and apply another recent test due to Pycke that was designed specifically for such complex cases. We provide clear textual descriptions of how to implement each of these recommended tests and encode them in R functions that we provide.
topic R functions
Animal navigation
Migration
Emlen funnel
Behaviour
Biostatistics
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12898-019-0246-8
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