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Jonas Wallin. Photo.

Jonas Wallin

Senior lecturer, Director of third cycle studies, Department of Statistics

Jonas Wallin. Photo.

Level set Cox processes

Author

  • Jonas Wallin
  • David Bolin
  • Anders Hildeman
  • Janine Illian

Summary, in English

The log-Gaussian Cox process (LGCP) is a popular point process for modeling noninteracting spatial point patterns. This paper extends the LGCP model to handle data exhibiting fundamentally different behaviors in different subregions of the spatial domain. The aim of the analyst might be either to identify and classify these regions, to perform kriging, or to derive some properties of the parameters driving the random field in one or several of the subregions. The extension is based on replacing the latent Gaussian random field in the LGCP by a latent spatial mixture model. The mixture model is specified using a latent, categorically valued, random field induced by level set operations on a Gaussian random field. Conditional on the classification, the intensity surface for each class is modeled by a set of independent Gaussian random fields. This allows for standard stationary covariance structures, such as the Matérn family, to be used to model Gaussian random fields with some degree of general smoothness but also occasional and structured sharp discontinuities. A computationally efficient MCMC method is proposed for Bayesian inference and we show consistency of finite dimensional approximations of the model. Finally, the model is fitted to point pattern data derived from a tropical rainforest on Barro Colorado island, Panama. We show that the proposed model is able to capture behavior for which inference based on the standard LGCP is biased.

Department/s

  • Department of Statistics

Publishing year

2018-12

Language

English

Pages

169-193

Publication/Series

Spatial Statistics

Volume

28

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Probability Theory and Statistics

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2211-6753