Data from streams frequently exhibit unique patterns of spatial autocorrelation resulting from the branching network structure, longitudinal (i.e., upstream/downstream) connectivity, directional water flow, and differences in flow volume throughout the network (Erin E. Peterson et al. 2013). In addition, stream networks are embedded within a spatial environment, which can also influence observations on the stream network. Traditional spatial statistical models, which are based solely on Eucliean distance, often fail to adequately describe these unique and complex spatial dependencies.
Spatial stream network models are based on a moving-average construction (J. M. Ver Hoef and Peterson 2010) and are specifically designed to describe two unique spatial relationships found in streams data. A pair of sites is considered flow-connected when water flows from an upstream site to a downstream site. Sites are flow-unconnected when they reside on the same stream network (i.e., share a common junction downstream) but do not share flow.
Spatial stream network models typically rely on two families of covariance functions to represent these relationships: the tail-up and tail-down models. In a tail-up model, the moving-average function points in the upstream direction. Covariance is a function of stream distance and a weighting structure used to proportionally allocate, or split, the function at upstream junctions to account for differences in flow volume or other influential variables (Erin E. Peterson and Ver Hoef 2010). As a result, non-zero covariances are restricted to flow-connected sites in a tail-up model. In a tail-down model, the moving average function points in the downstream direction. In contrast to the tail-up model, tail-down models describe both flow-connected and flow-unconnected relationships, although covariances will always be equal or stronger for flow-unconnected sites than flow-connected sites separated by equal stream distances (J. M. Ver Hoef and Peterson 2010). In the tail-down model, covariance is a function of stream distance and weights are not required. However, it is also possible and often preferable to build spatial stream network models based on a mixture of four components: a tail-up component, a tail-down component, a Euclidean component, and a nugget component. The Euclidean component is useful because it captures covariance in influential processes that are independent of the stream network at intermediate and broad scales (e.g., air temperature, soil type, or geology). The nugget component captures covariance in processes that are highly localized, thus being independent across sites. For more details regarding the construction of spatial stream network models and their covariance components, see Cressie et al. (2006), J. M. Ver Hoef, Peterson, and Theobald (2006), J. M. Ver Hoef and Peterson (2010), Erin E. Peterson and Ver Hoef (2010), and Isaak et al. (2014).
The SSN2
R package is used to fit and
summarize spatial stream network models and make predictions at
unobserved locations (Kriging). SSN2
is an updated version
of the SSN
R package (J. Ver Hoef et al. 2014). Why did we create
SSN2
to replace SSN
? There are two main
reasons:
SSN
depends on the rgdal
(Bivand, Keitt, and Rowlingson 2021),
rgeos
(Bivand and Rundel
2020), and maptools
(Bivand
and Lewin-Koh 2021) R packages, which are being
retired in October, 2023. Their functionality has been replaced and
modernized by the sf
package (Pebesma 2018). SSN2
depends on
sf
instead of rgdal
, rgeos
, and
maptools
, reflecting this broader change regarding handling
spatial data in R.
rgdal
,
rgeos
, and maptools
, available at https://geocompx.org//post/2023/rgdal-retirement .There are features we added to SSN2
that would have
been difficult to implement in SSN
without a massive
restructuring of SSN
’s foundation, so we created a new
package. For example, the SSN
objects in SSN2
are S3 objects but the SSN
objects in SSN
were
S4 objects. Additionally, many functions were rewritten and/or
repurposed in SSN2
to use generic functions (e.g., block
prediction in SSN2
is performed using
predict()
while in SSN
it was performed using
BlockPredict()
).
This vignette provides an overview of basic features in
SSN2
. We load SSN2
by running
library(SSN2)
If you use SSN2
in a formal publication or report,
please cite it. Citing SSN2
lets us devote more resources
to it in the future. We view the SSN2
citation by
running
citation(package = "SSN2")
#>
#> To cite SSN2 in publications use:
#>
#> Dumelle M, Peterson, E, Ver Hoef JM, Pearse A, Isaak D (2023). SSN2:
#> Spatial Modeling on Stream Networks in R. R package version 0.1.0
#>
#> A BibTeX entry for LaTeX users is
#>
#> @Manual{,
#> title = {{SSN2}: Spatial Modeling on Stream Networks in {R}},
#> author = {Michael Dumelle and Erin Peterson and Jay M. {Ver Hoef} and Alan Pearse and Dan Isaak},
#> year = {2023},
#> note = {{R} package version 0.1.0},
#> }
Spatial input data must be pre-processed before it can be used to fit
spatial stream network models in the SSN2
package. This
information is generated using the Spatial Tools for the Analysis of
River Systems (STARS) toolset for ArcGIS Desktop versions 9.3x-10.8x
(E. Peterson and Ver Hoef 2014). Note that
STARS
is designed to work with existing streams data in
vector format. The openSTARS
R package (Kattwinkel and Szöcs 2022) provides an open
source alternative to the STARS toolset, which depends on GRASS GIS. In
contrast to STARS
, openSTARS
is designed to
derive streams in raster format from a digital elevation model (DEM).
Both tools output a non-proprietary .ssn
folder (i.e.,
directory) which contains all of the spatial, topological and attribute
information needed to fit a spatial stream network model using
SSN2
. This includes:
SSN
Objects in SSN2
The data contained in the .ssn
object are read into R
and stored as an SSN
object, which has a special list
structure with four elements:
edges
: An sf
object that contains the
edges with LINESTRING
geometry.obs
: An sf
object that contains the
observed data with POINT
geometry.preds
A list of sf
objects with
POINT
geometry, each containing a set of locations where
predictions will be made.path
: A character string that represents the path to
the relevant .ssn
directory stored on your computer.A netgeom
(short for “network geometry”) column is also
added to each of the sf
objects stored within an
SSN
object. The netgeom
column contains a
character string describing the position of each line
(edges
) and point (obs
and preds
)
feature in relation to one another. The format of the
netgeom
column differs depending on whether it is
describing a feature with LINESTRING
or POINT
geometry. For edges, the format of netgeom
is
"ENETWORK (netID rid upDist)"
,
and for sites
"SNETWORK (netID rid upDist ratio pid locID)"
,
The data used to define the netgeom
column are
found in the edges, observed sites, and prediction
sites shapefiles, which are created using the
STARS
or openSTARS
software. For
edges, this includes a unique network identifier (netID
)
and reach (i.e., edge) identifier (rid
), as well as the
distance between the most downstream location on the stream network
(i.e., stream outlet) to the upstream node of each edge segment, when
movement is restricted to the stream network (upDist
). The
netgeom
column for sites also contains the
netID
and rid
for the edge on which the site
resides. The point identifier (pid
) is unique to each
measurement, while the location identifier (locID
) is
unique to each spatial location. Note that a locID
may have
multiple pid
s associated with it if there are repeated
measurements in the observed data or multiple predictions are made at
the same location. The upDist
value for each site
represents the stream distance between the stream outlet and the site
location. Finally, the ratio
is used to describe the
relative position of a site on its associated edge segment. It is the
proportional distance from the most downstream node of the edge segment
to the site location. For example, ratio
at a site is close
to zero when the site is close to the most downstream node of the edge
segment, and ratio
at a site is close to one when the site
is far from the most downstream node of the edge segment. Together these
key pieces of data are used to describe which network and edge each site
resides on, as well as where exactly the site is on each line segment.
It may at first seem redundant to combine and store multiple numeric
columns as text in the netgeom
column. However, these data
dictate how the observed and prediction sites relate to one another in
topological space, which impacts parameter estimates and predicted
values generated from fitted models. Storing these data as text in the
netgeom
column significantly reduces the chance that these
values are accidentally (and unknowingly) altered by a user.
In this vignette, we will use the Middle Fork 2004 stream temperature
data in SSN2
. The raw input data are stored in the
lsndata/MiddleFork04.ssn
directory installed alongside
SSN2
. We may store the file path to this example data:
path <- system.file("lsndata/MiddleFork04.ssn", package = "SSN2")
Several functions in SSN2
for reading and writing data
(which we use shortly) directly manipulate the .ssn
folder.
If it is not desirable to directly manipulate the
MiddleFork04.ssn
data installed alongside
SSN2
, MiddleFork04.ssn
may be copied it into a
temporary directory and the relevant path to this alternative location
can be stored:
copy_lsn_to_temp()
path <- paste0(tempdir(), "/MiddleFork04.ssn")
After specifying path
(using system.file()
or copy_lsn_to_temp()
), we import the stream reaches,
observed sites, and prediction sites:
mf04p <- ssn_import(
path = path,
predpts = c("pred1km", "CapeHorn", "Knapp"),
overwrite = TRUE
)
We summarise the mf04p
data by running
summary(mf04p)
#> Object of class SSN
#>
#> Object includes observations on 26 variables across 45 sites within the bounding box
#> xmin ymin xmax ymax
#> -1531385 2521181 -1498448 2540274
#>
#> Object also includes 3 sets of prediction points with a total of 2102 locations
#>
#> Variable names are (found using names(object)):
#> $obs
#> [1] "STREAMNAME" "COMID" "CDRAINAG" "AREAWTMAP" "SLOPE"
#> [6] "ELEV_DEM" "Source" "Summer_mn" "MaxOver20" "C16"
#> [11] "C20" "C24" "FlowCMS" "AirMEANc" "AirMWMTc"
#> [16] "NEAR_X" "NEAR_Y" "rid" "ratio" "afvArea"
#> [21] "upDist" "locID" "netID" "pid" "geometry"
#> [26] "netgeom"
#>
#> $pred1km
#> [1] "COMID" "GNIS_NAME" "CDRAINAG" "AREAWTMAP" "SLOPE" "ELEV_DEM"
#> [7] "FlowCMS" "AirMEANc" "AirMWMTc" "NEAR_X" "NEAR_Y" "rid"
#> [13] "ratio" "afvArea" "upDist" "locID" "netID" "pid"
#> [19] "geometry" "netgeom"
#>
#> $CapeHorn
#> [1] "COMID" "GNIS_NAME" "CDRAINAG" "AREAWTMAP" "SLOPE" "ELEV_DEM"
#> [7] "FlowCMS" "AirMEANc" "AirMWMTc" "NEAR_X" "NEAR_Y" "rid"
#> [13] "ratio" "afvArea" "upDist" "locID" "netID" "pid"
#> [19] "geometry" "netgeom"
#>
#> $Knapp
#> [1] "COMID" "GNIS_NAME" "CDRAINAG" "AREAWTMAP" "SLOPE" "ELEV_DEM"
#> [7] "FlowCMS" "AirMEANc" "AirMWMTc" "NEAR_X" "NEAR_Y" "rid"
#> [13] "ratio" "afvArea" "upDist" "locID" "netID" "pid"
#> [19] "geometry" "netgeom"
We see that mf04p
contains 45 observation sites and a
total of 2102 prediction sites stored in three different prediction
datasets. We will explore several of these variables throughout the rest
of the vignette:
AREAWTMAP
: Precipitation (area-weighted in mm)ELEV_DEM
: Elevation (based on a 30m DEM)Summer_mn
: Summer mean stream temperature
(Celsius)C16
: Number of times daily stream temperature exceeded
16 Celsius (in the summer)A more detailed description of all the variables in
mf04p
is available in the documentation and can be seen by
running ?MiddleFork04.ssn
or
help(MiddleFork04.ssn, package = "SSN2")
. SSN2
currently does not have a generic plotting function for SSN
objects. Instead, we rely on the plotting functionality of
ggplot2
(Wickham 2016) and
sf
(Pebesma 2018). This
vignette focuses on the use of ggplot2
, which we load by
running
library(ggplot2)
ggplot2 is only installed alongside SSN2
when
dependencies = TRUE
in install.packages()
, so
check that it is installed before reproducing any visualizations in this
vignette.
Prediction sites can be easily accessed in the SSN
object using the list element number or names attribute. For example, we
print the names of the prediction datasets to the console
names(mf04p$preds)
#> [1] "pred1km" "CapeHorn" "Knapp"
We view the Middle Fork stream network, overlay the observed sites
where data were collected using brown circles, and overlay the
pred1km
prediction locations using smaller, blue triangles
by running
ggplot() +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$edges) +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$preds$pred1km, pch = 17, color = "blue") +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$obs, color = "brown", size = 2) +
theme_bw()
Later we will fit models to stream network data. Before doing this, however, we supplement the .ssn object with hydrologic distance matrices that preserve directionality, which are required for statistical modeling:
ssn_create_distmat(
ssn.object = mf04p,
predpts = c("pred1km", "CapeHorn", "Knapp"),
among_predpts = TRUE,
overwrite = TRUE
)
Stream distance matrices are saved as local files the
.ssn
directory associated with the SSN
object,
mf04p$path
, in a folder called distance
created by ssn_create_distmat()
. The matrices are stored as
.Rdata
files in separate sub-folders for observed sites
(obs
) and each set of prediction sites. If the file path to
the .ssn
directory is incorrect, the
ssn_update_path()
can be used to update it before the
distance matrices are generated.
We begin by fitting linear models to stream network data using the
ssn_lm()
function. Later we fit generalized linear models
to stream network data using the ssn_glm()
function.
Typically, linear models are used when the response variable (i.e.,
dependent variable) is continuous and not highly skewed, and generalized
linear models are often used when the response variable is binary, a
count, or highly skewed.
Linear spatial stream network models for a quantitative response vector \(\mathbf{y}\) have spatially dependent random errors and are often parameterized as
\[\begin{equation*} \mathbf{y} = \mathbf{X} \boldsymbol{\beta} + \boldsymbol{\tau}_{tu} + \boldsymbol{\tau}_{td} + \boldsymbol{\tau}_{eu} + \boldsymbol{\epsilon}, \end{equation*}\]where \(\mathbf{X}\) is a matrix of explanatory variables (usually including a column of 1’s for an intercept), \(\boldsymbol{\beta}\) is a vector of fixed effects that describe the average impact of \(\mathbf{X}\) on \(\mathbf{y}\), \(\boldsymbol{\tau}_{tu}\) is a vector of spatially dependent (correlated) tail-up random errors, \(\boldsymbol{\tau}_{td}\) is a vector of spatially dependent (correlated) tail-down random errors, \(\boldsymbol{\tau}_{eu}\) is a vector of spatially dependent (correlated) Euclidean random errors, and \(\boldsymbol{\epsilon}\) is a vector of spatially independent (uncorrelated) random errors. The spatial dependence of each \(\boldsymbol{\tau}\) term is explicitly specified using a spatial covariance function that incorporates the variance of the respective \(\boldsymbol{\tau}\) term, often called a partial sill, and a range parameter that controls the behavior of the respective spatial covariance. The variance of \(\boldsymbol{\epsilon}\) is often called the nugget (or nugget effect).
Suppose we are interested in studying summer mean temperature
(Summer_mn
) on the stream network. We can visualize the
distribution of summer mean temperature (overlain onto the stream
network) by running
ggplot() +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$edges) +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$obs, aes(color = Summer_mn), size = 2) +
scale_color_viridis_c(limits = c(-1.5, 17), option = "H") +
theme_bw()
The ssn_lm()
function is used to fit linear spatial
stream network models and bears many similarities to
base-R’s lm()
function for non-spatial
linear models. Below we provide a few commonly used arguments to
ssn_lm()
:
formula
: a formula that describes the relationship
between the response variable and explanatory variables.
formula
uses the same syntax as the
formula
argument in lm()
.ssn.object
: the .ssn
object.tailup_type
: the tail-up covariance, can be
"linear"
, "spherical"
,
"exponential"
, "mariah"
, "epa"
,
or "none"
(the default)taildown_type
: the tail-down covariance, can be
"linear"
, "spherical"
,
"exponential"
, "mariah"
, "epa"
,
or "none"
(the default)euclid_type
: the Euclidean covariance, can be
"spherical"
, "exponential"
,
"gaussian"
, "cosine"
, "cubic"
,
"pentaspherical"
, "wave"
,
"jbessel"
, "gravity"
, "rquad"
,
"magnetic"
, or "none"
(the default)nugget_type
: "nugget"
(the default) or
"none"
.It is important to note that the default for
tailup_type
, taildown_type
, and
euclid_type
is "none"
, which means that they
must be specified if their relevant covariances are desired. The default
for nugget_type
is "nugget"
, which specifies a
nugget effect, useful because many ecological processes have localized
variability that is important to capture. Full parameterizations of each
covariance function are given in ssn_lm()
’s documentation,
which can be viewed by running help("ssn_lm", "SSN2")
.
There are different approaches to choosing between covariance functions.
One approach is to fit several models and compare their fits using
statistics like AIC or cross-validation error. Another approach is to
visualize the Torgegram()
and choose functions
appropriately.
The Torgegram()
in SSN2 is essentially a semivariogram
that describes variability in streams data based on flow-connected,
flow-unconnected, and Euclidean spatial relationships. Like other
semivariograms, the Torgegram describes how the semivariance
(i.e. halved average squared difference) between observations changes
with hydrologic or Euclidean distances. If there is strong dependence
between sites based on flow-connected or flow-unconnected relationships,
the semivariance will increase with respective distance. If, however,
there is not strong dependence, the semivariance will be relatively
flat. The Torgegram()
output can be combined with
plot()
to better understand which covariance components may
be most suitable in the model. For example, when the semivariance for
flow-connected sites increases with hydrologic distance but the
semivariance for flow-unconnected sites is flat, then a tail-up
component may be sufficient for the model (i.e., a tail-down component
is not needed). However, the model would likely benefit from a tail-down
component or a combination of tail-up and tail-down models if the
semivariance for both flow-connected and flow-unconnected sites
increases with distance. Alternatively, if the semivariance is flat,
then the model is unlikely to benefit from tail-up or tail-down
components. SSN2 also allows users to visualize changes in semivariance
based on Euclidean distance, which may provide additional insights about
whether a Euclidean component or a mixture of tail-up, tail-down and/or
Euclidean models will improve the model. Please see Zimmerman and Ver Hoef (2017) for a more
in-depth review of Toregegrams, along with strategies for interpreting
and using them to inform model fitting. For a more formal comparison
between models, use statistics like AIC
or cross-validation
error, which we discuss later.
Suppose that we want to model summer mean stream temperature as a function of elevation and precipitation. We can aid our understanding of what covariance components may be informative by visualizing a Torgegram:
tg <- Torgegram(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
type = c("flowcon", "flowuncon", "euclid")
)
The first argument to Torgegram()
is
formula
. Residuals from a non-spatial linear model
specified by formula
are used by the Toregram to visualize
remaining spatial dependence. The type
argument specifies
the Torgegram types and has a default value of
c("flowcon", "flowuncon")
for both flow-connected and
flow-unconnected semivariances. Here we also desire to visualize
Euclidean semivariance. We visualize all three components by running
plot(tg)
The flow-connected semivariances seem to generally increase with distance, which suggests that the model will benefit from at least a tail-up component. The takeaway for flow-unconnected and Euclidean semivariances is less clear – they seem to generally increase with distance but there are some low distances with high semivariances. This suggests that tail-down and Euclidean components may not be too impactful on the model fit. We investigate this next while we fit a model with all three components: tail-up, tail-down, and Euclidean.
We fit a spatial stream network model regressing summer mean stream
temperature on elevation and watershed-averaged precipitation using an
exponential tail-up covariance function with additive weights created
using watershed area (afvArea
), a spherical tail-down
covariance function, a Gaussian Euclidean covariance function, and a
nugget effect by running
ssn_mod <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea"
)
The estimation method is specified via the estmethod
argument, which has a default value of "reml"
for
restricted maximum likelihood (REML). The other estimation method is
"ml"
for maximum likelihood (ML). REML is chosen as the
default because it tends to yield more accurate covariance parameter
estimates than ML, especially for small sample sizes. One nuance of
REML, however, is that comparisons of likelihood-based statistics like
AIC are only valid when the models have the same fixed effects structure
(i.e., the same formula
). To compare fixed effects and
covariance structures simultaneously, use ML or a model comparison tool
that is not likelihood-based, such as cross validation via
loocv()
, which we discuss later.
We summarize the fitted model by running
summary(ssn_mod)
#>
#> Call:
#> ssn_lm(formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP, ssn.object = mf04p,
#> tailup_type = "exponential", taildown_type = "spherical",
#> euclid_type = "gaussian", additive = "afvArea")
#>
#> Residuals:
#> Min 1Q Median 3Q Max
#> -3.6393 -2.0646 -0.5952 0.2143 0.7497
#>
#> Coefficients (fixed):
#> Estimate Std. Error z value Pr(>|z|)
#> (Intercept) 76.195041 7.871574 9.680 < 2e-16 ***
#> ELEV_DEM -0.026905 0.003646 -7.379 1.6e-13 ***
#> AREAWTMAP -0.009099 0.004461 -2.040 0.0414 *
#> ---
#> Signif. codes: 0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
#>
#> Pseudo R-squared: 0.6124
#>
#> Coefficients (covariance):
#> Effect Parameter Estimate
#> tailup exponential de (parsill) 3.800e+00
#> tailup exponential range 4.194e+06
#> taildown spherical de (parsill) 4.480e-01
#> taildown spherical range 1.647e+05
#> euclid gaussian de (parsill) 1.509e-02
#> euclid gaussian range 4.496e+03
#> nugget nugget 2.087e-02
Similar to summaries of lm()
objects, summaries of
ssn_lm()
objects include the original function call,
residuals, and a coefficients table of fixed effects. The
(Intercept)
represents the average summer mean stream
temperature at sea level (an elevation of zero) and no precipitation,
ELEV_DEM
represents the decrease in average summer mean
stream temperature with a one unit (meter) increase in elevation, and
AREAWTMAP
represents the decrease in average summer mean
stream temperature with a one unit (mm) increase in precipitation. There
is strong evidence that average summer mean stream temperature decreases
with elevation (\(p\)-value \(< 0.001\)), while there is moderate
evidence that average summer mean stream temperature decreases with
precipitation (\(p\)-value \(\approx\) 0.05). A pseudo r-squared is also
returned, which quantifies the proportion of variability explained by
the fixed effects. The coefficients table of covariance parameters
describes the model’s dependence. The larger the de
parameter, the more variability in the process is attributed to the
relevant effect. Here, most of the model’s random variability comes from
the tail-up portion of the model. The larger the range
parameter, the more correlated nearby observations are with respect to
the relevant effect.
We directly compare the sources of variability in the model using the
varcomp
function:
varcomp(ssn_mod)
#> # A tibble: 5 × 2
#> varcomp proportion
#> <chr> <dbl>
#> 1 Covariates (PR-sq) 0.612
#> 2 tailup_de 0.344
#> 3 taildown_de 0.0405
#> 4 euclid_de 0.00137
#> 5 nugget 0.00189
Most of the variability in summer mean stream temperature is
explained by the fixed effects of elevation and precipitation
(Covariates (PR-sq)
) as well as the tail-up component. Note
that the values in the proportion
column sum to one.
In the remainder of this subsection, we describe the broom (Robinson, Hayes, and Couch 2021) functions
tidy()
, glance()
and augment()
.
tidy()
tidies coefficient output in a convenient
tibble
, glance()
glances at model-fit
statistics, and augment()
augments the data with fitted
model diagnostics.
We tidy the fixed effects (and add confidence intervals) by running
tidy(ssn_mod, conf.int = TRUE)
#> # A tibble: 3 × 7
#> term estimate std.error statistic p.value conf.low conf.high
#> <chr> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 (Intercept) 76.2 7.87 9.68 0 60.8 91.6
#> 2 AREAWTMAP -0.00910 0.00446 -2.04 4.14e- 2 -0.0178 -0.000356
#> 3 ELEV_DEM -0.0269 0.00365 -7.38 1.60e-13 -0.0341 -0.0198
We glance at the model-fit statistics by running
glance(ssn_mod)
#> # A tibble: 1 × 9
#> n p npar value AIC AICc logLik deviance pseudo.r.squared
#> <int> <dbl> <int> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 45 3 7 59.3 73.3 76.3 -29.6 41.9 0.612
The columns of this tibble
represent:
n
: The sample size.p
: The number of fixed effects (linearly independent
columns in \(\mathbf{X}\)).npar
: The number of estimated covariance
parameters.value
: The value of the minimized objective function
used when fitting the model.AIC
: The Akaike Information Criterion (AIC).AICc
: The AIC with a small sample size correction.logLik
: The log-likelihood.deviance
: The deviance.pseudo.r.squared
: The pseudo r-squared.The glances()
function can be used to glance at multiple
models at once. Suppose we wanted to compare the current model to a new
model that omits the tail-up and Euclidean components. We do this using
glances()
by running
ssn_mod2 <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
taildown_type = "spherical"
)
glances(ssn_mod, ssn_mod2)
#> # A tibble: 2 × 10
#> model n p npar value AIC AICc logLik deviance pseudo.r.squared
#> <chr> <int> <dbl> <int> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 ssn_mod 45 3 7 59.3 73.3 76.3 -29.6 41.9 0.612
#> 2 ssn_mod2 45 3 3 130. 136. 137. -65.1 41.9 0.180
Often AIC and AICc are used for model selection, as they balance
model fit and model simplicity. The lower AIC and AICc for the original
model (ssn_mod
) indicates it is a better fit to the data
(than ssn_mod2
). Outside of glance()
and
glances()
, the functions AIC()
,
AICc()
, logLik()
, deviance()
, and
pseudoR2()
are available to compute the relevant
statistics. Note that additive
is only required when the
tail-up covariance is specified. We are able to compare AIC
and AICc
for these models fit using REML because we are
only changing the covariance structure, not the fixed effects structure.
To compare AIC
and AICc
for models with
varying fixed effect and covariance structures, use ML. For example, we
compare a model with and without elevation to assess its importance:
ml_mod <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea",
estmethod = "ml"
)
ml_mod2 <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea",
estmethod = "ml"
)
glances(ml_mod, ml_mod2)
#> # A tibble: 2 × 10
#> model n p npar value AIC AICc logLik deviance pseudo.r.squared
#> <chr> <int> <dbl> <int> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 ml_mod 45 3 7 39.3 59.3 65.8 -19.6 44.6 0.609
#> 2 ml_mod2 45 2 7 56.1 74.1 79.3 -28.1 42.0 0.0344
Elevation seems important to model fit, as evidenced by the lower
AIC. Erin E. Peterson and Ver Hoef (2010)
describe a two-step model procedure for model selection based on AIC
when comparing models with varying covariance and fixed structures.
First, all covariance components are included (tail-up, tail-down,
Euclidean, nugget) and fixed effects are compared using ML. Then using
the model with the lowest AIC, refit using REML and compare models with
varying combinations of covariance components. Finally, proceed with the
model having the lowest AIC. Another approach is to compare a suite of
models (having varying fixed effect and covariance components) using ML
and then refit the best model using REML. Henceforth, we proceed with
the REML models, ssn_mod
and ssn_mod2
.
Another way to compare model fits is leave-one-out cross validation
available via the loocv()
function. loocv()
returns many model-fit statistics. One of these in the
root-mean-squared-prediction error, which captures the typical absolute
error associated with a prediction. We can compare the
mean-squared-prediction error between ssn_mod
,
ssn_mod2
:
loocv_mod <- loocv(ssn_mod)
loocv_mod$RMSPE
#> [1] 0.4365597
loocv_mod2 <- loocv(ssn_mod2)
loocv_mod2$RMSPE
#> [1] 0.8150283
ssn_mod
is the better model with respect to
AIC
, AICc
, and RMSPE
and shortly
we use it to return model diagnostics and make predictions.
loocv()
predictions using ssn_mod
are
typically within 0.437. of the true summer mean stream temperature. Note
that model comparison using loocv()
does not depend on the
estimation method (ML vs REML).
We augment the data with model diagnostics by running
aug_ssn_mod <- augment(ssn_mod)
aug_ssn_mod
#> Simple feature collection with 45 features and 9 fields
#> Geometry type: POINT
#> Dimension: XY
#> Bounding box: xmin: -1530805 ymin: 2527111 xmax: -1503079 ymax: 2537823
#> Projected CRS: USA_Contiguous_Albers_Equal_Area_Conic_USGS_version
#> # A tibble: 45 × 10
#> Summer_mn ELEV_DEM AREAWTMAP .fitted .resid .hat .cooksd .std.resid pid
#> * <dbl> <int> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <chr>
#> 1 11.4 1977 940. 14.4 -3.07 0.0915 0.0962 -1.78 1
#> 2 10.7 1984 1087. 12.9 -2.20 0.114 0.00471 -0.352 2
#> 3 10.4 1993 1087. 12.7 -2.25 0.0372 0.00724 -0.764 3
#> 4 10.1 2007 1087. 12.3 -2.18 0.0251 0.00153 -0.427 4
#> 5 10.1 2009 1087. 12.3 -2.13 0.0374 0.000583 -0.216 5
#> 6 9.81 2012 1109. 12.0 -2.16 0.0602 0.0150 -0.863 6
#> 7 9.76 2023 1116. 11.6 -1.85 0.0736 0.00739 0.549 7
#> 8 9.77 2023 1116. 11.6 -1.84 0.0648 0.00687 0.564 8
#> 9 9.53 2026 1130. 11.4 -1.87 0.112 0.00152 0.202 9
#> 10 12.6 1988 864. 14.9 -2.28 0.0498 0.00964 -0.762 10
#> # ℹ 35 more rows
#> # ℹ 1 more variable: geometry <POINT [m]>
The columns of this tibble represent:
Summer_mn
: Summer mean stream temperature.ELEV_DEM
: Elevation.Precipitation
: Precipitation..fitted
: The fitted values (the estimated mean given
the explanatory variable values)..resid
: The residuals (the response minus the fitted
values)..hat
: The leverage (hat) values..cooksd
: The Cook’s distance..std.residuals
: Standardized residuals.pid
: The pid
value.geometry
: The spatial information in the
sf
object.By default, augment()
only returns the variables in the
data used by the model. All variables from the original data are
returned by setting drop = FALSE
. We can write the
augmented data to a shapefile by loading sf
(which comes
installed alongside SSN2
) and running
library(sf)
st_write(aug_ssn_mod, paste0(tempdir(), "/aug_ssn_mod.shp"))
Many of the model diagnostics returned by augment()
can
be visualized by running using plot()
. For example, we plot
the fitted values against the standardized residuals by running
plot(ssn_mod, which = 1)
There are 6 total diagnostic plots (specified via the
which
argument) that return the same information returned
from running plot()
on an lm()
object.
Commonly a goal of a data analysis is to make predictions at
unobserved locations. In spatial contexts, prediction is often called
Kriging. Next we make summer mean stream temperature predictions at each
location in the pred1km
data in mf04p
by
running
predict(ssn_mod, newdata = "pred1km")
While augment()
was previously used to augment the
original data with model diagnostics, it can also be used to augment the
newdata
with predictions:
aug_preds <- augment(ssn_mod, newdata = "pred1km")
aug_preds[, ".fitted"]
#> Simple feature collection with 175 features and 1 field
#> Geometry type: POINT
#> Dimension: XY
#> Bounding box: xmin: -1530631 ymin: 2521707 xmax: -1500020 ymax: 2540253
#> Projected CRS: USA_Contiguous_Albers_Equal_Area_Conic_USGS_version
#> # A tibble: 175 × 2
#> .fitted geometry
#> <dbl> <POINT [m]>
#> 1 14.6 (-1520657 2536657)
#> 2 15.0 (-1519866 2536812)
#> 3 14.8 (-1521823 2536911)
#> 4 15.0 (-1523183 2537256)
#> 5 15.2 (-1523860 2537452)
#> 6 15.1 (-1525443 2537698)
#> 7 15.1 (-1526397 2537254)
#> 8 15.0 (-1527436 2536803)
#> 9 14.9 (-1529043 2536449)
#> 10 14.9 (-1529689 2537313)
#> # ℹ 165 more rows
Here .fitted
represents the predictions. Confidence
intervals for the mean response or prediction intervals for the
predicted response can be obtained by specifying the
interval
argument in predict()
and
augment()
. By default, predict()
and
augment()
compute 95% intervals, though this can be changed
using the level
argument. The arguments for
predict()
and augment()
on
ssn_lm()
objects is slightly different than the same
arguments for an lm()
object – to learn more run
help("predict.SSN2", "SSN2")
or
help("augment.SSN2", "SSN2")
.
We visualize these predictions (overlain onto the stream network) by running
ggplot() +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$edges) +
geom_sf(data = aug_preds, aes(color = .fitted), size = 2) +
scale_color_viridis_c(limits = c(-1.5, 17), option = "H") +
theme_bw()
Previously we wrote out model diagnostics to a shapefile. Now we
write out predictions to a geopackage (recall sf
must be
loaded) by running
st_write(aug_preds, paste0(tempdir(), "/aug_preds.gpkg"))
When performing prediction in SSN2
, the name of
newdata
must be the name of a prediction data set contained
in ssn.object$preds
. If newdata
is omitted or
has the value "all"
, prediction is performed for all
prediction data sets in ssn.object
. For example,
predict(ssn_mod)
predict(ssn_mod, newdata = "all")
makes predictions for pred1km
, Knapp
, and
CapeHorn
(the names of mf04p$preds
). Lastly,
if there are observations (in the obs
object) whose
response is missing (NA
), these observations are removed
from model fitting and moved to a prediction data set named
.missing
. Then predictions can be obtained at these
locations.
We can also predict the average value in a region using block Prediction (instead of making point predictions). We predict the average summer mean temperature throughout the Middle Fork stream network by running
predict(ssn_mod, newdata = "pred1km", block = TRUE, interval = "prediction")
#> fit lwr upr
#> 1 10.73479 9.987173 11.48241
There are several additional modeling tools available in
SSN2
that we discuss next: Fixing parameter values;
non-spatial random effects; and partition factors.
Perhaps we want to assume a particular covariance parameter is known.
This may be reasonable if information is known about the process or the
desire is to perform model selection for nested models or create profile
likelihood confidence intervals. Fixing covariance parameters in
SSN2
is accomplished via the tailup_initial
,
taildown_initial
, euclid_initial
, and
nugget_initial
arguments to ssn_lm()
. These
arguments are passed an appropriate initial value object created using
the tailup_initial()
, taildown_initial()
,
euclid_initial()
, or nugget_initial()
function, respectively. For example, suppose we want to fix the
Euclidean dependent error variance parameter at 1, forcing this
component to have a moderate effect on the covariance. First, we specify
the appropriate object by running
euclid_init <- euclid_initial("gaussian", de = 1, known = "de")
euclid_init
#> $initial
#> de
#> 1
#>
#> $is_known
#> de
#> TRUE
#>
#> attr(,"class")
#> [1] "euclid_gaussian"
The euclid_init
output shows that the range
parameter has an initial value of 1 that is assumed known. The
range
parameter will still be estimated. Next the model is
fit:
ssn_init <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_initial = euclid_init,
additive = "afvArea"
)
ssn_init
#>
#> Call:
#> ssn_lm(formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP, ssn.object = mf04p,
#> tailup_type = "exponential", taildown_type = "spherical",
#> euclid_initial = euclid_init, additive = "afvArea")
#>
#>
#> Coefficients (fixed):
#> (Intercept) ELEV_DEM AREAWTMAP
#> 77.181436 -0.027921 -0.008011
#>
#> Coefficients (covariance):
#> Effect Parameter Estimate
#> tailup exponential de (parsill) 3.882e+00
#> tailup exponential range 1.668e+06
#> taildown spherical de (parsill) 3.233e-02
#> taildown spherical range 7.041e+03
#> euclid gaussian de (parsill) 1.000e+00
#> euclid gaussian range 8.231e+04
#> nugget nugget 1.948e-02
Notice the Euclidean variance is 1.
Random effects can be added to an SSN model to incorporate additional
sources of variability separate from those on the stream network. Common
additional sources of variability modeled include repeated observations
at sites or network-specific effects. The random effects are modeled
using similar syntax as for random effects in the nlme
(Pinheiro and Bates 2006) and
lme4
(Bates et al. 2015)
R packages, being specified via a formula passed to the
random
argument. We model random intercepts for each of the
two networks in the data by running
ssn_rand <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea",
random = ~ as.factor(netID)
)
ssn_rand
#>
#> Call:
#> ssn_lm(formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP, ssn.object = mf04p,
#> tailup_type = "exponential", taildown_type = "spherical",
#> euclid_type = "gaussian", additive = "afvArea", random = ~as.factor(netID))
#>
#>
#> Coefficients (fixed):
#> (Intercept) ELEV_DEM AREAWTMAP
#> 76.219407 -0.026705 -0.009449
#>
#> Coefficients (covariance):
#> Effect Parameter Estimate
#> tailup exponential de (parsill) 3.688e+00
#> tailup exponential range 6.971e+05
#> taildown spherical de (parsill) 1.191e-02
#> taildown spherical range 1.089e+04
#> euclid gaussian de (parsill) 3.377e-02
#> euclid gaussian range 1.368e+04
#> nugget nugget 2.046e-02
#> random 1 | as.factor(netID) 3.809e-01
random = ~ as.factor(netID)
is short-hand for
random = ~ (1 | as.factor(netID))
, which is the more
familiar lme4
or nlme
syntax.
A partition factor is a variable that allows observations to be
uncorrelated when they from different levels of the partition factors.
For example, one may want to partition the model into two networks
despite their adjacency because of a significant land mass or similar
obstruction. Partition factors are modeled using a formula that contains
a single variable passed to the partition_factor
argument.
We model the two networks as uncorrelated by running
ssn_part <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea",
partition_factor = ~ as.factor(netID)
)
ssn_part
#>
#> Call:
#> ssn_lm(formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP, ssn.object = mf04p,
#> tailup_type = "exponential", taildown_type = "spherical",
#> euclid_type = "gaussian", additive = "afvArea", partition_factor = ~as.factor(netID))
#>
#>
#> Coefficients (fixed):
#> (Intercept) ELEV_DEM AREAWTMAP
#> 76.32118 -0.02805 -0.00697
#>
#> Coefficients (covariance):
#> Effect Parameter Estimate
#> tailup exponential de (parsill) 3.300e+00
#> tailup exponential range 6.695e+07
#> taildown spherical de (parsill) 3.618e-07
#> taildown spherical range 2.233e+06
#> euclid gaussian de (parsill) 1.002e-01
#> euclid gaussian range 5.036e+03
#> nugget nugget 2.525e-02
In short, the partition factor enables model fitting that builds independence in places not typical on a stream network but deemed relevant by the researcher.
Generalized linear spatial stream network models for a response vector \(\mathbf{y}\) have spatially dependent random errors and are often parameterized as
\[\begin{equation*} g(\boldsymbol{\mu}) = \mathbf{X} \boldsymbol{\beta} + \boldsymbol{\tau}_{tu} + \boldsymbol{\tau}_{td} + \boldsymbol{\tau}_{eu} + \boldsymbol{\epsilon}, \end{equation*}\]where \(\boldsymbol{\mu}\) is the
mean of \(\mathbf{y}\), \(g(\cdot)\) is a link function that “links”
\(\mathbf{\mu}\) to a linear function
of the predictor variables and random errors, and all other terms are
the same as those defined for linear spatial stream network models.
Rather than assuming \(y\) is normally
(Gaussian) distributed as is often the case with linear spatial stream
network models, generalized linear spatial stream network models assume
\(\mathbf{y}\) follows one of many
distributions and has a corresponding link function. Below we summarize
the families of generalized linear spatial stream network models
supported by SSN2
their link functions, and the type of
data typically associated with these families. For more on generalized
linear models more generally, see McCullagh and
Nelder (1989), Myers et al. (2012),
and Faraway (2016).
The ssn_glm()
function is used to fit generalized linear
spatial stream network models and bears many similarities to
base-R’s glm()
function for non-spatial
generalized linear models. The family (i.e., resposne distribution) is
controlled by the family
argument. When family
is Gaussian()
, the model fit is equivalent to one fit using
ssn_lm()
. Note that parameters are estimated on the
relevant link scale and should be interpreted accordingly.
Family | Link Function | Link Name | Data Type | SSN2 Function |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gaussian | \(g(\mathbf{\mu}) = \mathbf{\mu}\) | Identity | Continuous | ssn_lm() ; ssn_glm() |
Binomial | \(g(\mathbf{\mu}) = \log(\mathbf{\mu} / (1 - \mathbf{\mu}))\) | Logit | Binary; Binary Count | ssn_glm() |
Beta | \(g(\mathbf{\mu}) = \log(\mathbf{\mu} / (1 - \mathbf{\mu}))\) | Logit | Proportion | ssn_glm() |
Poisson | \(g(\mathbf{\mu}) = \log(\mathbf{\mu})\) | Log | Count | ssn_glm() |
Negative Binomial | \(g(\mathbf{\mu}) = \log(\mathbf{\mu})\) | Log | Count | ssn_glm() |
Gamma | \(g(\mathbf{\mu}) = \log(\mathbf{\mu})\) | Log | Skewed (positive continuous) | ssn_glm() |
Inverse Gaussian | \(g(\mathbf{\mu}) = \log(\mathbf{\mu})\) | Log | Skewed (positive continuous) | ssn_glm() |
The C16
variable in mf04p
represents the
number of times daily summer stream temperature exceeded 16 Celsius:
ggplot() +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$edges) +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$obs, aes(color = C16), size = 2) +
scale_color_viridis_c(option = "H") +
theme_bw()
Suppose we want to model C16
as a function of elevation
and precipitation. Often count data are modeled using Poisson
regression. Using tail-up, tail-down, and nugget components, we fit this
Poisson model by running
ssn_pois <- ssn_glm(
formula = C16 ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
family = "poisson",
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "epa",
taildown_type = "mariah",
additive = "afvArea"
)
The previous SSN2
functions used to explore linear
spatial stream network models are also available for generalized linear
spatial stream network models. For example, we can summarize the model
using summary()
:
summary(ssn_pois)
#>
#> Call:
#> ssn_glm(formula = C16 ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP, ssn.object = mf04p,
#> family = "poisson", tailup_type = "epa", taildown_type = "mariah",
#> additive = "afvArea")
#>
#> Deviance Residuals:
#> Min 1Q Median 3Q Max
#> -2.12277 -0.43689 -0.07905 0.26269 1.28473
#>
#> Coefficients (fixed):
#> Estimate Std. Error z value Pr(>|z|)
#> (Intercept) 45.549245 10.025635 4.543 5.54e-06 ***
#> ELEV_DEM -0.017567 0.004544 -3.866 0.000111 ***
#> AREAWTMAP -0.007586 0.003413 -2.222 0.026253 *
#> ---
#> Signif. codes: 0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
#>
#> Pseudo R-squared: 0.2443
#>
#> Coefficients (covariance):
#> Effect Parameter Estimate
#> tailup epa de (parsill) 9.484e-01
#> tailup epa range 4.290e+04
#> taildown mariah de (parsill) 1.774e-02
#> taildown mariah range 9.782e+06
#> nugget nugget 1.008e-04
#> dispersion dispersion 1.000e+00
Similar to summaries of glm()
objects, summaries of
ssn_glm()
objects include the original function call,
deviance residuals, and a coefficients table of fixed effects. The
(Intercept)
represents the log average C16
at
sea level (an elevation of zero) and zero precipitation,
ELEV_DEM
represents the decrease in log average summer mean
temperature with a one unit (meter) increase in elevation, and
AREAWTMAP
represents the decrease in log average summer
mean temperature with a one unit (mm) increase in precipitation. There
is strong evidence that log average summer mean temperature decreases
with elevation (\(p\)-value \(< 0.001\)), while there is moderate
evidence that log average summer mean temperature decreases with
precipitation (\(p\)-value \(\approx\) 0.03). Recall that the covariance
parameter estimates are on the link (here, log) scale.
The Poisson model assumes that each observations mean and variance are equal. Often with ecological or environmental data, the variance is larger than the mean – this is called overdispersion. The negative binomial model accommodates overdispersion for count data. We fit a negative binomial model by running
ssn_nb <- ssn_glm(
formula = C16 ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
family = "nbinomial",
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "epa",
taildown_type = "mariah",
additive = "afvArea"
)
We can compare the fit of these models using leave-one-out cross validation by running
loocv_pois <- loocv(ssn_pois)
loocv_pois$RMSPE
#> [1] 5.249275
loocv_nb <- loocv(ssn_nb)
loocv_nb$RMSPE
#> [1] 5.255264
The Poisson has a lower RMSPE
, which suggests no
evidence of overdispersion.
All advanced modeling features discussed for linear spatial stream network models (e.g., fixing covariance parameter values, random effects, partition factors) are also available for generalized linear spatial stream network models.
The ssn_simulate()
function is used to simulate data on
a stream network. First, covariance parameter values are specified and a
seed set:
tu_params <- tailup_params("exponential", de = 0.4, range = 1e5)
td_params <- taildown_params("spherical", de = 0.1, range = 1e6)
euc_params <- euclid_params("gaussian", de = 0.2, range = 1e3)
nug_params <- nugget_params("nugget", nugget = 0.1)
set.seed(2)
Then call ssn_simulate()
, specifying the
family
argument depending on the type of simulated data
desired (here, Gaussian), the ssn.object
and the network
(here, the observed network):
sims <- ssn_simulate(
family = "gaussian",
ssn.object = mf04p,
network = "obs",
additive = "afvArea",
tailup_params = tu_params,
taildown_params = td_params,
euclid_params = euc_params,
nugget_params = nug_params,
mean = 0,
samples = 1
)
head(sims)
#> [1] -0.8022248 -0.2953168 0.7179851 -0.2965733 -0.2811469 -0.1010336
We simulate binomial (presence/absence) data by running
sims <- ssn_simulate(
family = "binomial",
ssn.object = mf04p,
network = "obs",
additive = "afvArea",
tailup_params = tu_params,
taildown_params = td_params,
euclid_params = euc_params,
nugget_params = nug_params,
mean = 0,
samples = 2
)
head(sims)
#> 1 2
#> [1,] 0 1
#> [2,] 0 1
#> [3,] 0 1
#> [4,] 1 0
#> [5,] 1 0
#> [6,] 0 1
Currently, ssn_simulate()
only works on the observed
network (network = "obs"
). However, simulation in
SSN2
will be a focus of future updates, and we plan to add
support for simulating on prediction networks as well as observed and
prediction networks simultaneously.
Here we list the two SSN2
functions used to fit
models:
ssn_glm()
: Fit a spatial stream network generalized
linear model.ssn_lm()
: Fit a spatial stream network linear
model.Here we list some commonly used SSN2
functions that
operate on model fits:
AIC()
: Compute the AIC.AICc()
: Compute the AICc.anova()
: Perform an analysis of variance.augment()
: Augment data with diagnostics or new data
with predictions.coef()
: Return coefficients.confint()
: Compute confidence intervals.cooks.distance()
: Compute Cook’s distance.covmatrix()
: Return covariance matrices.deviance()
: Compute the deviance.fitted()
: Compute fitted values.glance()
: Glance at a fitted model.glances()
: Glance at multiple fitted models.hatvalues()
: Compute leverage (hat) values.logLik()
: Compute the log-likelihood.loocv()
: Perform leave-one-out cross validation and
compute relevant statistics.model.matrix()
: Return the model matrix (\(\mathbf{X}\)).plot()
: Create fitted model plots.predict()
: Compute predictions and prediction
intervals.pseudoR2()
: Compute the pseudo r-squared.residuals()
: Compute residuals.summary()
: Summarize fitted models.tidy()
: Tidy fitted models.varcomp()
: Compare variance components.vcov()
: Compute variance-covariance matrices of
estimated parameters.Documentation for these functions can be found by running
?function_name.SSN2
or
help("function_name.SSN2", "SSN2")
. For example,
?predict.SSN2
or
help("predict.SSN2", "SSN2")
.
Here we list some commonly used SSN2
functions for
manipulating SSN
objects:
ssn_create_distmat()
: Create distance matrices in the
.ssn
directory for use with modeling functions.ssn_get_data()
: Extract an sf
data.frame
of observed or prediction locations from the
SSN
object.ssn_get_netgeom()
: Extract topological information from
the netgeom
column.ssn_get_stream_distmat()
: Extract the stream distance
matrices for the observed or prediction locations in an SSN
object.ssn_import()
: Import an SSN
object from an
.ssn
directory.ssn_import_predpts()
: Import prediction data and store
within an existing SSN
object.ssn_put_data()
: Replace an sf
data.frame
of observed or prediction locations in an
SSN
object.ssn_split_predpts()
: Split prediction data stored
within an SSN
object into multiple prediction data
sets.ssn_subset()
: Subset an existing SSN
object based on a logical expression.SSN_to_SSN2()
: Convert an S4
SpatialStreamNetwork
object created in the SSN
to an S3 SSN
object used in SSN2
.ssn_update_path()
: Update the path
element
of an SSN
object.ssn_write()
: Write an SSN
project to a new
local .ssn
directory.All functions that manipulate SSN
objects have an
ssn_
prefix, which makes them easily accessible via tab
completion in RStudio.
Here we list some commonly used miscellaneous SSN2
functions:
ssn_simulate()
: Simulate spatially correlated random
variables on a stream network.For a full list of SSN2
functions alongside their
documentation, see the documentation manual.
SSN
to SSN2
Here we present a table of SSN
functions and provide
their relevant successors in SSN2
:
SSN Function Name |
SSN2 Function Name |
---|---|
AIC() |
AIC() ; AICc() |
BlockPredict() |
predict(…, block = TRUE) |
BLUP() |
fitted(…, type) |
covparms() |
coef() ; tidy(..., effects) |
createDistMat() |
ssn_create_distmat() |
CrossValidationSSN() |
loocv() |
CrossValidationStatsSSN() |
loocv() |
EmpiricalSemivariogram() |
Torgegram(…, type) |
getSSNdata.frame() |
ssn_get_data() |
getStreamDistMat() |
ssn_get_stream_distmat() |
glmssn() |
ssn_glm() ; ssn_lm() |
GR2() |
pseudoR2() |
importPredpts() |
ssn_import_predpts() |
importSSN() |
ssn_import() |
InfoCritCompare() |
augment() ; glance() ;
glances() ; loocv() |
predict() |
predict() |
putSSNdata.frame() |
ssn_put_data() |
residuals() |
residuals() |
SimulateOnSSN() |
ssn_simulate() |
splitPredictions() |
ssn_split_predpts() |
subsetSSN() |
ssn_subset() |
summary() |
summary() |
Torgegram() |
Torgegram(…, type) |
updatePath() |
ssn_update_path() |
varcomp() |
varcomp() |
writeSSN() |
ssn_write() |
In addition to the function name changes above, a few function argument names also changed. Please read the documentation for each function of interest to see its relevant argument name changes.
SSN2
There are several features we have planned for future versions of
SSN2
that did not make it into the initial release due to
the October timeline regarding the rgdal
,
rgeos
, and maptools
retirements. As such, we
plan to regularly update and add features to SSN2
in the
coming years – so check back often! Some of these features include
additional tools for large data sets (both model fitting and
prediction), manipulating the .ssn
object, simulating data,
and more. We will do our best to make future versions of
SSN2
backward compatible with this version, but minor
changes may occur until we are ready to release version 1.0.0.
library(SSN2)
citation(package = "SSN2")
path <- system.file("lsndata/MiddleFork04.ssn", package = "SSN2")
copy_lsn_to_temp()
path <- paste0(tempdir(), "/MiddleFork04.ssn")
mf04p <- ssn_import(
path = path,
predpts = c("pred1km", "CapeHorn", "Knapp"),
overwrite = TRUE
)
summary(mf04p)
library(ggplot2)
names(mf04p$preds)
ggplot() +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$edges) +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$preds$pred1km, pch = 17, color = "blue") +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$obs, color = "brown", size = 2) +
theme_bw()
ssn_create_distmat(
ssn.object = mf04p,
predpts = c("pred1km", "CapeHorn", "Knapp"),
among_predpts = TRUE,
overwrite = TRUE
)
ggplot() +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$edges) +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$obs, aes(color = Summer_mn), size = 2) +
scale_color_viridis_c(limits = c(-1.5, 17), option = "H") +
theme_bw()
tg <- Torgegram(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
type = c("flowcon", "flowuncon", "euclid")
)
plot(tg)
ssn_mod <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea"
)
summary(ssn_mod)
varcomp(ssn_mod)
tidy(ssn_mod, conf.int = TRUE)
glance(ssn_mod)
ssn_mod2 <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
taildown_type = "spherical"
)
glances(ssn_mod, ssn_mod2)
ml_mod <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea",
estmethod = "ml"
)
ml_mod2 <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea",
estmethod = "ml"
)
glances(ml_mod, ml_mod2)
loocv_mod <- loocv(ssn_mod)
loocv_mod$RMSPE
loocv_mod2 <- loocv(ssn_mod2)
loocv_mod2$RMSPE
aug_ssn_mod <- augment(ssn_mod)
aug_ssn_mod
library(sf)
st_write(aug_ssn_mod, paste0(tempdir(), "/aug_ssn_mod.shp"))
plot(ssn_mod, which = 1)
predict(ssn_mod, newdata = "pred1km")
aug_preds <- augment(ssn_mod, newdata = "pred1km")
aug_preds[, ".fitted"]
ggplot() +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$edges) +
geom_sf(data = aug_preds, aes(color = .fitted), size = 2) +
scale_color_viridis_c(limits = c(-1.5, 17), option = "H") +
theme_bw()
st_write(aug_preds, paste0(tempdir(), "/aug_preds.gpkg"))
predict(ssn_mod)
predict(ssn_mod, newdata = "all")
predict(ssn_mod, newdata = "pred1km", block = TRUE, interval = "prediction")
euclid_init <- euclid_initial("gaussian", de = 1, known = "de")
euclid_init
ssn_init <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_initial = euclid_init,
additive = "afvArea"
)
ssn_init
ssn_rand <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea",
random = ~ as.factor(netID)
)
ssn_rand
ssn_part <- ssn_lm(
formula = Summer_mn ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "exponential",
taildown_type = "spherical",
euclid_type = "gaussian",
additive = "afvArea",
partition_factor = ~ as.factor(netID)
)
ssn_part
ggplot() +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$edges) +
geom_sf(data = mf04p$obs, aes(color = C16), size = 2) +
scale_color_viridis_c(option = "H") +
theme_bw()
ssn_pois <- ssn_glm(
formula = C16 ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
family = "poisson",
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "epa",
taildown_type = "mariah",
additive = "afvArea"
)
summary(ssn_pois)
ssn_nb <- ssn_glm(
formula = C16 ~ ELEV_DEM + AREAWTMAP,
family = "nbinomial",
ssn.object = mf04p,
tailup_type = "epa",
taildown_type = "mariah",
additive = "afvArea"
)
loocv_pois <- loocv(ssn_pois)
loocv_pois$RMSPE
loocv_nb <- loocv(ssn_nb)
loocv_nb$RMSPE
tu_params <- tailup_params("exponential", de = 0.4, range = 1e5)
td_params <- taildown_params("spherical", de = 0.1, range = 1e6)
euc_params <- euclid_params("gaussian", de = 0.2, range = 1e3)
nug_params <- nugget_params("nugget", nugget = 0.1)
set.seed(2)
sims <- ssn_simulate(
family = "gaussian",
ssn.object = mf04p,
network = "obs",
additive = "afvArea",
tailup_params = tu_params,
taildown_params = td_params,
euclid_params = euc_params,
nugget_params = nug_params,
mean = 0,
samples = 1
)
head(sims)
sims <- ssn_simulate(
family = "binomial",
ssn.object = mf04p,
network = "obs",
additive = "afvArea",
tailup_params = tu_params,
taildown_params = td_params,
euclid_params = euc_params,
nugget_params = nug_params,
mean = 0,
samples = 2
)
head(sims)