Technical note: Bayesian calibration of dynamic ruminant nutrition models

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Abstract

Mechanistic models of ruminant digestion and metabolism have advanced our understanding of the processes underlying ruminant animal physiology. Deterministic modeling practices ignore the inherent variation within and among individual animals and thus have no way to assess how sources of error influence model outputs. We introduce Bayesian calibration of mathematical models to address the need for robust mechanistic modeling tools that can accommodate error analysis by remaining within the bounds of data-based parameter estimation. For the purpose of prediction, the Bayesian approach generates a posterior predictive distribution that represents the current estimate of the value of the response variable, taking into account both the uncertainty about the parameters and model residual variability. Predictions are expressed as probability distributions, thereby conveying significantly more information than point estimates in regard to uncertainty. Our study illustrates some of the technical advantages of Bayesian calibration and discusses the future perspectives in the context of animal nutrition modeling.

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Reed, K. F., Arhonditsis, G. B., France, J., & Kebreab, E. (2016). Technical note: Bayesian calibration of dynamic ruminant nutrition models. Journal of Dairy Science, 99(8), 6362–6370. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2015-10708

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