Pest risk assessment (PRA) comprises a set of quantitative and qualitative tools to protect productive ecosystems from the impacts of unwanted biological invasions. Self-organizing maps for pest profile analysis (SOM PPA) is a methodological approach aimed to support PRA. It is based on cluster analysis and extracts information out of current distributions of insect crop pests world-wide, allowing the analyst to generate a list of potential risk species for a target region. Self-organizing maps for pest profile analysis currently lacks of a measure of performance able to provide a level of confidence for its outputs. In this study, we investigate ζ diversity as an ecologically meaningful and generalizable metric of similarity. The application of ζ allowed us to quantify and thus reveal different levels of similarity across pest profiles. The use of ζ diversity applied to the SOM PPA provides an informative measure of uncertainty for the output of SOM PPA, thus adding major improvements to the methodology while only marginally increasing its complexity.
CITATION STYLE
Roigé, M., McGeoch, M. A., Hui, C., & Worner, S. P. (2017). Cluster validity and uncertainty assessment for self-organizing map pest profile analysis. Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 8(3), 349–357. https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.12669
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.