Reliability of environmental sampling culture results using the negative binomial intraclass correlation coefficient

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Abstract

The Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC) is commonly used to estimate the similarity between quantitative measures obtained from different sources. Overdispersed data is traditionally transformed so that linear mixed model (LMM) based ICC can be estimated. A common transformation used is the natural logarithm. The reliability of environmental sampling of fecal slurry on freestall pens has been estimated for Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis using the natural logarithm transformed culture results. Recently, the negative binomial ICC was defined based on a generalized linear mixed model for negative binomial distributed data. The current study reports on the negative binomial ICC estimate which includes fixed effects using culture results of environmental samples. Simulations using a wide variety of inputs and negative binomial distribution parameters (r; p) showed better performance of the new negative binomial ICC compared to the ICC based on LMM even when negative binomial data was logarithm, and square root transformed. A second comparison that targeted a wider range of ICC values showed that the mean of estimated ICC closely approximated the true ICC. © 2014 Aly et al.

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Aly, S. S., Zhao, J., Li, B., & Jiang, J. (2014). Reliability of environmental sampling culture results using the negative binomial intraclass correlation coefficient. SpringerPlus, 3(1), 1–7. https://doi.org/10.1186/2193-1801-3-40

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