More on Maxent
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Transcript of More on Maxent
More on MaxentEnv. Variable importance:
Ma xent attempts to determine variable importance a couple ways:
• During modeling, Maxent asks how much “gain” occurs
• During iterations, Maxent increases gain of the model by modifying coefficient for a single feature based on input environmental data
• Gain is related to information added by an environ. variable
• Maxent can then determine percent contribution of the env. variable to whole the model
More on MaxentEnv. Variable importance caveats
• Percent contribution outputs don’t take into account covariances across environmental layers
• Variale importance is based on Maxent algorithm! It might be different using a different method!
• Interpret with caution
• Permutation importance a new measure.
Env. Variable importance:
• Maxent attempts to determine variable importance a couple ways:
• jackknifing is another method to determine environmental layer importance
• It is a leave-one-layer out without replacement procedure
• How much “gain” occurs if we use individual layers or combinations?
• Which layer contributes the most gain when used individually?
Env. Variable importance:
• comparing test and train variable importance is useful
• Note that precip6190_ann is the best predictor for test but not train when used alone
• Suggests that transferability of monthly values lower than annual values
• Note, length of red bar indicates gain using all variables
• If blue bar is shorter than red, corresponding loss of gain (explanation) when variable omitted.
How to read these graphs
• Each graph shows the range of values for the pixels in the environment layers you used on the x-axis
• Probability of presence is shown on the y-axis (0 to 1)
• eg., tmax6190_annshows that for low tmaxs, probability of occurrence is ~1, which drops towards 0 around 22.5 C.
• Plots do not take into account correlation among variables
• Maxent produces a second graph with individual variables run separately
New Maxent Goodies
The Explain Tool
• New in Maxent 3.3
• Shows for any point where the value is on all response curves
• Can be used to see how env. Variables matter in different areas.
• Haven’t had a chance to use this much
How do we know when models are “realistic” or, better put, of “reasonable quality”, or even
better put… “valid”?
Two Types of Error in Distributional Predictions
Actual geographic distribution
Two Types of Error in Distributional Predictions
Predicted geographic distribution
Two Types of Error in Distributional Predictions
Actual geographic distribution
Predicted geographic distribution
Two Types of Error in Distributional Predictions
Actual geographic distribution
Predicted geographic distribution
Overprediction,or Commission
Underprediction,or Omission
Two Types of Error in Distributional Predictions
Objective: To Minimize Both Forms of Error
Two Types of Error in Distributional Predictions
Objective: To Minimize Both Forms of Error
There are at least two strategies to do so:- Collect New Data- Split your data into two sets, one set used in training, one set used in model testing.
To evaluate model quality you need to:1. Generate an ‘independent’ set of data
2. Generate a model with the training data
3. Quantify error components with a confusion matrix by utilizing the testing data
dcPredicted Absent
baPredicted Present
Actually Absent
Actually Present
a & d = correct predictions b = commission error
(false positives, overprediction)
c = omission error (false negatives,
underprediction)
Measuring Omission Redux
• Omission error is “easy” to measure if you have a test and training datset
• Training dataset to create model
• Test dataset to verify if suitable habitats include the “pixels” that also contain the test locations.
• If yes, then omission error is low.
Measuring Commission Error Redux
• Measuring commission error is much trickier• We don’t know anything about true absences, because we
only collected presence data• How to measure commission error?• In Maxent, the commission error is measured in reference to
the “background” (all pixels)• And we are therefore distinguishing presence from “random”
rather than presence from absence
High OmissionLowCommission
Zero OmissionHigh Commission
We know the model getsthis wrong. How? Explainin terms of omission, commission and in terms of true/false presence/absence
This one probably getssomething wrong too.Also explain….
Zero OmissionNo Commission Overfitting
And this one too…
EXAMPLE MODELS THAT YOU MIGHT NOT BELIEVE
Some stochastic algorithms (e.g. GARP) produce different models with the same input data. Good models find minimization between commission/omission error. So can find those models.
Commission Index (% of area predicted present)
Om
issi
on E
rror
(% o
f oc
curr
ence
poi
nts
outs
ide
the
pred
icte
d ar
ea)
0 100
100
For species with a fair number of
occurrence data this is a typical curve
Commission Index (% of area predicted present)
Om
issi
on E
rror
(% o
f occ
urre
nce
poin
ts o
utsi
de th
e pr
edic
ted
area
)
0 100
100
Distribution of a species in an area
High OmissionLow Commission
Zero OmissionHigh CommissionZero Omission
No Commission Overfitting
The question now is, which of these models are good and which ones are bad?
Commission Index (% of area predicted present)
Om
issi
on E
rror
(% o
f occ
urre
nce
poin
ts o
utsi
de th
e pr
edic
ted
area
)
0 100
100Models with high omission error are
clearly bad(not capturing
environment of known occurrences)
The question now is, which of these models are good and which ones are bad?
Commission Index (% of area predicted present)
Om
issi
on E
rror
(% o
f occ
urre
nce
poin
ts o
utsi
de th
e pr
edic
ted
area
)
0 100
100
overprediction
Region of the best models
overfitting Median
The following discussion made a big assumption: That models results are binary – either suitable or unsuitable.
HOWEVER…
SOME TOOLS PRODUCE CONTINUOUS MEASURESOF SUITABLE on a scale from 0 (unsuitable) to 100 (really suitable)
Like Maxent… the tools we’ll use.
So how to Threshold ?(eg convert a continuous map into a binary one)
• Lots of potential thresholds to choose. Some of the most common are:– Fixed (eg. all maxent values 10-100 are suitable, all 0-10
are not. Note … arbitrary)
– Lowest presence threshold (threshold that requires the lowest possible suitable area that still includes all training occurrence data points)
– Sensitivity-specificity equality (where true positive and true negative fraction are equal)
HOW TO READ SOME OF THE MAXENT OUTPUTS PART 2 – RECEIVER OPERATOR
CURVES.
WHAT THEY ARE, AND WHAT THEY MEAN.
AS BEST AS I CAN REMEMBER (and explain)
actual value
p n total
prediction outcome
p'True
Positive
FalsePositive
(commission)P'
n'False
Negative(omission)
TrueNegative
N'
total P N
- We can caculate the true positive rate (TPR) as TP/P - We can calculate the false positive rate (FPR) as FP/N- We can calculate accuracy (ACC) = (TP + TN) / (P + N)
Remember, we have test data to use to find errors of commission and omission
to see how the model performs
A B C C'
TPR = 0.63 TPR = 0.77 TPR = 0.24 TPR = 0.88
FPR = 0.28 FPR = 0.77 FPR = 0.88 FPR = 0.24
ACC = 0.68 ACC = 0.50 ACC = 0.18 ACC = 0.82
TP=63 FP=28 91
FN=37 TN=72 109
100 100 200
TP=77 FP=77 154
FN=23 TN=23 46
100 100 200
TP=24 FP=88 112
FN=76 TN=12 88
100 100 200
TP=88 FP=24 112
FN=12 TN=76 88
100 100 200
TPR is also called sensitivity1-FPR is also called specificity
WE CAN PLOT THE TPR against 1-FPR:This is called a Receiver-Operator Characteristic Curve
- Comes from information theory
ACC VALUES ARE GREAT WHEN YOU HAVE THRESHOLDED YOUR MAXENT RESULT. WHAT ABOUT VALUES OVER MULTIPLE THRESHOLDS?
- You calculate your ACC value at all thresholds- low thresholds overpredict (high commission errors)- high thresholds underpredict (high omission errors)
- you get a curve of under to overprediction – this is the ROC curve- the area under the curve is a good indicator of model performance
- You want AUC values close to 1
- Another graph showing how omission increases with increasing threshold. - Background (kind of pseudoabsences) go the other direction since you are predicting more absence as you increase threshold- You are looking at specificity versus sensitivity across thresholds
HOW TO READ SOME OF THE MAXENT OUTPUTS PART 2 – RECEIVER OPERATOR
CURVES.
WHAT THEY ARE, AND WHAT THEY MEAN.
People often report AUC values as measures of model performance and you can too. With caveats:
1. AUCs vary dependening whether a species is widespread or narrowly distributed
2. The choice of the “geographic window of extent” for modeling matters
3. AUCs are typically inflated due to spatial autocorrelation
4. So interpret “good” model results with caution.