6533b7d5fe1ef96bd1265239

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Item Response Trees: a recommended method for analyzing categorical data in behavioral studies

Johanna MappesAndrés López-sepulcreAndrés López-sepulcreKate D. L. UmbersSebastiano De BonaJanne K. Valkonen

subject

escalationpredator-prey interactionsBiologyMachine learningcomputer.software_genreGeneralized linear mixed modelSoftwareethologyrepeatabilityCategorical variableEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsbehavioral analysisSequenceta112business.industryScale (chemistry)Nonparametric statisticsRitem response theoryresponse treesOutcome (probability)ordinal dataRange (mathematics)ta1181Animal Science and Zoologycategorical dataArtificial intelligencebusinesscomputerGLMM

description

Behavioral data are notable for presenting challenges to their statistical analysis, often due to the difficulties in measuring behavior on a quantitative scale. Instead, a range of qualitative alternative responses is recorded. These can often be understood as the outcome of a sequence of binary decisions. For example, faced by a predator, an individual may decide to flee or stay. If it stays, it may decide to freeze or display a threat and if it displays a threat, it may choose from several alternative forms of display. Here we argue that instead of being analyzed using traditional nonparametric statistics or a series of separate analyses split by response categories, this kind of data can be more holistically analyzed using a generalized linear mixed model (GLMM) framework extended to binomial response trees. Originally devised for the social sciences to analyze questionnaires with multiple-choice answers, this approach can easily be applied to behavioral data using existing GLMM software. We illustrate its use with 2 representative examples: 1) repeatability in the measurement of antipredator display escalation and 2) the analysis of predator responses to prey appearance.

10.1093/beheco/arv091http://juuli.fi/Record/0009333515