How Long Can an Ecological Model Predict? by Maria Kuman* in Environmental Analysis & Ecology Studies_ Journal of Environmental Sciences
Abstract
Prediction
of ecological phenomenon
needs three components: a theoretical (or numerical) model based on the natural
laws (physical, chemical, or biological),
a sampling set of the reality, and a tolerance level. Comparison between the
predicted and sampled values leads to the estimation of model error. In the
error phase space, the prediction error is treated as a point; and the
tolerance level (a prediction parameter) determines a tolerance ellipsoid. The
prediction continues until the time when the error first exceeding the
tolerance level (i.e., the error point first crossing the tolerance-ellipsoid).
This time is called the first-passage time. Well-established theoretical
framework such as the backward Fokker-Planck equation can be used to estimate
the first-passage time-an up-time limit for any model prediction. A population
dynamical system is used as an example to illustrate the concept and
methodology and the dependence of the first-passage time on the model and
prediction parameters.
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