Abstract

This paper investigates the feasibility of using Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC) to calibrate and evaluate complex individual-based models (IBMs). As ABC evolves, various versions are emerging, but here we only explore the most accessible version, rejection-ABC. Rejection-ABC involves running models a large number of times, with parameters drawn randomly from their prior distributions, and then retaining the simulations closest to the observations. Although well-established in some fields, whether ABC will work with ecological IBMs is still uncertain.Rejection-ABC was applied to an existing 14-parameter earthworm energy budget IBM for which the available data consist of body mass growth and cocoon production in four experiments. ABC was able to narrow the posterior distributions of seven parameters, estimating credible intervals for each. ABC's accepted values produced slightly better fits than literature values do. The accuracy of the analysis was assessed using cross-validation and coverage, currently the best-available tests. Of the seven unnarrowed parameters, ABC revealed that three were correlated with other parameters, while the remaining four were found to be not estimable given the data available.It is often desirable to compare models to see whether all component modules are necessary. Here, we used ABC model selection to compare the full model with a simplified version which removed the earthworm's movement and much of the energy budget. We are able to show that inclusion of the energy budget is necessary for a good fit to the data. We show how our methodology can inform future modelling cycles, and briefly discuss how more advanced versions of ABC may be applicable to IBMs. We conclude that ABC has the potential to represent uncertainty in model structure, parameters and predictions, and to embed the often complex process of optimising an IBM's structure and parameters within an established statistical framework, thereby making the process more transparent and objective.

Highlights

  • We are able to show that inclusion of the energy budget is necessary for a good fit to the data

  • Animal populations consist of autonomous, adaptive individuals, all figuring out their own ways of achieving their goals

  • E. van der Vaart et al / Ecological Modelling 312 (2015) 182–190 processes are fit to some data

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Summary

Introduction

Animal populations consist of autonomous, adaptive individuals, all figuring out their own ways of achieving their goals From these activities of individuals emerge population consequences, such as spatial distributions, social structures and population dynamics. For many questions, both theoretical and applied, scientific knowledge exists at the level of the individuals or the population, but not both; in these cases, individual or agent-based models, here referred to as IBMs, can bridge the gap (DeAngelis and Mooij, 2005). In IBMs, the interactions among individuals and between them and their surroundings are explicitly simulated, and all individuals have their own characteristics and make their decisions This makes IBMs uniquely suited to exploring the effects of individual decisions on collective behaviour and to predicting how populations will change across time and space (Grimm and Railsback, 2005). Due to the inherent complexity of IBMs, this process is often complicated, and the resulting outcome is often difficult to evaluate (Augusiak et al, 2014)

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