Abstract
AbstractEcological patterns are often fundamentally chronological. However, generalization of data is necessarily accompanied by a loss of detail or resolution. Temporal data in particular contain information not only in data values but in the temporal structure, which is lost when these values are aggregated to provide point estimates. Dynamic time warping (DTW) is a time series comparison method that is capable of efficiently comparing series despite temporal offsets that confound other methods. The DTW method is both efficient and remarkably flexible, capable of efficiently matching not only time series but also any sequentially structured data set, which has made it a popular technique in machine learning, artificial intelligence, and big data analytical tasks. DTW is rarely used in ecology despite the ubiquity of temporally structured data. As technological advances have increased the richness of small‐scale ecological data, DTW may be an attractive analysis technique because it is able to utilize the additional information contained in the temporal structure of many ecological data sets. In this study, we use an example data set of high‐resolution fish movement records obtained from otolith microchemistry to compare traditional analysis techniques with DTW clustering. Our results suggest that DTW is capable of detecting subtle behavioral patterns within otolith data sets which traditional data aggregation techniques cannot. These results provide evidence that the DTW method may be useful across many of the temporal data types commonly collected in ecology, as well other sequentially ordered “pseudo time series” data such as classification of species by shape.
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