August 2014 Workshop on Applied hierarchical modeling in ecology using BUGS
and R: site-structured models for abundance 

Instructors: Marc Kéry & Andy Royle, Swiss Ornithological Institute & USGS
Patuxent Wildlife Research Center
Date: 13–15 August 2014
Venue: Cornell University, Ithaca New York
Computers: Bring your own laptop with latest R/unmarked and
WinBUGS/OpenBUGS/JAGS
Course fee: USD$550 (normal rate), USD$350 (student rate).

The analysis of abundance and of the dynamic rates governing their change
lies at the core of ecology and its applications such as conservation and
wildlife management. Metapopulation designs, where repeated measurements of
some quantity such as counts or distance measurements are made at a
collection of sites, underlie a vast number of studies in ecology and
management. Inference about such data is conveniently based on hierarchical
models, where one submodel describes the underlying true state of the
process (e.g., abundance at a site) and another submodel describes the
observation process that connects the true state to the observations.

In recent years, much progress has been made in the development of methods
and computer algorithms to fit hierarchical models. In particular, Bayesian
statistical analysis and the general-purpose Bayesian software package
WinBUGS have opened up entirely new possibilities for ecologists to conduct
complex population analyses. On the other hand, the R package unmarked
contains a wealth of functions to analyse hierarchical models of abundance
in a frequentist mode of inference. 

This course introduces key hierarchical models used in the analysis of
abundance and its spatial and temporal patterns, and provides both Bayesian
and the frequentist methods for their analysis. We use package unmarked in R
as well as WinBUGS and JAGS to fit and understand some of the most widely
used models for the analysis of animal and plant populations. These include:
- binomial (Royle 2004) and multinomial N-mixture models (e.g., removal,
double-observer) for the analysis of distribution and abundance,
- CAR modeling of spatial autocorrelation in abundance
- hierarchical distance sampling models (e.g., Royle et al. 2004, Conn et
al. 2012),
- dynamic models of abundance (Royle & Dorazio 2008; Dail & Madsen 2011)

This is an intermediate-level workshop with about 80% spent lecturing and
20% on solving exercises. A working knowledge of modern regression methods
(GLMs, mixed models) and preferentially of program R or another programming
language is required. No previous experience with program WinBUGS is assumed
(but, of course, it is beneficial). 

Please bring your own laptops and install a recent version of R, with the
latest version of package unmarked, plus JAGS and/or WinBUGS 1.4., with the
upgrade patch and the immortality key decoded (in this order, only for the
latter). OpenBUGS should work for most of what we do.

Please apply here by 1 July 2014:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1rabj8gKVm37TVnFyKqsi4lR0CMfxL9DDMh3o--GRpKA/viewform

Reply via email to