-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Comparing Segments of Developmental Trajectories
Date:   Mon, 12 Mar 2012 18:15:09 -0400
From:   Michelle Singleton <msingle...@midwestern.edu>
To:     morphmet@morphometrics.org



Dear Colleagues,

As part of a study of ontogenetic shape change in a group of related
species, I wish to compare patterns of shape change between successive
developmental stages. My intention was to compare angular differences
between species vectors obtained from multivariate regression of
Procrustes residuals on my developmental variable.

When I apply this approach to the full developmental series (juvenile to
adult) I get interspecies angles comparable to those obtained by myself
and others in prior studies, but when I look at individual segments
(e.g., Stage 1 to Stage 2) the resulting angles are very large,
apparently because the amount of variation between stages is too small
to allow accurate vector estimates, although the smaller sample sizes
probably contribute as well. The large angles do, nevertheless, return
the same qualitative result (in terms of relative vector similarity) as
the angles for the full ontogenetic series.

My questions are: 1) have I correctly identified the source of the
discrepancy in angle magnitudes? 2) can permutation significance tests
based on these angles be meaningful; or, 3) is this the wrong approach
and is there perhaps a more appropriate method for this comparison?

Many thanks for your thoughts on this problem.

Best regards,
Michelle

--
Michelle Singleton, Ph.D.
Professor of Anatomy
Midwestern University
555 31st Street
Downers Grove, IL 60515

Phone: 630.515.6137 <tel:630.515.6137>
Fax: 630.515.7199 <tel:630.515.7199>
e-mail: msingle...@midwestern.edu <mailto:msingle...@midwestern.edu>


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