# Kmulti

0th

Percentile

##### Marked K-Function

For a marked point pattern, estimate the multitype $K$ function which counts the expected number of points of subset $J$ within a given distance from a typical point in subset I.

Keywords
spatial, nonparametric
##### Usage
Kmulti(X, I, J, r=NULL, breaks=NULL, correction, ...)
##### Arguments
X
The observed point pattern, from which an estimate of the multitype $K$ function $K_{IJ}(r)$ will be computed. It must be a marked point pattern. See under Details.
I
Subset index specifying the points of X from which distances are measured.
J
Subset index specifying the points in X to which distances are measured.
r
numeric vector. The values of the argument $r$ at which the multitype $K$ function $K_{IJ}(r)$ should be evaluated. There is a sensible default. First-time users are strongly advised not to specify this argument. See below for importan
breaks
An alternative to the argument r. Not normally invoked by the user. See the Details section.
correction
A character vector containing any selection of the options "border", "bord.modif", "isotropic", "Ripley", "translate", "none" or "best". It specifie
...
Ignored.
##### Details

The function Kmulti generalises Kest (for unmarked point patterns) and Kdot and Kcross (for multitype point patterns) to arbitrary marked point patterns.

Suppose $X_I$, $X_J$ are subsets, possibly overlapping, of a marked point process. The multitype $K$ function is defined so that $\lambda_J K_{IJ}(r)$ equals the expected number of additional random points of $X_J$ within a distance $r$ of a typical point of $X_I$. Here $\lambda_J$ is the intensity of $X_J$ i.e. the expected number of points of $X_J$ per unit area. The function $K_{IJ}$ is determined by the second order moment properties of $X$.

The argument X must be a point pattern (object of class "ppp") or any data that are acceptable to as.ppp.

The arguments I and J specify two subsets of the point pattern. They may be logical vectors of length equal to X$n, or integer vectors with entries in the range 1 to X$n, etc.

The argument r is the vector of values for the distance $r$ at which $K_{IJ}(r)$ should be evaluated. It is also used to determine the breakpoints (in the sense of hist) for the computation of histograms of distances.

First-time users would be strongly advised not to specify r. However, if it is specified, r must satisfy r[1] = 0, and max(r) must be larger than the radius of the largest disc contained in the window.

This algorithm assumes that X can be treated as a realisation of a stationary (spatially homogeneous) random spatial point process in the plane, observed through a bounded window. The window (which is specified in X as X$window) may have arbitrary shape. Biases due to edge effects are treated in the same manner as in Kest. The edge corrections implemented here are [object Object],[object Object],[object Object] The pair correlation function pcf can also be applied to the result of Kmulti. ##### Value • An object of class "fv" (see fv.object). Essentially a data frame containing numeric columns • rthe values of the argument$r$at which the function$K_{IJ}(r)$has been estimated • theothe theoretical value of$K_{IJ}(r)$for a marked Poisson process, namely$\pi r^2$• together with a column or columns named "border", "bord.modif", "iso" and/or "trans", according to the selected edge corrections. These columns contain estimates of the function$K_{IJ}(r)$obtained by the edge corrections named. ##### Warnings The function$K_{IJ}$is not necessarily differentiable. The border correction (reduced sample) estimator of$K_{IJ}$used here is pointwise approximately unbiased, but need not be a nondecreasing function of$r$, while the true$K_{IJ}$must be nondecreasing. ##### References Cressie, N.A.C. Statistics for spatial data. John Wiley and Sons, 1991. Diggle, P.J. Statistical analysis of spatial point patterns. Academic Press, 1983. Diggle, P. J. (1986). Displaced amacrine cells in the retina of a rabbit : analysis of a bivariate spatial point pattern. J. Neurosci. Meth. 18, 115--125. Harkness, R.D and Isham, V. (1983) A bivariate spatial point pattern of ants' nests. Applied Statistics 32, 293--303 Lotwick, H. W. and Silverman, B. W. (1982). Methods for analysing spatial processes of several types of points. J. Royal Statist. Soc. Ser. B 44, 406--413. Ripley, B.D. Statistical inference for spatial processes. Cambridge University Press, 1988. Stoyan, D, Kendall, W.S. and Mecke, J. Stochastic geometry and its applications. 2nd edition. Springer Verlag, 1995. Van Lieshout, M.N.M. and Baddeley, A.J. (1999) Indices of dependence between types in multivariate point patterns. Scandinavian Journal of Statistics 26, 511--532. ##### See Also Kcross, Kdot, Kest, pcf ##### Aliases • Kmulti ##### Examples data(longleaf) # Longleaf Pine data: marks represent diameter <testonly>longleaf <- longleaf[seq(1,longleaf$n, by=50), ]</testonly>
K <- Kmulti(longleaf, longleaf$marks <= 15, longleaf$marks >= 25)
plot(K)
Documentation reproduced from package spatstat, version 1.19-1, License: GPL (>= 2)

### Community examples

Looks like there are no examples yet.