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In statistics, Wombling is any of a number of techniques used for identifying zones of rapid change, typically in some quantity as it varies across some geographical or Euclidean space. It is named for statistician William H. Womble. The technique may be applied to gene frequency in a population of organisms, and to evolution of language. ==References== *William H. Womble 1951. "Differential Systematics". ''Science'' vol 114, No. 2961, p315–322. *Fitzpatrick M.C., Preisser E.L., Porter A., Elkinton J., Waller L.A., Carlin B.P., Ellison A.E. (2010) "Ecological boundary detection using Bayesian areal wombling", Ecology 91:3448–3455 *Liang, S.; Banerjee, S.; Carlin, B.P. (2009) "Bayesian Wombling for Spatial Point Processes", ''Biometrics'', 65 (11), 1243–1253 * Ma, H.; Carlin, B.P. (2007) ("Bayesian Multivariate Areal Wombling for Multiple Disease Boundary Analysis" ), ''Bayesian Analysis'', 2 (2), 281–302 *Banerjee, S. ; Gelfand, A.E. (2006) ("Bayesian Wombling: Curvilinear Gradient Assessment Under Spatial Process Models" ), ''Journal of the American Statistical Association.'', 101(476), 1487–1501. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Wombling」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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