Jorge Poco, H. Doraiswamy, Marian Talbert, Jeffrey Morisette, Claudio T. Silva
Abstract
Species distribution models (SDM) are used to help understand what drives the distribution of various plant and animal species. These models are typically high dimensional scalar functions, where the dimensions of the domain correspond to predictor variables of the model algorithm. Understanding and exploring the differences between models help ecologists understand areas where their data or understanding of the system is incomplete and will help guide further investigation in these regions. These differences can also indicate an important source of model to model uncertainty. However, it is cumbersome and often impractical to perform this analysis using existing tools, which allows for manual exploration of the models usually as 1-dimensional curves. In this paper, we propose a topology-based framework to help ecologists explore the differences in various SDMs directly in the high dimensional domain. In order to accomplish this, we introduce the concept of maximum topology matching that computes a locality-aware correspondence between similar extrema of two scalar functions. The matching is then used to compute the similarity between two functions. We also design a visualization interface that allows ecologists to explore SDMs using their topological features and to study the differences between pairs of models found using maximum topological matching. We demonstrate the utility of the proposed framework through several use cases using different data sets and report the feedback obtained from ecologists.
Materials
BibTeX
@inproceedings{2015-TopoMatching,
 title = {Using Maximum Topology Matching to Explore Differences in Species Distribution Models},
 author = {Jorge Poco AND H. Doraiswamy AND Marian Talbert AND Jeffrey Morisette AND Claudio T. Silva},
 booktitle = {IEEE Scientific Visualization Conference},
 year = {2015},
 url = {http://www.visualdslab.com/papers/TopoMatching},
}