by jlaake » Wed Mar 11, 2009 7:35 pm
One of the authors or developers will have to help with your question, but I thought I'd just mention the parallel I saw between the model you describe here and double observer distance sampling models. If I understand it correctly the measure
Gamma = PsiAB/(PsiA*PsiB)
is the ratio of probability that a site is occupied by both species A and B divided by the product of the probability that the site is occupied by A and the probability that the site is occupied by B. If the species are occupying sites independently then you would expect PsiAB=PsiA*PsiB because under independence the product of an intersection (ie both A and B) is the product of the probabilities. If there is positive dependence (attraction) then PsiAB > PsiA*PsiB and the opposite is true if there is negative dependence (avoidance).
In double observer distance sampling, gamma is the same as delta (Borchers et al 2006; Laake et al 2008), which measures the dependence in the detection probabilities by 2 observers. If there is heterogeneity in detection probabiliity (some critters are easier to see than others) that is not modeled, this will create a positive dependence (delta >1), which means both observers will see those that are easy to see and they will both miss those that are harder to see.
So while this may not be relevant to the question I thought it wouldn't hurt to point out the similarity. Also, for those of you that monitor all of the forum components, this is relevant to the discussion to the question posed by db regarding removal models for double observer point transect data. Some of the issues raised by Murray Efford in the discussion and his recent paper (Efford and Dawson 2009) could be relevant to occupancy modelling.
BORCHERS, D. L., J. L. LAAKE, C. SOUTHWELL and C. G. M. PAXTON. 2006. Accommodating unmodeled heterogeneity in double-observer distance sampling surveys. Biometrics 62: 372-378.
EFFORD, M. and D. K. DAWSON. 2009. Effect of distance-related hetoreneity on population size estimates from point counts. Auk 126: 100-111.
LAAKE, J., M. J. DAWSON and J. HONE. 2008. Visibility bias in aerial survey: mark-recapture, line-transect or both? Wildlife Research 35: 299-309.