Using simulations and data to evaluate mean sensitivity (ζ) as a useful statistic in dendrochronology

Publication date

2013

Authors

Bunn, A.G.
Jansma, E.
Korpela, M.
Westfall, R.D.
Baldwin, J.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

License

(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2013

Abstract

Mean sensitivity (ζ) continues to be used in dendrochronology despite a literature that shows it to be of questionable value in describing the properties of a time series. We simulate first-order autoregressive models with known parameters and show that ζ is a function of variance and autocorrelation of a time series. We then use 500 random tree-ring data sets with unknown parameters and show that ζ is at best equivalent to the standard deviation of a time series in cases without high autocorrelation and is an inefficient estimator of the coefficient of variation. It is hard to justify the use of ζ as a useful, descriptive statistic in dendrochronology on theoretical or empirical grounds. It is better to make a thorough evaluation of the time series properties of a data set and we suggest various avenues for doing so including some that are maybe unfamiliar to most dendrochronologists including generalized autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity (GARCH) models.

Keywords

Time-series model, Autocorrelation

Citation