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12 - Decisions and trade-offs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 August 2009

Barbara J. Downes
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne
Leon A. Barmuta
Affiliation:
University of Tasmania
Peter G. Fairweather
Affiliation:
Flinders University of South Australia
Daniel P. Faith
Affiliation:
Australian Museum, Sydney
Michael J. Keough
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne
P. S. Lake
Affiliation:
Monash University, Victoria
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Summary

Statistical decision theory has a long history and can basically be viewed in two ways. Classical statistical hypothesis-testing in the Neyman–Pearson form (Neyman & Pearson 1928), which we described in chapter 4, emphasizes decision errors from the test of a null hypothesis, and these errors have a frequentist interpretation. In contrast, what is termed modern statistical decision theory has a strong Bayesian influence (Berger 1985; Hamburg 1985; Pratt et al. 1996) and has emphasized monetary costs and benefits from decisions in an economic and management context. Nonetheless, all statistical decision problems have certain characteristics in common (Box 12.1; Hamburg 1985; Neter et al. 1993). In this chapter, we will focus on errors associated with the components of the decision-making process and how the choice of criteria for making decisions interacts with the design of the monitoring program.

MAKING STATISTICAL DECISIONS

We need to examine the errors possible from a statistical decision-making process in an environmental monitoring context. In chapter 4 (see Table 4.4) we defined two possible types of error. These errors arise because we are making decisions about the truth or otherwise of hypotheses about unknown population parameters from imperfect samples. If we could record an entire population, such as all the possible locations upstream and downstream of the mine, then we could make decisions about the truth of hypotheses about those parameters without sampling error. Errors of inference may still arise, due to measurement error and confounding.

Type
Chapter
Information
Monitoring Ecological Impacts
Concepts and Practice in Flowing Waters
, pp. 323 - 340
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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