Twenty-Five Years of the Binary Power Law for Characterizing Heterogeneity of Disease Incidence

Author:

Madden L. V.1,Hughes G.1,Moraes W. Bucker1,Xu X.-M.1,Turechek W. W.1

Affiliation:

1. First and third authors: Department of Plant Pathology, Ohio State University, Wooster 44691; second author: Crop and Soil Systems Research Group, SRUC, King’s Buildings, Edinburgh EH9 3JG, UK; fourth author: NIAB, East Malling Research, New Road, East Malling, ME19 6BJ, UK; and fifth author: United States Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Horticultural Research Laboratory, 2001 South Rock Road, Ft. Pierce, FL 34945.

Abstract

Spatial pattern, an important epidemiological property of plant diseases, can be quantified at different scales using a range of methods. The spatial heterogeneity (or overdispersion) of disease incidence among sampling units is an especially important measure of small-scale pattern. As an alternative to Taylor’s power law for the heterogeneity of counts with no upper bound, the binary power law (BPL) was proposed in 1992 as a model to represent the heterogeneity of disease incidence (number of plant units diseased out of n observed in each sampling unit, or the proportion diseased in each sampling unit). With the BPL, the log of the observed variance is a linear function of the log of the variance for a binomial (i.e., random) distribution. Over the last quarter century, the BPL has contributed to both theory and multiple applications in the study of heterogeneity of disease incidence. In this article, we discuss properties of the BPL and use it to develop a general conceptualization of the dynamics of spatial heterogeneity in epidemics; review the use of the BPL in empirical and theoretical studies; present a synthesis of parameter estimates from over 200 published BPL analyses from a wide range of diseases and crops; discuss model fitting methods, and applications in sampling, data analysis, and prediction; and make recommendations on reporting results to improve interpretation. In a review of the literature, the BPL provided a very good fit to heterogeneity data in most publications. Eighty percent of estimated slope (b) values from field studies were between 1.06 and 1.51, with b positively correlated with the BPL intercept parameter. Stochastic simulations show that the BPL is generally consistent with spatiotemporal epidemiological processes and holds whenever there is a positive correlation of disease status of individuals composing sampling units.

Publisher

Scientific Societies

Subject

Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science

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