On Information Rank Deficiency in Phenotypic Covariance Matrices

Author:

O’Keefe F Robin1,Meachen Julie A2,Polly P David3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Marshall University, One John Marshall Drive, Huntington, WV 25701, USA

2. Department of Anatomy, Des Moines University, 3200 Grand Avenue, Des Moines, IA 50312, USA

3. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Indiana University, 1001 E 10th St, Bloomington, IN 47408, USA

Abstract

Abstract This article investigates a form of rank deficiency in phenotypic covariance matrices derived from geometric morphometric data, and its impact on measures of phenotypic integration. We first define a type of rank deficiency based on information theory then demonstrate that this deficiency impairs the performance of phenotypic integration metrics in a model system. Lastly, we propose methods to treat for this information rank deficiency. Our first goal is to establish how the rank of a typical geometric morphometric covariance matrix relates to the information entropy of its eigenvalue spectrum. This requires clear definitions of matrix rank, of which we define three: the full matrix rank (equal to the number of input variables), the mathematical rank (the number of nonzero eigenvalues), and the information rank or “effective rank” (equal to the number of nonredundant eigenvalues). We demonstrate that effective rank deficiency arises from a combination of methodological factors—Generalized Procrustes analysis, use of the correlation matrix, and insufficient sample size—as well as phenotypic covariance. Secondly, we use dire wolf jaws to document how differences in effective rank deficiency bias two metrics used to measure phenotypic integration. The eigenvalue variance characterizes the integration change incorrectly, and the standardized generalized variance lacks the sensitivity needed to detect subtle changes in integration. Both metrics are impacted by the inclusion of many small, but nonzero, eigenvalues arising from a lack of information in the covariance matrix, a problem that usually becomes more pronounced as the number of landmarks increases. We propose a new metric for phenotypic integration that combines the standardized generalized variance with information entropy. This metric is equivalent to the standardized generalized variance but calculated only from those eigenvalues that carry nonredundant information. It is the standardized generalized variance scaled to the effective rank of the eigenvalue spectrum. We demonstrate that this metric successfully detects the shift of integration in our dire wolf sample. Our third goal is to generalize the new metric to compare data sets with different sample sizes and numbers of variables. We develop a standardization for matrix information based on data permutation then demonstrate that Smilodon jaws are more integrated than dire wolf jaws. Finally, we describe how our information entropy-based measure allows phenotypic integration to be compared in dense semilandmark data sets without bias, allowing characterization of the information content of any given shape, a quantity we term “latent dispersion”. [Canis dirus; Dire wolf; effective dispersion; effective rank; geometric morphometrics; information entropy; latent dispersion; modularity and integration; phenotypic integration; relative dispersion.]

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference53 articles.

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2. Geomorph: Software for geometric morphometric analyses. R package version 3.2.1;Adams,2020

3. Temporal variation in tooth fracture among Rancho La Brea dire wolves;Binder;J. Vertebrate Paleontol.,2002

4. A comparison of tooth wear and breakage in Rancho La Brea sabertooth cats and dire wolves across time;Binder;J. Vertebrate Paleontol.,2010

5. Morphometric tools for landmark data: geometry and biology;Bookstein,1997

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