Some Consequences of Using the Horsfall-Barratt Scale for Hypothesis Testing

被引:42
作者
Bock, C. H. [1 ]
Gottwald, T. R. [2 ]
Parker, P. E. [3 ]
Ferrandino, F. [4 ]
Welham, S. [5 ]
van den Bosch, F. [5 ]
Parnell, S. [5 ]
机构
[1] ARS SEFTNRL, USDA, Byron, GA 31008 USA
[2] ARS USHRL, USDA, Ft Pierce, FL 34945 USA
[3] Anim & Plant Hlth Inspect Serv PPQ, USDA, Moore Air Base, Edinburg, TX 78539 USA
[4] Connecticut Agr Expt Stn, Dept Plant Pathol & Ecol, New Haven, CT 06511 USA
[5] Rothamsted Res, Harpenden AL5 2JQ, Herts, England
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
DISEASE ASSESSMENT; CITRUS CANKER; VISUAL ESTIMATION; SEVERITY; ACCURACY; PRECISION; RELIABILITY; SYMPTOMS; BLIGHT;
D O I
10.1094/PHYTO-08-09-0220
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Comparing treatment effects by hypothesis testing is a common practice in plant pathology. Nearest percent estimates (NPEs) of disease severity were compared with Horsfall-Barratt (H-B) scale data to explore whether there was an effect of assessment method on hypothesis testing. A simulation model based on field-collected data using leaves with disease severity of 0 to 60% was used; the relationship between NPEs and actual severity was linear, a hyperbolic function described the relationship between the standard deviation of the rater mean NPE and actual disease, and a lognormal distribution was assumed to describe the frequency of NPEs of specific actual disease severities by raters. Results of the simulation showed standard deviations of mean NPEs were consistently similar to the original rater standard deviation from the field-collected data; however, the standard deviations of the H-B scale data deviated from that of the original rater standard deviation, particularly at 20 to 50% severity, over which H-B scale grade intervals are widest; thus, it is over this range that differences in hypothesis testing are most likely to occur. To explore this, two normally distributed, hypothetical severity populations were compared using a t test with NPEs and H-B midpoint data. NPE data had a higher probability to reject the null hypothesis (H-0) when H-0 was false but greater sample size increased the probability to reject H-0 for both methods, with the H-B scale data requiring up to a 50% greater sample size to attain the same probability to reject the H-0 as NPEs when H-0 was false. The increase in sample size resolves the increased sample variance caused by inaccurate individual estimates due to H-B scale midpoint scaling. As expected, various population characteristics influenced the probability to reject H-0, including the difference between the two severity distribution means, their variability, and the ability of the raters. Inaccurate raters showed a similar probability to reject H-0 when H-0 was false using either assessment method but average and accurate raters had a greater probability to reject H-0 when H-0 was false using NPEs compared with H-B scale data. Accurate raters had, on average, better resolving power for estimating disease compared with that offered by the H-B scale and, therefore, the resulting sample variability was more representative of the population when sample size was limiting. Thus, there are various circumstances under which H-B scale data has a greater risk of failing to reject H-0 when H-0 is false (a type II error) compared with NPEs.
引用
收藏
页码:1030 / 1041
页数:12
相关论文
共 38 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1978, PLANT DIS ADV TREATI
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2009, WEB SCI
[3]  
BERGER RD, 1980, U MINNESOTA MISC PUB, V7
[4]   Characteristics of the perception of different severity measures of citrus canker and the relationships between the various symptom types [J].
Bock, C. H. ;
Parker, P. E. ;
Cook, A. Z. ;
Gottwald, T. R. .
PLANT DISEASE, 2008, 92 (06) :927-939
[5]   Visual rating and the use of image analysis for assessing different symptoms of citrus canker on grapefruit leaves [J].
Bock, C. H. ;
Parker, P. E. ;
Cook, A. Z. ;
Gottwald, T. R. .
PLANT DISEASE, 2008, 92 (04) :530-541
[6]   The Horsfall-Barratt scale and severity estimates of citrus canker [J].
Bock, C. H. ;
Gottwald, T. R. ;
Parker, P. E. ;
Cook, A. Z. ;
Ferrandino, F. ;
Parnell, S. ;
van den Bosch, F. .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PLANT PATHOLOGY, 2009, 125 (01) :23-38
[7]   Comparison of Assessment of Citrus Canker Foliar Symptoms by Experienced and Inexperienced Raters [J].
Bock, C. H. ;
Parker, P. E. ;
Cook, A. Z. ;
Riley, T. ;
Gottwald, T. R. .
PLANT DISEASE, 2009, 93 (04) :412-424
[8]   Variation in bentgrass susceptibility to Typhula incarnata and in isolate aggressiveness under controlled environment conditions [J].
Chang, S. W. ;
Chang, T. H. ;
Abler, R. A. B. ;
Jung, G. .
PLANT DISEASE, 2007, 91 (04) :446-452
[9]  
Chester K. S., 1950, PLANT DIS REP S, P190
[10]   Managing Foliar Blights on Carrot Using Copper, Azoxystrobin, and Chlorothalonil Applied According to TOM-CAST [J].
Dorman, E. A. ;
Webster, B. J. ;
Hausbeck, M. K. .
PLANT DISEASE, 2009, 93 (04) :402-407