Volume 55, Issue 4 pp. 1300-1305

Multiple Comparison of Entropies with Application to Dinosaur Biodiversity

Kathleen S. Fritsch

Kathleen S. Fritsch

Mathematics and Computer Science, The University of Tennessee at Martin, Martin, Tennessee 38238, U.S.A.

Search for more papers by this author
Jason C. Hsu

Jason C. Hsu

Department of Statistics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1247, U.S.A. email: [email protected]

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 25 May 2004
Citations: 16

Abstract

Summary. Did the biodiversity of dinosaurs decline, or did it remain more or less constant before their mass extinction 65 million years ago? Sheehan et al. (1991, Science, 835–839) reported that the biodiversity of families of dinosaur species remained more or less constant preceding their extinction, suggesting extinction due to a cataclysmic event such as an asteroid strike. But that claim was based on the incorrect interpretation that a large p value associated with a test of null hypothesis of equality supports that null hypothesis. To assess whether there is a basis for such a claim, we formulate the problem as one of practical equivalence, in analogy to bioequivalence. We then develop reliable practical equivalence confidence intervals for differences of entropies by applying the bootstrap-t technique to a nearly pivotal quantity. Confidence intervals for changes in the biodiversity of dinosaurs are then computed, allowing the reader to assess whether there is evidence of near constancy of dinosaur biodiversity before extinction.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.