Figure 1. Forests of Costa Rica in 1940, 1961 and 1983.
Figure 2. Area within the parallelogram shows feasible space for success of a model to simulate a landscape where there is 70% deforestation in reality. Each of the nine points shows a percent success at a different combination of information concerning location and quantity. The nine points are NQNL. MQNL, PQNL, NQML, MQML, PQML, NQPL, MQPL, and PQPL.
Figure 3. Stacked bar showing potential for percent correct due to quantity and location of the particular landscape run illustrated in Figures 1 and 2.
Figure 4. Stacked bar showing components of percent correct and incorrect classification of the particular simulation run illustrated in Figure 2.
Figure 5. Percent success of thirteen modeled scenarios at various quantities to simulate a landscape where there is 70% deforestation in reality.
Figure 6. Total Error (PQPL-MQML), Value of Perfect Information of Quantity given MQML (PQML-MQML) and Value of Perfect Information of Location given MQML (MQPL-MQML) of thirteen modeled scenarios at various quantities to simulate a landscape where there is 70% deforestation in reality.
Figure 7. Kno, Klocation, Kquantity, and Kstandard of thirteen modeled scenarios at various quantities to simulate a landscape where there is 70% deforestation in reality.
Figure 8. Stacked bar showing potential for percent correct due to quantity and location of the particular landscape run illustrated in Figures 1 and 2.
Figure 9. Percent success of thirteen modeled scenarios at various quantities to simulate a landscape where there is 58% deforestation in reality.
Figure 10. Total Error (PQPL-MQML), Value of Perfect Information of Quantity given MQML (PQML-MQML), and Value of Perfect Information of Location given MQML (MQPL-MQML) of thirteen modeled scenarios at various quantities to simulate a landscape where there is 58% deforestation in reality.
Figure 11. Kno, Klocation, Kquantity, and Kstandard of thirteen modeled scenarios at various quantities to simulate a landscape where there is 58% deforestation in reality.
Copyright 2000 Graduate School of Geography, Clark University