have about classes.
I also started a bare bones webpage:
http://www.isds.duke.edu/~jbc30/SpatioTemporal/
A also put up the latex source code and bib file I used if you are
interested in making additions, corrections, or other. Please email
me any
changes, and I'll maintain an RCS version of it.
I'll put some plots up there when I have time to give you all an
idea of
what my context is. Ironically, I can't ssh to the webserver from
work (at
the US EPA), so I can only update it from home.
Here are some questions to you all:
- What data do you have interest in analyzing?
- What type of code do you have to contribute?
- Are you interested in writing classes/methods? If so, what is your
background? (I can provide several tutorials on S4 classes on the
web that
I found useful).
I will pass along these related packages as being related to spatio-
temporal
data:
trip (trip class extends SpatialPointsDataFrame), pastecs,
tripEstimation,
hydrosalinity(?), PBSmapping(?), RadioSonde, STARIMA(?), Bayesian
Vector
Accumulation(?), spBayes(?), INLA (Havard Rue website)
I skimmed a fair number of time related packages (more than just
timeDate
and chron), including xts, zoo, (tseries, timeSeries, ts, its, etc)
as well,
and came to the conclusion that it would best to allow either a time
series
type package (regular or irregular times) as well as a package for
continuous time (functional data, like paths of animals, in the trip
library), and I'm a fan of the fda
library<http://ego.psych.mcgill.ca/misc/fda/>.
It would be nice to have easy spline/FDA access for datasets where
time is
collected in a continuous manner rather than in the usual arima grid
setting.
With that information dump, I'll try and get another update out in
about two
weeks depending on my schedule, which should include any progress
I've made
that I'm satisfied with. I will respond to individual emails as well.
Cheers,
Blair
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