I should have written: "I have a series of linear measurements of bones . . ." They in fact include several measurements of breadth and thickness. I wonder why the sum of all measurements should be such an unusual choice. Richard Wright > >Subject: Re: size > From: "F. James Rohlf" <[log in to unmask]> > Date: Wed, 25 May 2005 22:23:00 -0400 > To: [log in to unmask] > >There are many methods that have been proposed. The simplest is to express >them as ratios of some measure of size - which gets back to the original >question as there are many ways to express size. The sum of all the >measurements is a pretty unusual choice but it often may not matter much in >practice because the measurements are usually very highly correlated. > >----------------------- >F. James Rohlf, Distinguished Professor & Graduate Program Director >State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY 11794-5245 >www: http://life.bio.sunysb.edu/ee/rohlf > >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Classification, clustering, and phylogeny estimation >> [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of leo horseman >> Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2005 10:03 PM >> To: [log in to unmask] >> Subject: >> >> I do not have a citation for you; however, I am interested in >> the question. >> I must admit to being baffled. Why include size measurements >> in your analysis at all, unless somehow the measurement of >> shape is derived from the size measurement. If you've >> measured only bone lengths, which surely would vary greatly >> in size, then how did you arrive at a shape measurement? >> >> M.C. >> >> >From: Richard Wright <[log in to unmask]> >> >Reply-To: "Classification, clustering, and phylogeny >> estimation" >> > <[log in to unmask]> >> >To: [log in to unmask] >> >Date: Mon, 23 May 2005 12:06:54 +1000 >> > >> >This is a question about size and shape in morphometric studies. >> > >> >I have a series of measurements of bone lengths in individuals that >> >vary greatly in size. I want to consider similarities and >> differences >> >between the individuals solely in terms of shape. To remove >> differences >> >in absolute size I have taken each individual, summed all the >> >measurements for that individual, and then divided each >> measurement by that sum. >> > >> >This is an intuitively simple method. Some years ago I read a >> >recommendation about using it. Now an editor is asking me to cite a >> >reference to the use of the method. Unfortunately I cannot recollect >> >where I saw it advocated. >> > >> >Can anybody help? >> > >> >I know that there are various alternative methods for >> eliminating size >> >in multivariate morphometric work, such as eliminating the first >> >principal component if that is one of general size. However >> my question >> >is not about the competing merits of size/shape methodologies in >> >general. This is a specific request for a citation of the >> approach outlined above. >> > >>