6,358 research outputs found
A practical guide and software for analysing pairwise comparison experiments
Most popular strategies to capture subjective judgments from humans involve
the construction of a unidimensional relative measurement scale, representing
order preferences or judgments about a set of objects or conditions. This
information is generally captured by means of direct scoring, either in the
form of a Likert or cardinal scale, or by comparative judgments in pairs or
sets. In this sense, the use of pairwise comparisons is becoming increasingly
popular because of the simplicity of this experimental procedure. However, this
strategy requires non-trivial data analysis to aggregate the comparison ranks
into a quality scale and analyse the results, in order to take full advantage
of the collected data. This paper explains the process of translating pairwise
comparison data into a measurement scale, discusses the benefits and
limitations of such scaling methods and introduces a publicly available
software in Matlab. We improve on existing scaling methods by introducing
outlier analysis, providing methods for computing confidence intervals and
statistical testing and introducing a prior, which reduces estimation error
when the number of observers is low. Most of our examples focus on image
quality assessment.Comment: Code available at https://github.com/mantiuk/pwcm
Insect-mediated cross-pollination in male-sterile, female-fertile mutant soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merrill] lines
Currently, there is no economical way to produce large quantities of F1 hybrid soybean seed in the USA. One of the fundamental requirements for hybrid seed production is the availability of a stable male-sterile, female-fertile system. However, the more challenging barrier is the efficient transfer of pollen from the male parent to the female parent. This could potentially be achieved through pollinator insects. The objectives were to evaluate seed set among soybean lines segregating for male sterility, use phenotypic recurrent selection program to increase pollinator attraction of those male-sterile female-fertile identified as superior parental lines, and conduct agronomic tests for heterosis in the hybrids produced through insect-mediated cross-pollination. Differential seed set was observed among the evaluated lines, indicating that preferential pollination was present, which could suggest that selection among male-sterile, female-fertile lines can be made in order to obtain female parents suitable to produce hybrid soybean seed. Phenotypic recurrent selection in a favorable environment was successful in increasing the number of seed per male-sterile soybean plant. Mean seed-set per family as high as 304 seeds per male-sterile plant was observed after just two selection cycles. This suggested that very few genes with major effects may regulate the traits related to pollinator preference and out-crossing. A differential response was observed among the cross-combinations, suggesting variability for those traits among the parental lines. Evaluation of agronomic data revealed that positive heterosis was present in some of the crosses tested. Although heterosis is not a static attribute and is strongly affected by the environment, some promising parental combinations were found
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