Hello, thank you for the excellent rEDM package, which works really well for addressing my research question. However, I came across an issue where I was hoping to get your help: What is the temporal resolution of “T_period” when creating a matrix with surrogates and applying the “seasonal” method? I assume that the default setting is a value of one for T_period. However, I don’t understand whether this value corresponds to one week, month, day, or year—especially since the first column of my data is a string and does not include any date.
Additionally, I am studying data where I expect external forcing due to solar radiation (diurnal fluctuations) rather than seasonal external forcing (seasonality). Is there a way to test for this external forcing on a daily basis, particularly if I can mathematically approximate this diurnal, external forcing using the same spline function applied for seasonality?
Thanks for your help!
Hello, thank you for the excellent rEDM package, which works really well for addressing my research question. However, I came across an issue where I was hoping to get your help: What is the temporal resolution of “T_period” when creating a matrix with surrogates and applying the “seasonal” method? I assume that the default setting is a value of one for T_period. However, I don’t understand whether this value corresponds to one week, month, day, or year—especially since the first column of my data is a string and does not include any date.
Additionally, I am studying data where I expect external forcing due to solar radiation (diurnal fluctuations) rather than seasonal external forcing (seasonality). Is there a way to test for this external forcing on a daily basis, particularly if I can mathematically approximate this diurnal, external forcing using the same spline function applied for seasonality?
Thanks for your help!