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The MRG package has been created to generate gridded output of data from censuses and surveys, respecting different requirements, such as confidentiality rules for protecting the privacy of individuals. The package has been particularly developed for handling Farm Structure Survey data, but can be used for many other purposes.
The package provides two main methods for gridding of data:
In addition, there is support functionality for the main methods above.
The package is highly flexible, in the sense that it includes three different methods for confidentiality and reliability, where parameters can be varied. Additionally, it is possible to add a user defined function for applications where other restrictions are necessary.
Together with the gridding approach, there is also a possibility to apply a
contextual suppression of grid cells. This means that grid cells will not be aggregated with
neighbours if their value is small compared with the non-confidential neighbours, they
will instead be suppressed in a post-processing step at the end.
The Farm Structure Survey data comes from a European wide survey of agricultural holdings, conducted by the national statistical bureaus. A range of variables have been collected from each of the holdings in the survey, including agricultural area, organic agricultural area, number of employees, gender and age of owners, number of animals and their type, etc. A census (attempt to sample data from all holdings) usually takes place every 10 years (2000, 2010, 2020, …), whereas surveys (samples from about 20% of the holdings) take place every 3-4 years between the census years. Some holdings, particularly in survey years, are representative for a larger group, and are attributed a weight to be applied if data are aggregated in any way.
A large number of the agricultural variables would be of interest to stakeholders and researchers. However, there are confidentiality rules in place, which limits the possibilities for sharing the data, they can only be distributed as aggregated variables. To distribute the aggregated values (mean or sum) for a grid cell or administrative unit, the data must respect the following two confidentiality rules: - Frequency rule: Data for a grid cell can not be distributed if it is based on less than 10 (weighted) holdings - Dominance rule: If the two largest holdings (or the largest holding if it has a weight of two) represent more than 85% of the value in a grid cell, the data of the grid cell can not be distributed.
Additionally, it also includes a reliability rule for sample data with weights. This is to assure that the expected uncertainty of the result is below a threshold. The default is that the expected coefficient of variation (CV) should be below 0.35.
The original data set is restricted. However, the package includes a “fake” data set, which has the same structure as a real data set, but manipulated to be the same as any real farms. This makes it possible to test the methodology also for those who don’t have access to the original data.
This function attempts to keep the resolution as high as possible, while respecting the confidentiality rules. Starting with a high resolution grid (for example 1*1 km), it will first check groups of four grid cells which are within the lower resolution grid cells. If the confidentiality rule fails for any of the high resolution cells, the function will only keep the aggregated value from the lower resolution grid.
The figure below gives an indication of how the function works. In this simplified example,
the numbers reflect the number of holdings in each grid cell, and we are only considering
the frequency rule, i.e., that the number of holdings in a grid cell has to be at least 10.
In the first grid in the figure below, non of the grid cells have more than 10 holdings,
they are all yellow (except for the white ones without holdings at all).
In the second grid, the four grid cells in the upperright corner have reached the limit and are green,
in addition to two
grid cells in the central left side.
However, there are still grid cells with less than 10 holdings in the lower left corner,
so also these are merged in the transition to the grid at the right in the figure.
The four grid cells in the top right corner are kept though.
However, we could imagine cases where we would rather like to suppress the grid cell with 1 holding in the central image, to be able to keep the higher resolution grid cell with 11 holdings. The gridding function therefore includes a parameter (suppresslim) that sets a minimum limit for the values inside a confidential grid cell to be merged with neigbouring grid cells. This limit could for example be 0.1, in that case the grid cell with one holding should be suppressed as in the figure below.
The package includes a synthetic test data set, which includes data of a similar type and distribution as the true FSS data. This is used in the examples of the methodology below.
library(sf)
library(dplyr)
library(viridis)
library(ggplot2)
library(giscoR)
library(ggforce)
library(patchwork)
library(kableExtra)
library(MRG)
data(ifs_dk) # Census data (weights in EXT_CORE, all equal to 1)
ifs_weight = ifs_dk[ifs_dk$Sample == 1, ] # The sample data, weights in EXT_MODULE, varying
# The sum of the weights (EXT_MODULE) are equal to the population size
sum(ifs_weight$EXT_MODULE) - dim(ifs_dk)[1]
#> [1] 1.999433e-08
# Create spatial data
# Move coordinates away from grid cell boundaries with locAdj = "LL",
# as holdings are registered with coordinates in the lower left corner
# of the INSPIRE 1*1 km grid.
# Coordinates exactly on the border can cause issues in some functions
# This function is particular for the FSS data set, with a particular format
# for the geo-location. For other data sets, the coordinate shift can be done
# on an sf-object either with the function locAdjFun, or in a call to
# createMRGobject.
ifg = fssgeo(ifs_dk, locAdj = "LL")
ffg = fssgeo(ifs_weight, locAdj = "LL")
# Read country borders for Denmark, only used for plotting
borders = gisco_get_nuts(nuts_level = 0)
dkb = borders[borders$CNTR_CODE == "DK",] %>% st_transform(crs = 3035)
# Necessary to avoid some warnings for intersection further down
st_agr(dkb) = "constant"
# Set the base resolutions, and create a hierarchical list with gridded data
# No variable name is needed if we're only looking at the number of holdings
# but we include the utilized agricultural area, as it will also be used further below.
ress = c(1,5,10,20,40, 80, 160)*1000
ifl = list()
ifl = gridData(ifg, vars = "UAA", res = ress)
# List of grids for the organic utilized agricultural area
ifl2 = gridData(ifg, vars = "UAAXK0000_ORG", res = ress)
# List of grids with two variable (weights could be ignored, as they are all equal to one)
ifl3 = gridData(ifg, vars = c("UAA", "UAAXK0000_ORG"), weights = "EXT_CORE", res = ress)
# List of grids for for the sample data (weights necessary)
ffl = gridData(ffg, vars = c("UAA"), weights = "EXT_MODULE", res = ress)
Just to understand the distribution of grid cells which should be confidential or not, We can create a table, giving an overview of grid cells with the number of holdings greater or equal to 10, and grid cells with less than 10 holdings. Below the different grids are plotted together.
ifltab = data.frame("N GE 10" = unlist(lapply(ifl, FUN = function(x) sum(x$count >= 10))),
"N LT 10" = unlist(lapply(ifl, FUN = function(x) sum(x$count < 10))))
ifltab
#> N.GE.10 N.LT.10
#> 1 0 23776
#> 2 1794 385
#> 3 582 52
#> 4 178 11
#> 5 57 1
#> 6 22 0
#> 7 8 0
# Create a single data.frame for the hierarchical grids for plotting
ifall = do.call("rbind", ifl[1:6])
ifall$res1 = paste(ifall$res/1000, "km")
ifall$res2 = factor(ifall$res1, levels = unique(ifall$res1))
# Plot the hierarchical grids of Denmark
ggplot() + geom_sf(data = ifall, aes(fill = count), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "number of \n holdings", trans = "log10") +
scale_color_viridis( name = "number of \n holdings", trans = "log10") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
# coord_sf(crs = 3035) +
theme_bw() +
theme(panel.grid.major = element_line(colour = 'transparent')) +
ggtitle("Number of holdings for different resolutions") +
facet_wrap(vars(res2))
First we create a multi-resolution grid function only with farm number as confidentiality rule (The dominance rule does not apply if we only analyse the number of holdings)
himg0 = multiResGrid(ifl, checkValidity = FALSE)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2179 ; removed: 23704 ; added: 2107 ; confidential: 72"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 1642 ; removed: 768 ; added: 231 ; confidential: 41"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 1539 ; removed: 137 ; added: 34 ; confidential: 9"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 1451 ; removed: 96 ; added: 8 ; confidential: 1"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 1366 ; removed: 86 ; added: 1 ; confidential: 0"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 1366 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 0"
# Some points that will help visualizing some differences between plots
pta = data.frame(matrix(ncol = 2, byrow = TRUE,
data = c(4245000, 3685000,
4345000, 3815000)))
pta$rad = c(20000)
pta$color = c("red")
xlim = c(4200000, 4400000)
ylim = c(3650000, 3840000)
# Clip the result to the coastline of Denmark and create ggplot
himg00 = st_intersection(dkb, himg0)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
g0 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg00, aes(fill = count), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
scale_color_identity(guide = "none") +
geom_circle(data = as.data.frame(pta), aes(x0 = X1, y0 = X2, r = rad, color = color)) +
xlab("") + ylab("") +
ggtitle("Only frequency rule") +
coord_sf(xlim = xlim, ylim = ylim) +
theme(text = element_text(size = 10)) +
theme_bw()
# Create multi-resolution grid for utilized agricultural area (UAA),
# clip it to the coastline and create ggplot for the number of farms
himg1 = multiResGrid(ifl, vars = "UAA", ifg = ifg)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2179 ; removed: 23704 ; added: 2107 ; confidential: 72"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 1601 ; removed: 824 ; added: 246 ; confidential: 42"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 1493 ; removed: 145 ; added: 37 ; confidential: 9"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 1405 ; removed: 96 ; added: 8 ; confidential: 1"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 1333 ; removed: 73 ; added: 1 ; confidential: 0"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 1333 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 0"
himg01 = st_intersection(dkb, himg1)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
g1 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg01, aes(fill = count), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10") +
# scale_color_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
scale_color_identity(guide = "none") +
geom_circle(data = as.data.frame(pta), aes(x0 = X1, y0 = X2, r = rad, color = color)) +
coord_sf(xlim = xlim, ylim = ylim) +
xlab("") + ylab("") +
ggtitle("Frequency and dominance rule") +
theme(text = element_text(size = 15)) +
theme_bw()
print(g0+g1 + plot_layout(guides = "collect"))
In a second step, we can run the same procedure, but for the utilized agricultural area (UAA). Then the function will also check that the dominance rule is respected for all pixels. Two plots are necessary to show the results of this procedure. The first one shows the number of farms, as above, but also respecting the dominance rule. The second plot shows the gridded UAA from the same holdings. It should be noted that there is only a small effect from applying the dominance rule in this example.
pta = data.frame(matrix(ncol = 2, byrow = TRUE,
data = c(4245000, 3685000,
4345000, 3815000)))
pta$rad = c(20000)
pta$color = c("red")
xlim = c(4200000, 4400000)
ylim = c(3650000, 3840000)
# Clip the result to the coastline of Denmark and create ggplot
himg00 = st_intersection(dkb, himg0)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
g0 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg00, aes(fill = count), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10") +
# scale_color_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
# coord_sf(crs = 3035) +
scale_color_identity(guide = "none") +
geom_circle(data = as.data.frame(pta), aes(x0 = X1, y0 = X2, r = rad, color = color)) +
xlab("") + ylab("") +
ggtitle("Only frequency rule") +
coord_sf(xlim = xlim, ylim = ylim) +
theme(text = element_text(size = 10)) +
theme_bw()
# Create multi-resolution grid for utilized agricultural area (UAA),
# clip it to the coastline and create ggplot for the number of farms
himg1 = multiResGrid(ifl, vars = "UAA", ifg = ifg)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2179 ; removed: 23704 ; added: 2107 ; confidential: 72"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 1601 ; removed: 824 ; added: 246 ; confidential: 42"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 1493 ; removed: 145 ; added: 37 ; confidential: 9"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 1405 ; removed: 96 ; added: 8 ; confidential: 1"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 1333 ; removed: 73 ; added: 1 ; confidential: 0"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 1333 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 0"
himg01 = st_intersection(dkb, himg1)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
g1 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg01, aes(fill = count), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10") +
# scale_color_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
scale_color_identity(guide = "none") +
geom_circle(data = as.data.frame(pta), aes(x0 = X1, y0 = X2, r = rad, color = color)) +
coord_sf(xlim = xlim, ylim = ylim) +
xlab("") + ylab("") +
ggtitle("Frequency and dominance rule") +
theme(text = element_text(size = 15)) +
theme_bw()
print(g0+g1 + plot_layout(guides = "collect"))
Using the results from above, we can also plot the UAA for each grid cell. First, one can notice that the UAA is somewhat dependent on the grid cell size, which is typical for variables that are summed. An alternative would be to present the UAA as UAA/km\(^2\) for each grid cell. Second, one can observe that the final grid cells are the same size as above because this is simply another variable produced from the same underlying input data.
g11 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg01, aes(fill = UAA, color = UAA)) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "UAA (ha)", trans = "log10") +
scale_color_viridis( name = "UAA (ha)", trans = "log10") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
xlab("") + ylab("") +
ggtitle("") +
theme_bw()
g11
We can run the same procedure for the organic UAA. Here the grid cells are generally much larger. This is because there are considerably fewer holdings with organic farming in this synthetic data set. Only one grid cell can be disseminated at 5 km, whereas the majority are 10 km (91) or 20 km (67). Then there are 18, 2 and 1 grid cells of 40 km, 80 km and 160 km, respectively. In total there are 180 grid cells in this map with organic farms.
himg2 = multiResGrid(ifl2, vars = "UAAXK0000_ORG", ifg = ifg)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 5513 ; removed: 19922 ; added: 1659 ; confidential: 7"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 894 ; removed: 5180 ; added: 561 ; confidential: 23"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 229 ; removed: 832 ; added: 167 ; confidential: 13"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 148 ; removed: 110 ; added: 29 ; confidential: 4"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 125 ; removed: 29 ; added: 6 ; confidential: 3"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 114 ; removed: 13 ; added: 2 ; confidential: 2"
himg02 = st_intersection(dkb, himg2)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
g12 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg02, aes(fill = UAAXK0000_ORG, color = UAAXK0000_ORG)) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "UAA Organic (ha)", trans = "log10") +
scale_color_viridis( name = "UAA Organic (ha)", trans = "log10") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
ggtitle("") +
theme_bw()
g12
#> Warning in scale_fill_gradientn(colours = viridisLite::viridis(256, alpha, : log-10 transformation introduced infinite values.
#> Warning in scale_color_gradientn(colours = viridisLite::viridis(256, alpha, : log-10 transformation introduced infinite values.
The large grid cells on the coast can, in many cases, be an unwanted feature. For many applications, it is usually better to suppress smaller grid cells with a few holdings instead of aggregating them with grid cells that already have a high number of holdings. This can be achieved with the suppresslim-option. The chunk below creates multi-resolution grids with four different values of the suppresslim-parameter.
When (upper left panel of the figure), one can see some large
grid cells marked with circles that disappear in one of the other panels
(as the value provided to the r
suppresslim` function increases). The ones
inside the red and blue circles disappear already with .
The ones in the black and green circles disappear with ,
and the grid cells within the green circle are further reduced in size for
. The suppressed grid cells (red squares) are barely visible
for the lowest value of 0.1, whereas there are considerably more
(and larger) grid cells suppressed for the largest value of 0.1.
himg11 = multiResGrid(ifl, vars = "UAA", ifg = ifg, postProcess = FALSE, suppresslim = 0)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2179 ; removed: 23704 ; added: 2107 ; confidential: 72"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 1601 ; removed: 824 ; added: 246 ; confidential: 42"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 1493 ; removed: 145 ; added: 37 ; confidential: 9"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 1405 ; removed: 96 ; added: 8 ; confidential: 1"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 1333 ; removed: 73 ; added: 1 ; confidential: 0"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 1333 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 0"
himg111 = MRGpostProcess(himg11, vars = "UAA")
himg12 = multiResGrid(ifl, vars = "UAA", ifg = ifg, postProcess = FALSE, suppresslim = 0.02)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2179 ; removed: 23704 ; added: 2107 ; confidential: 72"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 1657 ; removed: 746 ; added: 224 ; confidential: 67"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 1603 ; removed: 77 ; added: 23 ; confidential: 48"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 1558 ; removed: 50 ; added: 5 ; confidential: 41"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 1558 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 41"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 1558 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 41"
himg121 = MRGpostProcess(himg12, vars = "UAA")
himg13 = multiResGrid(ifl, vars = "UAA", ifg = ifg, postProcess = FALSE, suppresslim = 0.05)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2179 ; removed: 23704 ; added: 2107 ; confidential: 72"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 1724 ; removed: 651 ; added: 196 ; confidential: 100"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 1690 ; removed: 51 ; added: 17 ; confidential: 87"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 1675 ; removed: 17 ; added: 2 ; confidential: 82"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 1675 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 82"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 1675 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 82"
himg131 = MRGpostProcess(himg13, vars = "UAA")
himg14 = multiResGrid(ifl, vars = "UAA", ifg = ifg, postProcess = FALSE, suppresslim = 0.1)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2179 ; removed: 23704 ; added: 2107 ; confidential: 72"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 1811 ; removed: 531 ; added: 163 ; confidential: 141"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 1790 ; removed: 32 ; added: 11 ; confidential: 134"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 1783 ; removed: 8 ; added: 1 ; confidential: 131"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 1783 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 131"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 1783 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 131"
himg141 = MRGpostProcess(himg14, vars = "UAA")
himg15 = multiResGrid(ifl, vars = "UAA", ifg = ifg, postProcess = FALSE, suppresslim = 0.2)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2311 ; removed: 23564 ; added: 2099 ; confidential: 204"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 2082 ; removed: 340 ; added: 111 ; confidential: 350"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 2067 ; removed: 22 ; added: 7 ; confidential: 349"
himg151 = MRGpostProcess(himg15, vars = "UAA")
# Clip to coastline
himg1111 = st_intersection(dkb, himg111)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
himg1211 = st_intersection(dkb, himg121)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
himg1311 = st_intersection(dkb, himg131)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
himg1411 = st_intersection(dkb, himg141)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
himg1511 = st_intersection(dkb, himg151)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
# Locations for circles
pta = data.frame(matrix(ncol = 2, byrow = TRUE,
data = c(4220000, 3640000,
4320000, 3820000,
4363000, 3695000,
4390000, 3540000)))
pta$rad = c(50000, 30000, 30000, 50000)
pta$color = c("red", "black", "blue", "green")
slims = c(0, 0.02, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2)
himgs = list(himg111, himg121, himg131, himg141, himg151)
ps = list()
ahuas = c(himg111$UAA, himg121$UAA, himg131$UAA, himg141$UAA, himg151$UAA)
lims = range(ahuas[ahuas > 0], na.rm = TRUE)
for (ii in 1:length(himgs)) {
hint = himgs[[ii]]
st_agr(hint) = "constant"
hint = st_intersection(dkb, hint)
ps[[ii]] = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = hint, aes(fill = UAA), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "UAA (ha)", trans = "log10", limits = lims, na.value="red") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 0.5) +
ggtitle(paste("Suppresslim = ", slims[[ii]])) +
scale_color_identity(guide = "none") +
geom_circle(data = as.data.frame(pta), aes(x0 = X1, y0 = X2, r = rad, color = color)) +
xlab("") + ylab("") +
theme_bw()
}
# Only printing the first four plots
ps[[1]] + ps[[2]] + ps[[3]] + ps[[4]] + plot_layout(guides = "collect")
Table \(\ref{table:suppresslim}\) shows the distribution of grid cell sizes for different values of \(suppresslim\) provided to the function. The numbers in the brackets refer to the number of suppressed grid cells for each grid cell size. There is one value more than in the figure above.
As the value of \(suppresslim\) provided to the function increases, the number of large grid cells decreases. For example, the largest grid cell for is 40 km, whereas 20 km is the largest for . At the same time, the number of smaller grid cells increases considerably. There are 1774 grid cells of 5 km for , whereas there are 1144 for . The number of large grid cells (20 and 40 km) go down from 29 and 8, respectively, to 7 and 0. However, increasing values of suppresslim also leads to suppression of an increasing number of grid cells, in most cases small ones. The total number of suppressed grid cells are 21, 51, 97 and 174, respectively, for the different values in the table. If we look at the percentage of farms and UAA that are not part of the final map, this ranges from 0.3% - 3.7% of the total number of farms, and 0.001% - 2.5% of the total UAA, with the highest values for .
# create lists of the non post-processed and the post-processed results
hnPro = list(himg11, himg12, himg13, himg14, himg15)
hpro = list(himg111, himg121, himg131, himg141, himg151)
# Get the number of grid cells for each of them
d1 = unlist(lapply(hnPro, FUN = function(x) dim(x)[1]))
d2 = unlist(lapply(hpro, FUN = function(x) sum(is.na(x$UAA))))
# Create tables of resolutions for each suppresslim-value separately for the two sets of results
r1s = lapply(hnPro, FUN = function(x) as.data.frame(table(x$res)))
r2s = lapply(hpro, FUN = function(x) as.data.frame(table(x$res[!is.na(x$count)])))
# Join the tables above to one table for each set of results
r11s = r1s[[1]]
r22s = r2s[[1]]
for (ii in 2:length(r1s)) {
r11s = r11s %>% left_join(r1s[[ii]], by = "Var1")
r22s = r22s %>% left_join(r2s[[ii]], by = "Var1")
}
r11s[is.na(r11s)] = 0
r22s[is.na(r22s)] = 0
slim = c(0, 0.02, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2)
slims = paste0("sl_", slim)
names(r11s) = names(r22s) = c("res", slims)
r11s$res = as.numeric(as.character(r11s$res))/1000
r22s$res = as.numeric(as.character(r22s$res))/1000
# difference between them
rdiff = data.frame(r11s$res, r11s[, 2:dim(r11s)[2]]-r22s[, 2:dim(r11s)[2]])
# Creating latex table output
rnew = r11s
for (icol in 2:6) {
irows = dim(r11s)[1]
spaces = ifelse(rdiff[,icol] >= 10, rep(" ",irows ), rep("\\hskip 10pt ", irows))
rnew[, icol] = paste0(r11s[,icol], spaces, "(", rdiff[, icol], ")")
}
lnew = rnew %>% kbl(caption=“Distribution of grid cell sizes for different values of suppresslim with the number of suppressed grid cells in brackets”, format=“latex”, col.names = c(“Resolution (km)”, slim), align=“r”, escape = F) %>% kable_minimal(full_width = F, html_font = “Source Sans Pro”) lnew
In this example, we demonstrate the importance of the reliability checks when gridding survey data as opposed to census data. The reliability check of the estimates does not have an impact on the gridded census data as this covers the entire population. However, this is not the case for the agricultural survey data, which is usually collected in a stratified approach (where the selection depends on a set of criteria that might include geographic location, farm size, economic size, crop types, etc). For each stratum, the surveyed holdings will have a weight assigned depending on the subsampling rate of that stratum. In this case, it is the weighted number of holdings and the weighted values that must pass the confidentiality rules. If a record has a high weight (for example, above 10), the confidentiality rules are immediately met for any grid cell with this record, but the value is not reliable, as it is only based on a single observation. A grid cell estimate can be reliable with considerably less than 10 records, but no fixed limit can be given as this also depends on the population size and the variability within the recorded values.
The figure shows four maps of gridded synthetic agricultural survey data from Denmark, a subset of the data set above. In the top panels of the figure, the reliability has not been taken into account, whereas this procedure has been done for the data shown in the bottom panels. The panels to the left show the number of records (the actual number of farms surveyed) whereas the panels to the right show the number of farms according to the survey weights. The tiny grid cells that contain just a few holdings with large enough weights to pass the confidentiality rules have mostly disappeared, producing a smoother and more realistic map. The result is considerably fewer grid cells, based on more records. Only 6 grid cells have less than 10 records, with 3 records as the fewest. Note that the reliability check is integrated into the iterative process that produces the multi-resolution grid, but because it is a computationally intensive process, it is not applied by default.
# Create grids from the sample data, with and without checking the reliability
# of the grids
himg4 = multiResGrid(ffl, vars = c("UAA"), weights = "EXT_MODULE", ifg = ffg,
strat = "STRA_ID_CORE", checkReliability = FALSE)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2034 ; removed: 8185 ; added: 1738 ; confidential: 272"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 1190 ; removed: 1180 ; added: 336 ; confidential: 36"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 1069 ; removed: 157 ; added: 36 ; confidential: 5"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 1032 ; removed: 43 ; added: 6 ; confidential: 0"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 1032 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 0"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 1032 ; removed: 0 ; added: 0 ; confidential: 0"
himg5 = multiResGrid(ffl, vars = c("UAA"), weights = "EXT_MODULE", ifg = ffg,
strat = "STRA_ID_CORE", checkReliability = TRUE, reliabilitySplit = 15)
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2033 ; removed: 8187 ; added: 1739 ; confidential: 287"
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> Warning in FUN(newX[, i], ...): no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 634 ; removed: 1951 ; added: 552 ; confidential: 50"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 314 ; removed: 445 ; added: 125 ; confidential: 13"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 259 ; removed: 76 ; added: 21 ; confidential: 1"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 257 ; removed: 3 ; added: 1 ; confidential: 1"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 242 ; removed: 16 ; added: 1 ; confidential: 0"
himg4 = himg4[himg4$weight1 > 0,]
himg04 = st_intersection(dkb, himg4)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
atlims1 = range(c(himg4$weight1, himg5$weight1, himg4$count, himg5$count), na.rm = TRUE)
g1 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg04, aes(fill = weight1), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10", limits = atlims1, na.value = "red") +
scale_color_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10", limits = atlims1, na.value = "red") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
ggtitle("Farms without validity check") +
theme_bw()
himg05 = st_intersection(dkb, himg5)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
g2 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg05, aes(fill = weight1), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10", limits = atlims1, na.value = "red") +
scale_color_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10", limits = atlims1, na.value = "red") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
ggtitle("Farms with validity check") +
theme_bw()
atlims11 = range(c(himg4$count, himg5$count))
g01 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg04, aes(fill = count), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10", limits = atlims1, na.value="red") +
scale_color_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10", limits = atlims1, na.value = "red") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
ggtitle("Records without validity check") +
theme_bw()
g02 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg05, aes(fill = count), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10", limits = atlims1, na.value="red") +
scale_color_viridis( name = "number of farms", trans = "log10", limits = atlims1, na.value="red") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
ggtitle("Records with validity check") +
theme_bw()
print(g01 + g1 + g02 + g2 + plot_layout(guides = "collect"))
#> Warning in scale_fill_gradientn(colours = viridisLite::viridis(256, alpha, : log-10 transformation introduced infinite values.
#> Error in seq.default(min, max, by = by): 'from' must be a finite number
It is only possible to make ratios if the maps have the same resolution. The multiResGrid function accepts a vector of variable names, and will ensure that the confidentiality rules are respected for all variables for each grid cell. A ratio can therefore be easily produced as shown in the code chunk below.
The figure shows the gridded total UAA and gridded organic UAA in the upper panels,
together with the gridded organic share in the lower panel. We can see that the
grid cells are the same for both total UAA and organic UAA individually.
To produce the ratio or the share of organic UAA, the gridding procedure was done
with , which resulted in the suppression of two grid cells
in the southern part of Denmark and on the island to the east. Using the synthetic
data, we can see that the concentration of organic farming is higher in
the south of the country, although this pattern may differ when actual data from
the agricultural census are used. Note that there is also the function
that can be used if the numerator grid
# Create joint multi-resolution grid for UAA and organic UAA, and apply suppresslim to avoid unnecessary aggregation
himg3 = multiResGrid(ifl3, vars = c("UAA", "UAAXK0000_ORG"), ifg = ifg, suppresslim = 0.05)
#> [1] "ires 2 5000 #himg-cells: 2179 ; removed: 23704 ; added: 2107 ; confidential: 72"
#> [1] "ires 3 10000 #himg-cells: 636 ; removed: 2126 ; added: 583 ; confidential: 48"
#> [1] "ires 4 20000 #himg-cells: 196 ; removed: 607 ; added: 167 ; confidential: 19"
#> [1] "ires 5 40000 #himg-cells: 132 ; removed: 92 ; added: 28 ; confidential: 11"
#> [1] "ires 6 80000 #himg-cells: 119 ; removed: 19 ; added: 6 ; confidential: 8"
#> [1] "ires 7 160000 #himg-cells: 108 ; removed: 13 ; added: 2 ; confidential: 6"
# Create the ratio, and clip to coastline
himg3$ratio = himg3$UAAXK0000_ORG/himg3$UAA
himg03 = st_intersection(dkb, himg3)
#> Warning: attribute variables are assumed to be spatially constant throughout all geometries
st_agr(himg03) = "constant"
lims = c(min(himg03$UAAXK0000_ORG[himg03$UAAXK0000_ORG > 0], na.rm = TRUE), max(himg03$UAA, na.rm = TRUE))
g131 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg03, aes(fill = UAA), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "UAA (ha)", trans = "log10", limits = lims) +
scale_color_viridis( name = "UAA (ha)", trans = "log10", limits = lims) +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
ggtitle("UAA") +
theme_bw()
g132 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg03[himg03$UAAXK0000_ORG > 0,], aes(fill = UAAXK0000_ORG), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "UAA (ha)", trans = "log10", limits = lims) +
# scale_color_viridis( name = "UAA (ha)", trans = "log10", limits = lims) +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
ggtitle("UAA organic") +
theme_bw()
g133 = ggplot() + geom_sf(data = himg03, aes(fill = ratio), lwd = 0) +
scale_fill_viridis( name = "Organic share") +
scale_color_viridis( name = "Organic share") +
geom_sf(data = dkb, fill = NA, colour='black', lwd = 1) +
ggtitle("Organic share") +
theme_bw()
g131 + g132 + plot_layout(guides = "collect") + plot_spacer() + g133
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.