
sftrack provides modern classes for tracking and
movement data, relying on sf spatial
infrastructure. Tracking data are made of tracks, i.e. series of
locations with at least 2-dimensional spatial coordinates (x,y), a time
index (t), and individual identification (id) of the object being
monitored; movement data are made of trajectories, i.e. the line
representation of the path, composed by steps (the straight-line
segments connecting successive locations). sftrack is
designed to handle movement of both living organisms and inanimate
objects.
The development and design of the sftrack package follow
three simple principles:
sftrack is designed to
be as easy to use as familiar R structures like data.frames
and sf objects. sftrack objects are tidy, and
follow the idea that rows are records (locations) and columns are
variable (following the semantics of tracking and movement data);sftrack is
meant first for users to use on their data, but also directly designed
to address other developers’ needs for their own tracking packages.To get started, install sftrack directly from CRAN, or
check the development version on GitHub with the remotes
package:
# To install the stable version from CRAN
install.packages("sftrack")
# To install the dev version with built vignettes
remotes::install_github("mablab/sftrack", ref = "dev", build_vignettes = TRUE)The dev version is updated much more frequently and
should pass the majority of CRAN checks. However, if you install the
dev version, understand it may still contain some bugs.
Please submit any bug you find to the issues page.
sftrack and sftraj
objectsThe easiest way to create an sftrack object is to start
from a data.frame with all information as columns,
typically the raw data extracted from telemetry devices:
library("sftrack")
data(raccoon)
raccoon$timestamp <- as.POSIXct(as.POSIXlt(raccoon$timestamp, tz = "EST5EDT"))
head(raccoon)
#> animal_id latitude longitude timestamp height hdop vdop fix
#> 1 TTP-058 NA NA 2019-01-18 19:02:30 NA 0.0 0.0 NO
#> 2 TTP-058 26.06945 -80.27906 2019-01-18 20:02:30 7 6.2 3.2 2D
#> 3 TTP-058 NA NA 2019-01-18 21:02:30 NA 0.0 0.0 NO
#> 4 TTP-058 NA NA 2019-01-18 22:02:30 NA 0.0 0.0 NO
#> 5 TTP-058 26.06769 -80.27431 2019-01-18 23:02:30 858 5.1 3.2 2D
#> 6 TTP-058 26.06867 -80.27930 2019-01-19 00:02:30 350 1.9 3.2 3DIn order to convert your raw data into an sftrack
object, use the function as_sftrack(). The function
requires the three main elements of tracking data:
x and
y axes (can be UTM, lat/long, etc., with projection
provided in crs);POSIXct (or as
integer);my_sftrack <- as_sftrack(
data = raccoon,
coords = c("longitude","latitude"),
time = "timestamp",
group = "animal_id",
crs = 4326)
head(my_sftrack)
#> Sftrack with 6 features and 10 fields (3 empty geometries)
#> Geometry : "geometry" (XY, crs: WGS 84)
#> Timestamp : "timestamp" (POSIXct in EST5EDT)
#> Groupings : "sft_group" (*id*)
#> -------------------------------
#> animal_id latitude longitude timestamp height hdop vdop fix
#> 1 TTP-058 NA NA 2019-01-18 19:02:30 NA 0.0 0.0 NO
#> 2 TTP-058 26.06945 -80.27906 2019-01-18 20:02:30 7 6.2 3.2 2D
#> 3 TTP-058 NA NA 2019-01-18 21:02:30 NA 0.0 0.0 NO
#> 4 TTP-058 NA NA 2019-01-18 22:02:30 NA 0.0 0.0 NO
#> 5 TTP-058 26.06769 -80.27431 2019-01-18 23:02:30 858 5.1 3.2 2D
#> 6 TTP-058 26.06867 -80.27930 2019-01-19 00:02:30 350 1.9 3.2 3D
#> sft_group geometry
#> 1 (id: TTP-058) POINT EMPTY
#> 2 (id: TTP-058) POINT (-80.27906 26.06945)
#> 3 (id: TTP-058) POINT EMPTY
#> 4 (id: TTP-058) POINT EMPTY
#> 5 (id: TTP-058) POINT (-80.27431 26.06769)
#> 6 (id: TTP-058) POINT (-80.2793 26.06867)summary_sftrack(my_sftrack)
#> group points NAs begin_time end_time length_m
#> 1 TTP-041 223 0 2019-01-18 19:02:30 2019-02-01 18:02:07 10212.55
#> 2 TTP-058 222 0 2019-01-18 19:02:30 2019-02-01 18:02:30 26893.27While sftrack objects contain tracking data (locations),
they can easily be converted to movement data (with a step model
instead) with as_sftraj:
my_sftraj <- as_sftraj(my_sftrack)
head(my_sftraj)
#> Sftraj with 6 features and 10 fields (3 empty geometries)
#> Geometry : "geometry" (XY, crs: WGS 84)
#> Timestamp : "timestamp" (POSIXct in EST5EDT)
#> Grouping : "sft_group" (*id*)
#> -------------------------------
#> animal_id latitude longitude timestamp height hdop vdop fix
#> 1 TTP-058 NA NA 2019-01-18 19:02:30 NA 0.0 0.0 NO
#> 2 TTP-058 26.06945 -80.27906 2019-01-18 20:02:30 7 6.2 3.2 2D
#> 3 TTP-058 NA NA 2019-01-18 21:02:30 NA 0.0 0.0 NO
#> 4 TTP-058 NA NA 2019-01-18 22:02:30 NA 0.0 0.0 NO
#> 5 TTP-058 26.06769 -80.27431 2019-01-18 23:02:30 858 5.1 3.2 2D
#> 6 TTP-058 26.06867 -80.27930 2019-01-19 00:02:30 350 1.9 3.2 3D
#> sft_group geometry
#> 1 (id: TTP-058) POINT EMPTY
#> 2 (id: TTP-058) POINT (-80.27906 26.06945)
#> 3 (id: TTP-058) POINT EMPTY
#> 4 (id: TTP-058) POINT EMPTY
#> 5 (id: TTP-058) LINESTRING (-80.27431 26.06...
#> 6 (id: TTP-058) LINESTRING (-80.2793 26.068...Both objects can easily be plotted with base R plot functions, which
highlights the fundamental difference between tracking and movement data
(sftrack on the left; sftraj on the
right):
plot(my_sftrack, main = "Tracking data (locations)")
plot(my_sftraj, main = "Movement data (steps)")

move::Move and trackeR::trackeRdata,
integrated into as_sftrack;ggplot2);While the foundations of the package are now pretty solid, we are
still dealing with open questions about several aspects of the package,
including the names of sftrack variables (e.g. coordinates,
timestamps, id and error), the structure of the grouping factor, or the
structure of the error term.
If you have strong opinions or simply want to help on the technical side, we invite you to comment on those open issues here.
We also need to precisely understand what is expected from such a
package. The idea here is to collect all possible use cases for a
trajectory object in R. We know they are multiple, and will contribute
our own use cases — however, we want sftrack to be as
useful as possible, and to act as a center piece for movement in R, so
we need you to tell us how you would use it. In other words, we
want to understand what you expect from such a package, as a user or as
a developer. For this, we ask you to fill out special issues in
the GitHub tracker of the package, following the ‘Use
case’ template.
Use cases do not need to be very complicated, but need to present a specific use in human terms, the technical requirements associated to it, and the input and output of the use case. Such use case could look like this:
[Use case] Amazing plot for trajectory
Use case:
Plot a trajectory using my
special_trajplotfunction, which shows [something amazing].Requirements:
spatial coordinates (x,y) as geographic coordinates with projection information
a time (t) as POSIXt object, ordered in time
information that identifies individuals (e.g. animal) for each location
data associated to each location directly accessible
Input: a
sftrackobjectOutput: a plot with [something amazing] about the trajectory
Additional information: See my
special_trajplotfunction here [with link].
Another example could be like this:
[Use case] Fill in missing locations in a sequence
Use case: Fill in the missing locations of a trajectory that contains spatial or temporal gaps. (for instance coming from GPS with failed fixes); In other words add in the missing values of a trajectory, i.e. timestamps with no geographic coordinates.
Requirements:
a time (t) as POSIXt object, ordered in time
information that identifies sequences of locations (optional, if several sequences), which could be different circuits of one individual, or different individuals, etc.
sftrackshould be capable of handling/storing missing valuesInput: a
sftrackobjectOutput: a
sftrackobject with additional timestamps for gaps (but otherwise identical in every way to the originalsftrack)Additional information: See
adehabitatLT::setNA, which does exactly that onltrajobjects.