: This specifies the Method or Basis . It suggests the shape is being approximated using a Hermite-based expansion rather than standard linear or Fourier descriptors. 2 : This likely denotes the Degree or Dimension . It could represent the second-order Hermite polynomial ( H2cap H sub 2
In a practical write-up, Shapes.Hermi.2.var would be used to quantify the of a sample. Shapes.Hermi.2.var
: If you are using Hermite descriptors to "smooth" a biological shape (like a leaf or a bone), the .2.var would tell you how much the second-order curvature varies across your specimens. : This specifies the Method or Basis
If this variable follows standard object-oriented or data-frame naming conventions (common in languages like R or S-Plus), it can be broken down as follows: It could represent the second-order Hermite polynomial (
If this is part of a specific proprietary script or a niche academic package (such as those used in paleoanthropology or cardiology), it likely serves as the in a shape-space model.
While the specific identifier Shapes.Hermi.2.var does not appear as a standard, widely documented variable in mainstream programming libraries (like R's shapes package or Python’s scipy ), its syntax strongly suggests a specific application in or Geometric Morphometrics , likely involving Hermite polynomials or Hermite splines .