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| Main Author: | |
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| Format: | Preprint |
| Published: |
2026
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.00874 |
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Table of Contents:
- Comparing multivariate yield quality distributions across spatially referenced agricultural fields is complicated by two pervasive features: non-normality and spatial autocorrelation. Classical procedures such as ANOVA, MANOVA, and standard rank tests assume independence and therefore exhibit severe Type I error inflation when spatial dependence is present. We propose a nonparametric spatial Cramer-von Mises-type test based on kernel-smoothed empirical copula processes constructed from pooled componentwise ranks. Spatial kernel weights account explicitly for local dependence, while the rank transformation removes sensitivity to marginal distributional form. Under fixed-domain infill asymptotics and polynomial alpha-mixing conditions, we establish weak convergence of the smoothed empirical copula process to a mean-zero Gaussian limit and show that the resulting quadratic test statistic converges to a weighted sum of chi-squared random variables restricted to the K-1-dimensional contrast subspace. Practical inference is obtained through a Satterthwaite approximation calibrated using the exact discrete spatial covariance operator under a Gaussian copula model. Monte Carlo experiments with bivariate log-normal spatial data demonstrate that the proposed test maintains nominal size across varying strengths of spatial dependence, in contrast to classical parametric and non-spatial rank-based methods, which become severely anti-conservative. The procedure provides a theoretically justified and computationally tractable framework for comparing multivariate spatial yield distributions in precision agriculture and related applied settings.