Interpreting Accuracy Values
Why Accuracy Matters
Accuracy values indicate the likelihood of an EBV changing (up or down) as more information on the animal becomes available.
Accuracy values account for the risk involved in making breeding decisions and provide buyers with the confidence that an EBV is accurate.
For any trait, the accuracy of the EBV is influenced by several factors:
- Amount of information for the animal
- Amount of information from relatives
- Heritability of the trait
- Amount of information from traits correlated with the trait of interest and the strength of these correlations
- Number of animals being compared (contemporaries).
Animals With High Accuracy Values
Selecting breeding stock with high accuracy values minimises risk in breeding decisions. Widely used stock sires and AI bulls with lots of recorded relatives will have high accuracy values. Fully recorded young bulls with lots of recorded relatives will have acceptable accuracy values.
Animals With Low Accuracy Values
An important feature of Signet’s breeding evaluations is that they are risk averse. EBVs based on limited amounts of information get adjusted back towards an average figure until more data becomes available.
Among those animals with low accuracy values there may be individuals with good genetics, but a lack of performance data means they are difficult to identify using EBVs
Summary
- Accuracy values indicate how similar an animal’s EBVs are to its true breeding value
- Breeders can use accuracy values to predict the likelihood that an animals EBVs will change over time