This vignette tracks the legacy nb vignette, which was based on part of the first (2008) edition of ASDAR. It adds hints to the code in the nb vignette to use the sf vector representation instead of the sp vector representation to create neighbour objects. .
This is a summary of the results below:
In general, if you need to reproduce results from using
"Spatial"
objects in spdep, coerce sf
objects to sp objects before constructing neighbour objects
(particularly if polygon centroids are used for point
representation).
However, for new work, you should use "sf"
objects
read in using sf.
From spdep 1.1-7, a number of steps have been taken to choose more efficient approaches especially for larger data sets, using functions in sf and the approximate nearest neighbour (ANN) implementation in dbscan rather than RANN.
We’ll use the whole NY 8 county set of boundaries, as they challenge
the implementations more than just the Syracuse subset. The description
of the input geometries from ADSAR is: New York leukemia: used and
documented extensively in Waller and Gotway (2004) and with data
formerly made available in Chap. 9 of
http://web1.sph.emory.edu/users/lwaller/ch9index.htm
; the
data import process is described in the help file of NY_data in
spData; geometries downloaded from the CIESIN server
formerly at
sedac.ciesin.columbia.edu/data/set/acrp-boundary-1992/data-download, now
possibly https://earthdata.nasa.gov/data/catalog/sedac-ciesin-sedac-acrp-1992-bf-1.00,
file /pub/census/usa/tiger/ny/bna_st/t8_36.zip, and extensively edited;
a zip archive NY_data.zip of shapefiles and a GAL format neighbours list
is on the book website. Further, the zipfile is now at a new location
requiring login. The object listw_NY is directly imported from
nyadjwts.dbf on the Waller & Gotway (2004) chapter 9 website.
The version of the New York 8 counties geometries used in ASDAR and included as a shapefile in spdep was converted from the original BNA file using an external utility program to convert to MapInfo format and converted on from there using GDAL 1.4.1 (the OGR BNA driver was not then available; it entered OGR at 1.5.0, release at the end of 2007), and contains invalid geometries. What was found in mid-2007 was that included villages were in/excluded by in-out umbilical cords to the boundary of the enclosing tract, when the underlying BNA file was first converted to MapInfo (holes could not exist then).
Here we will use a GPKG file created as follows (rgdal could also be used with the same output; GDAL prior to GDAL 3.3 built with GEOS, so the BNA vector driver will use geometry tests: The BNA driver supports reading of polygons with holes or lakes. It determines what is a hole or a lake only from geometrical analysis (inclusion, non-intersection tests) and ignores completely the notion of polygon winding (whether the polygon edges are described clockwise or counter-clockwise). GDAL must be built with GEOS enabled to make geometry test work.):
library(sf)
sf_bna <- st_read("t8_36.bna", stringsAsFactors=FALSE)
table(st_is_valid(sf_bna))
sf_bna$AREAKEY <- gsub("\\.", "", sf_bna$Primary.ID)
data(NY_data, package="spData")
key <- as.character(nydata$AREAKEY)
sf_bna1 <- sf_bna[match(key, sf_bna$AREAKEY), c("AREAKEY")]
sf_bna2 <- merge(sf_bna1, nydata, by="AREAKEY")
sf_bna2_utm18 <- st_transform(sf_bna2, "+proj=utm +zone=18 +datum=NAD27")
st_write(sf_bna2_utm18, "NY8_bna_utm18.gpkg")
Since the spdep package was created, spatial
weights objects have been constructed as lists with three
components and a few attributes, in old-style class listw
objects. The first component of a listw
object is an
nb
object, a list of n
integer vectors, with
at least a character vector region.id
attribute with
n
unique values (like the row.names
of a
data.frame
object); n
is the number of spatial
entities. Component i
of this list contains the integer
identifiers of the neighbours of i
as a sorted vector with
no duplication and values in 1:n
; if i
has no
neighbours, the component is a vector of length 1
with
value 0L
. The nb
object may contain an
attribute indicating whether it is symmetric or not, that is whether
i
is a neighbour of j
implies that
j
is a neighbour of i
. Some neighbour
definitions are symmetric by construction, such as contiguities or
distance thresholds, others are asymmetric, such as
k
-nearest neighbours. The nb
object
redundantly stores both i
-j
and
j
-i
links.
The second component of a listw
object is a list of
n
numeric vectors, each of the same length as the
corresponding non-zero vectors in the nb
object. These give
the values of the spatial weights for each i
-j
neighbour pair. It is often the case that while the neighbours are
symmetric by construction, the weights are not, as for example when
weights are row-standardised by dividing each row of input
weights by the count of neighbours or cardinality of the neighbour set
of i
. In the nb2listw
function, it is also
possible to pass through general weights, such as inverse distances,
shares of boundary lengths and so on.
The third component of a listw
object records the
style
of the weights as a character code, with
"B"
for binary weights taking values zero or one (only one
is recorded), "W"
for row-standardised weights, and so on.
In order to subset listw
objects, knowledge of the
style
may be necessary.
First some housekeeping and setup to permit this vignette to be built when packages are missing or out-of-date:
if (!suppressPackageStartupMessages(require(sf, quietly=TRUE))) {
message("install the sf package")
dothis <- FALSE
}
if (dothis) sf_extSoftVersion()
## GEOS GDAL proj.4 GDAL_with_GEOS USE_PROJ_H PROJ
## "3.13.0" "3.10.0" "9.5.1" "true" "true" "9.5.1"
Let us read the GPKG file with valid geometries in to ‘sf’ and ‘sp’ objects:
NY8_sf <- st_read(system.file("shapes/NY8_bna_utm18.gpkg", package="spData"), quiet=TRUE)
table(st_is_valid(NY8_sf))
##
## TRUE
## 281
Here we first generate a queen contiguity nb object using the legacy spdep approach. This first either uses a pre-computed list of vectors of probable neighbours or finds intersecting bounding boxes internally. Then the points on the boundaries of each set of polygons making up an observation are checked for a distance less than snap to any of the points of the set of polygons making up an observation included in the set of candidate neighbours. Because contiguity is symmetric, only i to j contiguities are tested. A queen contiguity is found as soon as one point matches, a rook contiguity as soon as two points match:
suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(spdep))
reps <- 10
eps <- sqrt(.Machine$double.eps)
system.time(for(i in 1:reps) NY8_sf_1_nb <- poly2nb(NY8_sf, queen=TRUE, snap=eps))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.0981 0.0026 0.1009
Using spatial indices to check intersection of polygons is much
faster than the legacy method in poly2nb. From spdep
1.1-7, use is made of GEOS through sf to find candidate
neighbours when foundInBox=NULL
, the default value. Because
contiguity is symmetric by definition, foundInBox=
only
requires intersections for higher indices, leading to a slight overhead
to remove duplicates, as st_intersects()
reports both
i j
ans j i
relationships. As
st_intersects()
does not report whether neighbours are
queen
or rook
, a further step is needed to
distinguish the two cases.
NY8_sf_1_nb
## Neighbour list object:
## Number of regions: 281
## Number of nonzero links: 1632
## Percentage nonzero weights: 2.066843
## Average number of links: 5.807829
spdep::poly2nb uses two heuristics, first to find candidate
neighbours from intersecting polygons (st_intersects()
),
and second to use the symmetry of the relationship to halve the number
of remaining tests. This means that performance is linear in n, but with
overhead for identifying candidates, and back-filling symmetric
neighbours. Further, spdep::poly2nb()
stops searching for
queen contiguity as soon as the first neighbour point is found within
snap distance (if not identical, which is tested first); a second
neighbour point indicates rook contiguities. For details of alternatives
for spherical geometries, see section @ref(spher-poly2nb) below.
Next, we explore a further possible source of differences in
neighbour object reproduction, using the original version of the tract
boundaries used in ASDAR, but with some invalid geometries as mentioned
earlier (NY8_utm18.gpkg
was created from the original ESRI
Shapefile used in ASDAR):
if (packageVersion("spData") >= "2.3.2") {
NY8_sf_old <- sf::st_read(system.file("shapes/NY8_utm18.gpkg", package="spData"))
} else {
NY8_sf_old <- sf::st_read(system.file("shapes/NY8_utm18.shp", package="spData"))
}
## Reading layer `NY8_utm18' from data source
## `/home/rsb/lib/r_libs/spData/shapes/NY8_utm18.gpkg' using driver `GPKG'
## Simple feature collection with 281 features and 17 fields
## Geometry type: POLYGON
## Dimension: XY
## Bounding box: xmin: 358241.9 ymin: 4649755 xmax: 480393.1 ymax: 4808545
## Projected CRS: WGS 84 / UTM zone 18N
table(st_is_valid(NY8_sf_old))
##
## FALSE TRUE
## 5 276
We can see that there are a number of differences between the neighbour sets derived from the fully valid geometries and the older partly invalid set:
try(NY8_sf_old_1_nb <- poly2nb(NY8_sf_old), silent = TRUE)
all.equal(NY8_sf_old_1_nb, NY8_sf_1_nb, check.attributes=FALSE)
## [1] "Component 57: Numeric: lengths (4, 5) differ"
## [2] "Component 58: Numeric: lengths (5, 6) differ"
## [3] "Component 66: Numeric: lengths (7, 11) differ"
## [4] "Component 73: Numeric: lengths (4, 5) differ"
## [5] "Component 260: Numeric: lengths (8, 9) differ"
Using st_make_valid()
to make the geometries valid:
NY8_sf_old_val <- st_make_valid(NY8_sf_old, dist=0)
table(st_is_valid(NY8_sf_old_val))
##
## TRUE
## 281
we also see that the geometry type of the geometry column changes:
class(st_geometry(NY8_sf_old))
## [1] "sfc_POLYGON" "sfc"
class(st_geometry(NY8_sf_old_val))
## [1] "sfc_GEOMETRY" "sfc"
and checking the "sfg"
objects, two now have objects of
different topological dimensions.
table(sapply(st_geometry(NY8_sf_old_val), function(x) class(x)[[2]]))
##
## MULTIPOLYGON POLYGON
## 3 278
This can be remedied using st_collection_extract()
to
get the polygon objects:
NY8_sf_old_val <- st_collection_extract(NY8_sf_old_val, "POLYGON")
table(sapply(st_geometry(NY8_sf_old_val), function(x) class(x)[[2]]))
##
## MULTIPOLYGON
## 281
However, in making the geometries valid, we change the geometries, so the new sets of neighbours still differ from those made with the valid geometries in the same ways as before imposing validity:
try(NY8_sf_old_1_nb_val <- poly2nb(NY8_sf_old_val), silent = TRUE)
all.equal(NY8_sf_old_1_nb_val, NY8_sf_1_nb, check.attributes=FALSE)
## [1] "Component 57: Numeric: lengths (4, 5) differ"
## [2] "Component 58: Numeric: lengths (5, 6) differ"
## [3] "Component 66: Numeric: lengths (7, 11) differ"
## [4] "Component 73: Numeric: lengths (4, 5) differ"
## [5] "Component 260: Numeric: lengths (8, 9) differ"
The neighbour sets are the same for the old boundaries with or without imposing validity:
all.equal(NY8_sf_old_1_nb_val, NY8_sf_old_1_nb, check.attributes=FALSE)
## [1] TRUE
knearneigh()
and dnearneigh()
require point
support, so decisions must be taken about how to place the point in the
areal object. We can use st_centroid()
to get the
centroids, using the of_largest_polygon=TRUE
argument to
make sure that the centroid is that of the largest polygon id the
observation is made up of more than one external ring:
NY8_ct_sf <- st_centroid(st_geometry(NY8_sf), of_largest_polygon=TRUE)
or st_point_on_surface()
which guarantees that the point
will fall on the surface of a member polygon:
NY8_pos_sf <- st_point_on_surface(st_geometry(NY8_sf))
or indeed taking the centre of the largest inscribed circle (the function returns a radius line segment, so we choose the central point, not the point on the circle):
if (unname(sf_extSoftVersion()["GEOS"] >= "3.9.0"))
NY8_cic_sf <- st_cast(st_inscribed_circle(st_geometry(NY8_sf), nQuadSegs=0), "POINT")[(1:(2*nrow(NY8_sf)) %% 2) != 0]
We need to check whether coordinates are planar or not:
st_is_longlat(NY8_ct_sf)
## [1] FALSE
From this, we can check the graph-based neighbours (planar coordinates only):
suppressPackageStartupMessages(require(deldir))
NY84_nb <- tri2nb(NY8_ct_sf)
if (require(dbscan, quietly=TRUE)) {
NY85_nb <- graph2nb(soi.graph(NY84_nb, NY8_ct_sf))
} else NY85_nb <- NULL
## Warning in graph2nb(soi.graph(NY84_nb, NY8_ct_sf)): neighbour object has 2 sub-graphs
NY86_nb <- graph2nb(gabrielneigh(NY8_ct_sf))
NY87_nb <- graph2nb(relativeneigh(NY8_ct_sf))
K-nearest neighbours use the coordinate matrices, and can handle
Great Circle distances, but this is not demonstrated here, as the data
set used is planar, in which case dbscan::kNN()
in 2D or 3D
building a kd-tree is used:
system.time(for (i in 1:reps) suppressWarnings(NY88_nb_sf <- knn2nb(knearneigh(NY8_ct_sf, k=1))))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.0226 0.0010 0.0236
Legacy code may be used omitting the kd-tree:
system.time(for (i in 1:reps) suppressWarnings(NY89_nb_sf <- knn2nb(knearneigh(NY8_ct_sf, k=1, use_kd_tree=FALSE))))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.0230 0.0015 0.0246
Distance neighbours need a threshold - nbdists
shows the
maximum distance to first nearest neighbour:
dsts <- unlist(nbdists(NY88_nb_sf, NY8_ct_sf))
summary(dsts)
## Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max.
## 82.85 912.85 1801.11 3441.04 4461.26 17033.11
max_1nn <- max(dsts)
dnearneigh
can also handle Great Circle distances, but
this is not demonstrated here, as the data set used is planar:
system.time(for (i in 1:reps) suppressWarnings(NY810_nb <- dnearneigh(NY8_ct_sf, d1=0, d2=0.75*max_1nn)))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.0587 0.0015 0.0604
By default, the function uses dbscan::frNN()
to build a
kd-tree in 2D or 3D which is then used to find distance neighbours. For
small n, the argument use_kd_tree=FALSE
may speed up
computation a little by reverting to legacy code not building a kd-tree
first, but in general the differences are so small that the user will
not notice:
system.time(for (i in 1:reps) suppressWarnings(NY811_nb <- dnearneigh(NY8_ct_sf, d1=0, d2=0.75*max_1nn, use_kd_tree=FALSE)))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.0448 0.0013 0.0462
Spherical point-based neighbours may be found using Great Circle distances. These have been used for many years, but the switch of sf 1.0-0 to use s2 by default has opened up new opportunities where spatial indexing on the sphere may help.
pts_ll <- st_transform(NY8_ct_sf, "OGC:CRS84")
st_is_longlat(pts_ll)
## [1] TRUE
If the input geometries are in geographical coordinates, and
sf_use_s2()
is TRUE
, knearneigh()
will use spatially indexed points and
s2::s2_closest_edges()
(see https://github.com/r-spatial/s2/issues/125#issuecomment-860107442)
(old_use_s2 <- sf_use_s2())
## [1] TRUE
and performs well with also with larger data sets:
sf_use_s2(TRUE)
system.time(for (i in 1:reps) pts_ll1_nb <- knn2nb(knearneigh(pts_ll, k=6)))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.0320 0.0001 0.0322
For this smaller data set, the legacy approach without spatial indexing is adequate, but slows down as the number of observations increases:
sf_use_s2(FALSE)
## Spherical geometry (s2) switched off
system.time(for (i in 1:reps) pts_ll2_nb <- knn2nb(knearneigh(pts_ll, k=6)))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.0273 0.0000 0.0274
The WGS84 ellipsoid Great Circle distances differ a very little from the s2 spherical distances, yielding output that here diverges for two tract centroids:
all.equal(pts_ll1_nb, pts_ll2_nb, check.attributes=FALSE)
## [1] "Component 52: Mean relative difference: 1.466667"
## [2] "Component 124: Mean relative difference: 0.0251046"
pts_ll1_nb[[52]]
## [1] 15 38 48 49 50 53
pts_ll2_nb[[52]]
## [1] 37 38 48 49 50 53
pts_ll1_nb[[124]]
## [1] 117 122 123 125 133 134
pts_ll2_nb[[124]]
## [1] 116 117 123 125 133 134
sf_use_s2(old_use_s2)
## Spherical geometry (s2) switched on
Distance neighbours are more problematic. While
nbdists()
works well with s2 spherical
coordinates, none of the tried adaptations for dnearneigh()
work adequately yet. An argument use_s2=
is set to TRUE if
s2 > 1.0-7, using
s2::s2_closest_edges()
or the legacy brute-force approach,
then only calculating distances from i
to j
and copying those to j
to i
through symmetry.
The distance metric is alway "km"
.
max_1nn_ll <- max(unlist(nbdists(knn2nb(knearneigh(pts_ll, k=1)), pts_ll)))
## Warning in knn2nb(knearneigh(pts_ll, k = 1)): neighbour object has 62 sub-graphs
args(dnearneigh)
## function (x, d1, d2, row.names = NULL, longlat = NULL, bounds = c("GE",
## "LE"), use_kd_tree = TRUE, symtest = FALSE, use_s2 = packageVersion("s2") >
## "1.0.7", k = 200, dwithin = TRUE)
## NULL
If we permit s2 methods to run, without other
arguments set, and s2 > 1.0-7,
s2::s2_dwithin_matrix()
is run:
if (packageVersion("s2") > "1.0.7") {
system.time(for (i in 1:(reps/5)) suppressWarnings(pts_ll3_nb <- dnearneigh(pts_ll, d1=0,
d2=0.75*max_1nn_ll)))/(reps/5)
}
## user system elapsed
## 0.0655 0.0000 0.0655
Alternatively, spherical distances can be used with
dwithin=FALSE
and s2::s2_closest_edges()
;
although running in similar time, s2::s2_closest_edges()
depends on the additional k=
argument, which, if mis-set,
may miss valid neighbours:
system.time(for (i in 1:(reps/5)) suppressWarnings(pts_ll5_nb <- dnearneigh(pts_ll, d1=0, d2=0.75*max_1nn_ll, dwithin=FALSE)))/(reps/5)
## user system elapsed
## 0.0525 0.0000 0.0525
if (packageVersion("s2") > "1.0.7") all.equal(pts_ll3_nb, pts_ll5_nb, check.attributes=FALSE)
## [1] TRUE
Using s2::s2_closest_edges()
respects
d1 > 0
without requiring a second pass in R, so is
faster than s2::s2_dwithin_matrix()
:
if (packageVersion("s2") > "1.0.7") {
system.time(for (i in 1:(reps/5)) suppressWarnings(pts_ll3a_nb <- dnearneigh(pts_ll, d1=5,
d2=0.75*max_1nn_ll, dwithin=FALSE)))/(reps/5)
}
## user system elapsed
## 0.0450 0.0000 0.0455
Using s2::s2_dwithin_matrix()
requires a second pass,
one for the lower bound, another for the upper bound, and a set
difference operation to find neighbours in the distance band:
if (packageVersion("s2") > "1.0.7") {
system.time(for (i in 1:(reps/5)) suppressWarnings(pts_ll5a_nb <- dnearneigh(pts_ll, d1=5,
d2=0.75*max_1nn_ll)))/(reps/5)
}
## user system elapsed
## 0.0865 0.0000 0.0865
if (packageVersion("s2") > "1.0.7") all.equal(pts_ll3a_nb, pts_ll5a_nb, check.attributes=FALSE)
## [1] TRUE
Setting use_s2=FALSE
falls back to the legacy version,
which uses symmetry to reduce time:
system.time(for (i in 1:reps) suppressWarnings(pts_ll6_nb <- dnearneigh(pts_ll, d1=0, d2=0.75*max_1nn_ll, use_s2=FALSE)))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.0363 0.0000 0.0364
Minor differences may occur between the legacy ellipsoid and s2 spherical approaches:
all.equal(pts_ll5_nb, pts_ll6_nb, check.attributes=FALSE)
## [1] "Component 20: Numeric: lengths (6, 5) differ"
## [2] "Component 28: Numeric: lengths (7, 6) differ"
## [3] "Component 112: Numeric: lengths (109, 108) differ"
## [4] "Component 116: Numeric: lengths (109, 108) differ"
## [5] "Component 122: Numeric: lengths (105, 106) differ"
## [6] "Component 123: Numeric: lengths (108, 107) differ"
## [7] "Component 130: Numeric: lengths (108, 109) differ"
## [8] "Component 134: Numeric: lengths (106, 105) differ"
## [9] "Component 158: Numeric: lengths (101, 102) differ"
## [10] "Component 165: Numeric: lengths (101, 102) differ"
## [11] "Component 168: Numeric: lengths (101, 102) differ"
## [12] "Component 179: Numeric: lengths (89, 90) differ"
## [13] "Component 180: Numeric: lengths (96, 97) differ"
## [14] "Component 188: Numeric: lengths (46, 47) differ"
## [15] "Component 189: Numeric: lengths (55, 56) differ"
## [16] "Component 196: Numeric: lengths (47, 46) differ"
## [17] "Component 210: Numeric: lengths (106, 104) differ"
## [18] "Component 226: Numeric: lengths (88, 87) differ"
## [19] "Component 229: Numeric: lengths (55, 53) differ"
## [20] "Component 235: Numeric: lengths (40, 39) differ"
## [21] "Component 237: Numeric: lengths (14, 15) differ"
## [22] "Component 245: Numeric: lengths (16, 15) differ"
system.time(for (i in 1:reps) suppressWarnings(pts_ll6a_nb <- dnearneigh(pts_ll, d1=5, d2=0.75*max_1nn_ll, use_s2=FALSE)))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.0288 0.0001 0.0290
if (packageVersion("s2") > "1.0.7") all.equal(pts_ll5a_nb, pts_ll6a_nb, check.attributes=FALSE)
## [1] "Component 20: Numeric: lengths (6, 5) differ"
## [2] "Component 28: Numeric: lengths (7, 6) differ"
## [3] "Component 112: Numeric: lengths (62, 61) differ"
## [4] "Component 113: Numeric: lengths (62, 63) differ"
## [5] "Component 116: Numeric: lengths (56, 55) differ"
## [6] "Component 119: Numeric: lengths (68, 69) differ"
## [7] "Component 122: Numeric: lengths (43, 44) differ"
## [8] "Component 123: Numeric: lengths (50, 49) differ"
## [9] "Component 128: Numeric: lengths (65, 64) differ"
## [10] "Component 130: Numeric: lengths (61, 63) differ"
## [11] "Component 132: Numeric: lengths (45, 46) differ"
## [12] "Component 134: Numeric: lengths (46, 45) differ"
## [13] "Component 136: Numeric: lengths (61, 62) differ"
## [14] "Component 147: Numeric: lengths (50, 51) differ"
## [15] "Component 154: Numeric: lengths (56, 57) differ"
## [16] "Component 158: Numeric: lengths (49, 50) differ"
## [17] "Component 165: Mean relative difference: 0.02823018"
## [18] "Component 168: Numeric: lengths (54, 56) differ"
## [19] "Component 179: Numeric: lengths (77, 78) differ"
## [20] "Component 180: Numeric: lengths (85, 86) differ"
## [21] "Component 188: Numeric: lengths (39, 40) differ"
## [22] "Component 189: Numeric: lengths (48, 49) differ"
## [23] "Component 196: Numeric: lengths (45, 44) differ"
## [24] "Component 210: Numeric: lengths (68, 66) differ"
## [25] "Component 226: Numeric: lengths (82, 81) differ"
## [26] "Component 229: Numeric: lengths (48, 46) differ"
## [27] "Component 235: Numeric: lengths (38, 37) differ"
## [28] "Component 237: Numeric: lengths (14, 15) differ"
## [29] "Component 245: Numeric: lengths (15, 14) differ"
It also turns out that when sf functions are used to find contiguity neighbours, s2 spatial indexing functionality is accessed in finding candidate neighbours in intersecting geometries.
NY8_sf_ll <- st_transform(NY8_sf, "OGC:CRS84")
st_is_longlat(NY8_sf_ll)
## [1] TRUE
The timings are a little slower when st_intersects()
hands off geometry predicates to s2_intersects_matrix()
,
but the results are the same, and because spatial indexing is used, this
scales well for larger data sets:
sf_use_s2(TRUE)
system.time(for (i in 1:reps) NY8_sf_1_nb_ll <- poly2nb(NY8_sf_ll, queen=TRUE, snap=eps))/reps
## user system elapsed
## 0.1543 0.0021 0.1570
all.equal(NY8_sf_1_nb, NY8_sf_1_nb_ll, check.attributes=FALSE)
## [1] TRUE