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Geostatistics

2014-7-3 00:38| view publisher: amanda| views: 1003| wiki(57883.com) 0 : 0

description: Geostatistics i s intimately related to interpolation methods, but extends far beyond simple interpolation problems. Geostatistical techniques rely on statistical model that is based on random functio ...
Geostatistics i s intimately related to interpolation methods, but extends far beyond simple interpolation problems. Geostatistical techniques rely on statistical model that is based on random function (or random variable) theory to model the uncertainty associated with spatial estimation and simulation.
A number of simpler interpolation methods/algorithms, such as inverse distance weighting, bilinear interpolation and nearest-neighbor interpolation, were already well known before geostatistics.[2] Geostatistics goes beyond the interpolation problem by considering the studied phenomenon at unknown locations as a set of correlated random variables.
Let Z(x) be the value of the variable of interest at a certain location x. This value is unknown (e.g. temperature, rainfall, piezometric level, geological facies, etc.). Although there exists a value at location x that could be measured, geostatistics considers this value as random since it was not measured, or has not been measured yet. However, the randomness of Z(x) is not complete, but defined by a cumulative distribution function (CDF) that depends on certain information that is known about the value Z(x):
F(\mathit{z}, \mathbf{x}) = \operatorname{Prob} \lbrace Z(\mathbf{x}) \leqslant \mathit{z} \mid \text{information} \rbrace .
Typically, if the value of Z is known at locations close to x (or in the neighborhood of x) one can constrain the CDF of Z(x) by this neighborhood: if a high spatial continuity is assumed, Z(x) can only have values similar to the ones found in the neighborhood. Conversely, in the absence of spatial continuity Z(x) can take any value. The spatial continuity of the random variables is described by a model of spatial continuity that can be either a parametric function in the case of variogram-based geostatistics, or have a non-parametric form when using other methods such as multiple-point simulation or pseudo-genetic techniques.
By applying a single spatial model on an entire domain, one makes the assumption that Z is a stationary process. It means that the same statistical properties are applicable on the entire domain. Several geostatistical methods provide ways of relaxing this stationarity assumption.
In this framework, one can distinguish two modeling goals:
Estimating the value for Z(x), typically by the expectation, the median or the mode of the CDF f(z,x). This is usually denoted as an estimation problem.
Sampling from the entire probability density function f(z,x) by actually considering each possible outcome of it at each location. This is generally done by creating several alternative maps of Z, called realizations. Consider a domain discretized in N grid nodes (or pixels). Each realization is a sample of the complete N-dimensional joint distribution function
F(\mathbf{z}, \mathbf{x}) = \operatorname{Prob} \lbrace Z(\mathbf{x}_1) \leqslant z_1, Z(\mathbf{x}_2) \leqslant z_2, ..., Z(\mathbf{x}_N) \leqslant z_N \rbrace .
In this approach, the presence of multiple solutions to the interpolation problem is acknowledged. Each realization is considered as a possible scenario of what the real variable could be. All associated workflows are then considering ensemble of realizations, and consequently ensemble of predictions that allow for probabilistic forecasting. Therefore, geostatistics is often used to generate or update spatial models when solving inverse problems.[3][4]
A number of methods exist for both geostatistical estimation and multiple realizations approaches. Several reference books provide a comprehensive overview of the discipline.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15]
Methods
Estimation
Kriging
Main article: Kriging
Kriging is a group of geostatistical techniques to interpolate the value of a random field (e.g., the elevation, z, of the landscape as a function of the geographic location) at an unobserved location from observations of its value at nearby locations.
Indicator kriging
Main article: Multiple-indicator kriging
Multiple-indicator kriging (MIK) is a recent advance on other techniques for mineral deposit modeling and resource block model estimation, such as ordinary kriging. Initially, MIK showed considerable promise as a new method that could more accurately estimate overall global mineral deposit concentrations or grades.
Simulation
Aggregation
Dissagregation
Turning bands
Cholesky Decomposition
Truncated Gaussian
Plurigaussian
Annealing
Spectral simulation
Sequential Indicator
Sequential Gaussian
Dead Leave
Transition probabilities
Markov chain geostatistics
Markov mesh models
Support vector machine
Boolean simulation
Genetic models
Pseudo-genetic models
Cellular automata
Multiple-Point Geostatistics (MPS)
Definitions and tools
Regionalized variable theory
Covariance function
Semi-variance
Variogram
Kriging
Range (geostatistics)
Sill (geostatistics)
Nugget effect
Training image
Main scientific journals related to geostatistics
Water Resources Research
Advances in Water Resources
Ground Water
Mathematical Geosciences
Computers & Geosciences
Computational Geosciences
J. Soil Science Society of America
Environmetrics
Remote Sensing of the Environment
Stochastic Environmental Research and Risk Assessment
Scientific organisations related to geostatistics
European Forum for GeoStatistics (see note below, under External Links)
GeoEnvia promotes the use of geostatistical methods in environmental applications

Geostatistics is a branch of statistics focusing on spatial or spatiotemporal datasets. Developed originally to predict probability distributions of ore grades for mining operations,[1] it is currently applied in diverse disciplines including petroleum geology, hydrogeology, hydrology, meteorology, oceanography, geochemistry, geometallurgy, geography, forestry, environmental control, landscape ecology, soil science, and agriculture (esp. in precision farming). Geostatistics is applied in varied branches of geography, particularly those involving the spread of diseases (epidemiology), the practice of commerce and military planning (logistics), and the development of efficient spatial networks. Geostatistical algorithms are incorporated in many places, including geographic information systems (GIS) and the R statistical environment.
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