Gaussian process for estimating parameters of partial differential equations and its application to the Richards equation

2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (8-9) ◽  
pp. 1629-1649
Author(s):  
Pankaj Kumar Rai ◽  
Shivam Tripathi
Author(s):  
Wei Xing ◽  
Akeel A. Shah ◽  
Prasanth B. Nair

In this paper, Isomap and kernel Isomap are used to dramatically reduce the dimensionality of the output space to efficiently construct a Gaussian process emulator of parametrized partial differential equations. The output space consists of spatial or spatio-temporal fields that are functions of multiple input variables. For such problems, standard multi-output Gaussian process emulation strategies are computationally impractical and/or make restrictive assumptions regarding the correlation structure. The method we develop can be applied without modification to any problem involving vector-valued targets and vector-valued inputs. It also extends a method based on linear dimensionality reduction to response surfaces that cannot be described accurately by a linear subspace of the high dimensional output space. Comparisons to the linear method are made through examples that clearly demonstrate the advantages of nonlinear dimensionality reduction.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kerstin Rau ◽  
Thomas Gläßle ◽  
Tobias Rentschler ◽  
Philipp Hennig ◽  
Thomas Scholten

<p>Recently, there is a growing interest for the soil variable soil thickness in the soil science, geoscience and ecology communities. More and more scientists assume that soil thickness summarizes many different characteristics of the site that are important for plant growth, soil biodiversity and climate change. As such soil thickness can be an indicator of properties like water holding capacity, nutrient cycling, carbon storage, habitat for soil fauna and overall soil quality and productivity. At the same time, it takes a lot of effort to measure soil thickness, especially for larger and heterogeneous areas like mountain regions, which would require dense sampling. For these reasons, it is becoming increasingly important to spatially predict soil thickness as accurately as possible using models. <br>The typical difficulty in predicting variables in environmental sciences is the small number of samples in the field and resulting from this a small number of usable data points to train models in the spatial domain. One possibility to create valid models with sparse spatially distributed soil data is the combination of point measurements with domain knowledge. For soils and their properties such knowledge can be archived from related environmental data, for example, parent material and climate, and their spatial distribution neighboring the sample points. Frequently used machine learning methods for environmental modelling, especially in the geosciences, are the Gaussian Process Regression Models (GPRs), because a spatial correlation can already be implemented via the covariance kernel. One of the great advantages of using GPRs is the possibility to inform this algorithm directly with soil science knowledge. We can claim this knowledge in different ways. <br>In this paper we apply a new approach of implementing geographical knowledge into the Gaussian Processes by means of partial differential equations (PDEs), each describing a pedological process. These PDEs include information on how independent environmental variables influence the searched dependent variable. At first, we calculate for simple correlations between soil thickness and these variables, which we then convert into a PDE. As independent variables we initially use exclusively topographical variables derived from Digital Elevation Models (DEM) such as slope, different curvatures, aspect or the topographic wetness index. In this way, expert knowledge can adapt the GPR model in addition to the already existing assumption of spatial dependency given by prior covariance, where near things are more related than distant. <br>The algorithm will be applied to a data set from Andalusia, Spain, developed by Tobias Rentschler. Among land use information gained from remote sensing, it contains our target variable soil thickness.</p>


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