Identifying a land use change cellular automaton by Bayesian data assimilation

2014 ◽  
Vol 53 ◽  
pp. 121-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith A. Verstegen ◽  
Derek Karssenberg ◽  
Floor van der Hilst ◽  
André P.C. Faaij
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Levy ◽  
Marcel Van Oijen ◽  
Gwen Buys ◽  
Sam Tomlinson

Abstract. We present a method for estimating land-use change using a Bayesian data assimilation approach. The approach provides a general framework for combining multiple disparate data sources with a simple model. This allows us to constrain estimates of gross land-use change with reliable national-scale census data, whilst retaining the detailed information available from several other sources. Eight different data sources, with three different data structures, were combined in our posterior estimate of land-use and land-use change, and other data sources could easily be added in future. The tendency for observations to underestimate gross land-use change is accounted for by allowing for a skewed distribution in the likelihood function. The data structure produced has high temporal and spatial resolution, and is appropriate for dynamic process-based modelling. Uncertainty is propagated appropriately into the output, so we have a full posterior distribution of output and parameters. The data are available in the widely used netCDF file format from http://eidc.ceh.ac.uk/ (doi pending).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter E. Levy

<p>The aim of this work was to make improved estimates of land-use change in the UK, using multiple sources of data. We applied a method for estimating land-use change using a Bayesian data assimilation approach. This allows us to constrain estimates of gross land-use change with national-scale census data, whilst retaining the detailed information available from several other sources. We produced a time series of maps describing our best estimate of land-use change given the available data, as well as the full posterior distribution of this space-time data cube. This quantifies the joint probability distribution of the parameters, and properly propagates the uncertainty from input data to final output. The output data has been summarised in the form of land-use vectors. The results show that we can provide improved estimates of past land-use change using this method. The main advantage of the approach is that it provides a coherent, generalised framework for combining multiple disparate sources of data, and adding further sources of data in future is straightforward.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. 1497-1513 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Levy ◽  
Marcel van Oijen ◽  
Gwen Buys ◽  
Sam Tomlinson

Abstract. We present a method for estimating land-use change using a Bayesian data assimilation approach. The approach provides a general framework for combining multiple disparate data sources with a simple model. This allows us to constrain estimates of gross land-use change with reliable national-scale census data, whilst retaining the detailed information available from several other sources. Eight different data sources, with three different data structures, were combined in our posterior estimate of land use and land-use change, and other data sources could easily be added in future. The tendency for observations to underestimate gross land-use change is accounted for by allowing for a skewed distribution in the likelihood function. The data structure produced has high temporal and spatial resolution, and is appropriate for dynamic process-based modelling. Uncertainty is propagated appropriately into the output, so we have a full posterior distribution of output and parameters. The data are available in the widely used netCDF file format from http://eidc.ceh.ac.uk/.


2011 ◽  
Vol 222 (20-22) ◽  
pp. 3761-3772 ◽  
Author(s):  
DongJie Guan ◽  
HaiFeng Li ◽  
Takuro Inohae ◽  
Weici Su ◽  
Tadashi Nagaie ◽  
...  

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