4.6 Article

A fuzzy interval analysis approach to kriging with ill-known variogram and data

Journal

SOFT COMPUTING
Volume 16, Issue 5, Pages 769-784

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00500-011-0768-2

Keywords

Geostatistics; Kriging; Variogram; Random function; Epistemic uncertainty; Fuzzy subset; Possibility theory; Optimization

Funding

  1. French Research National Agency (ANR) [CRISCO2 ANR-06-CO2-003]

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Geostatistics is a branch of statistics dealing with spatial phenomena. Kriging consists in estimating or predicting a spatial phenomenon at non-sampled locations from an estimated random function. It is assumed that, under some well-chosen simplifying hypotheses of stationarity, the probabilistic model, i.e. the random function describing spatial variability dependencies, can be completely assessed from the dataset. However, in the usual kriging approach, the choice of the random function is mostly made at a glance by the experts (i.e. geostatisticians), via the selection of a variogram from a thorough descriptive analysis of the dataset. Although information necessary to properly select a unique random function model seems to be partially lacking, geostatistics, in general, and the kriging methodology, in particular, does not account for the incompleteness of the information that seems to pervade the procedure. The paper proposes an approach to handle epistemic uncertainty appearing in the kriging methodology. On the one hand, the collected data may be tainted with errors that can be modelled by intervals or fuzzy intervals. On the other hand, the choice of parameter values for the theoretical variogram, an essential step, contains some degrees of freedom that are seldom acknowledged. In this paper, we propose to account for epistemic uncertainty pervading the variogram parameters, and possibly the dataset, and lay bare its impact on the kriging results, improving on previous attempts by Bardossy and colleagues in the late 1980s.

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