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Inverse distance weighting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Inverse distance weighting

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Inverse distance weighting (IDW) is a method for multivariate interpolation, a process of assigning values to unknown points by using values from usually scattered set of known points.

A general form of finding an interpolated value u for a given point x using IDW is an interpolating function:

u(\mathbf{x}) = \frac{ \sum_{k = 0}^{N}{ w_k(\mathbf{x}) u_k } }{ \sum_{k = 0}^{N}{ w_k(\mathbf{x}) } },

where:

w_k(\mathbf{x}) =  \frac{1}{d(\mathbf{x},\mathbf{x}_k)^p},

is a simple IDW weighting function, as defined by Shepard[1], x denotes an interpolated (arbitrary) point, xk is an interpolating (known) point, d is a given distance (metric operator) from the known point xk to the unknown point x, N is the total number of known points used in interpolation and p is a positive real number, called the power parameter. Here weight decreases as distance increases from the interpolated points. Greater values of p assign greater influence to values closest to the interpolated point. For 0 < p < 1 u(x) has sharp peaks over the interpolated points xk, while for p > 1 the peaks are smooth. The most common value of p is 2.

The Shepard's method is a consequence of minimization of a functional related to a measure of deviations between tuples of interpolating points {x, u} and k tuples of interpolated points {xk, uk}, defined as:

\phi(\mathbf{x}, u) = \left( \sum_{k = 0}^{N}{\frac{(u-u_k)^2}{d(\mathbf{x},\mathbf{x}_k)^p}} \right)^{\frac{1}{p}} ,

derived from the minimizing condition:

\frac{\part \phi(\mathbf{x}, u)}{\part u} = 0.

The method can easily be extended to higher dimensional space and it is in fact a generalization of Lagrange approximation into a multidimensional spaces. A modified version of the algorithm designed for trivariate interpolation was developed by Robert J. Renka and is available in Netlib as algorithm 661 in the toms library.

Contents

[edit] Liszka's method

A modification of the Shepard's method was proposed by Liszka[2] in applications to experimental mechanics, who proposed to use:

w_k(\mathbf{x}) =  \frac{1}{(d(\mathbf{x},\mathbf{x}_k)^2+ \varepsilon^2)^\frac{1}{2}},

as a weighting function, where ε is chosen in dependence of the statistical error of measurement of the interpolated points.

[edit] Probability metric

Yet another modification of the Shepard's method was proposed by Łukaszyk[3] also in applications to experimental mechanics. The proposed weighting function had the form:

w_k(\mathbf{x}) =  \frac{1}{(D_{**}(\mathbf{x}, \mathbf{x}_k)  )^\frac{1}{2}},

where D_{**}(\mathbf{x}, \mathbf{x}_k) is a probability metric chosen also with regard to the statistical error probability distributions of measurement of the interpolated points.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Shepard, Donald (1968). "A two-dimensional interpolation function for irregularly-spaced data". Proceedings of the 1968 ACM National Conference: 517–524. Retrieved on 2007-02-18. 
  2. ^ Liszka T., An Interpolation Method for an Irregular Net of Nodes, Wyd. Int. J. for Num. Meth. In Engng, 1984.
  3. ^ *A new concept of probability metric and its applications in approximation of scattered data sets

[edit] See also

This applied mathematics-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
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