CVJan 21, 2016

Spatial Scaling of Satellite Soil Moisture using Temporal Correlations and Ensemble Learning

arXiv:1601.05767v11 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for high-resolution soil moisture data in agriculture and environmental monitoring, though it is incremental as it builds on existing downscaling methods with specific improvements.

The paper tackles the problem of downscaling satellite soil moisture from coarse to fine scales by developing a novel algorithm that leverages temporal correlations and ensemble learning, achieving a time-averaged error of 0.01 m³/m³ with minimal degradation during data gaps.

A novel algorithm is developed to downscale soil moisture (SM), obtained at satellite scales of 10-40 km by utilizing its temporal correlations to historical auxiliary data at finer scales. Including such correlations drastically reduces the size of the training set needed, accounts for time-lagged relationships, and enables downscaling even in the presence of short gaps in the auxiliary data. The algorithm is based upon bagged regression trees (BRT) and uses correlations between high-resolution remote sensing products and SM observations. The algorithm trains multiple regression trees and automatically chooses the trees that generate the best downscaled estimates. The algorithm was evaluated using a multi-scale synthetic dataset in north central Florida for two years, including two growing seasons of corn and one growing season of cotton per year. The time-averaged error across the region was found to be 0.01 $\mathrm{m}^3/\mathrm{m}^3$, with a standard deviation of 0.012 $\mathrm{m}^3/\mathrm{m}^3$ when 0.02% of the data were used for training in addition to temporal correlations from the past seven days, and all available data from the past year. The maximum spatially averaged errors obtained using this algorithm in downscaled SM were 0.005 $\mathrm{m}^3/\mathrm{m}^3$, for pixels with cotton land-cover. When land surface temperature~(LST) on the day of downscaling was not included in the algorithm to simulate "data gaps", the spatially averaged error increased minimally by 0.015 $\mathrm{m}^3/\mathrm{m}^3$ when LST is unavailable on the day of downscaling. The results indicate that the BRT-based algorithm provides high accuracy for downscaling SM using complex non-linear spatio-temporal correlations, under heterogeneous micro meteorological conditions.

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