2d interpolation of n-dimensional data

조회 수: 1 (최근 30일)
Curtis Wen
Curtis Wen 2021년 8월 24일
댓글: Curtis Wen 2021년 8월 25일
I have this set of data (simplified)
x = [1 2 3]
y = [3 7 2]
temp = [22 25 23; 33 25 17; 19 25 26];
each X Y coordinate pair corresponds to a column in temp. So (X,Y) = (1,3) -> [22; 33; 19]. I'm trying to setup a 2D interpolation which gives me interpolated values of temp from input XY. My solution which works, but is slow, is to create a scatteredinterpolant for every row of temp ie
int1 = scatteredinterpolant([1 2 3]', [3 7 2]', [22 25 23]')
int2 = scatteredinterpolant([1 2 3]', [3 7 2]', [33 25 17]')
int3 = scatteredinterpolant([1 2 3]', [3 7 2]', [19 25 26]')
and then using the scatteredinterpolants 3 times. My actual dataset of temp has 30000 elements per coordinate pair, so this goes pretty slow. Any suggestions?

채택된 답변

Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski 2021년 8월 24일
You can just change the Values of one scatteredInterpolant object. It won't have to redo the expensive underlying triangulation of x/y then. Example using zeros and ones for your temp.
s = scatteredInterpolant(rand(3,1),rand(3,1),zeros(3,1))
s =
scatteredInterpolant with properties: Points: [3×2 double] Values: [3×1 double] Method: 'linear' ExtrapolationMethod: 'linear'
s(0.3,0.2)
ans = 0
s.Values = ones(3,1) % swap for your second set of values
s =
scatteredInterpolant with properties: Points: [3×2 double] Values: [3×1 double] Method: 'linear' ExtrapolationMethod: 'linear'
s(0.3,0.2)
ans = 1
  댓글 수: 1
Curtis Wen
Curtis Wen 2021년 8월 25일
Its not too much of a time savings since the evaluation of each interp still takes as long, but it does reduce the number of interpolant objects created and reduces my filesize so I'll take it. Thank you!

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

추가 답변 (0개)

카테고리

Help CenterFile Exchange에서 Interpolation에 대해 자세히 알아보기

태그

제품


릴리스

R2019b

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by