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RESEARCH PRODUCT

A perspective on Gaussian processes for Earth observation

Gustau Camps-vallsMarkus ReichsteinDino SejdinovicJakob Runge

subject

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Machine LearningEarth observationComputer scienceDatenmanagement und AnalyseMachine Learning (stat.ML)02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistrycomputer.software_genreStatistics - Applications01 natural sciencesMachine Learning (cs.LG)symbols.namesakeStatistics - Machine LearningApplications (stat.AP)Uncertainty quantificationGaussian processPhysical lawPropagation of uncertaintyMultidisciplinarybusiness.industryPerspective (graphical)gaussian processes021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciences13. Climate actionCausal inferenceComputer ScienceGlobal Positioning SystemsymbolsData mining0210 nano-technologybusinesscomputerPerspectives

description

Earth observation (EO) by airborne and satellite remote sensing and in-situ observations play a fundamental role in monitoring our planet. In the last decade, machine learning and Gaussian processes (GPs) in particular has attained outstanding results in the estimation of bio-geo-physical variables from the acquired images at local and global scales in a time-resolved manner. GPs provide not only accurate estimates but also principled uncertainty estimates for the predictions, can easily accommodate multimodal data coming from different sensors and from multitemporal acquisitions, allow the introduction of physical knowledge, and a formal treatment of uncertainty quantification and error propagation. Despite great advances in forward and inverse modelling, GP models still have to face important challenges that are revised in this perspective paper. GP models should evolve towards data-driven physics-aware models that respect signal characteristics, be consistent with elementary laws of physics, and move from pure regression to observational causal inference.

10.1093/nsr/nwz028http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwz028