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Activity Number: 197 - New Methods for Scalable Nonstationary Spatial Statistics
Type: Topic-Contributed
Date/Time: Tuesday, August 10, 2021 : 1:30 PM to 3:20 PM
Sponsor: Section on Statistics and the Environment
Abstract #317239
Title: Modeling Massive Multivariate Spatial Data with the Basis Graphical Lasso
Author(s): William Kleiber* and Mitchell Krock and Dorit Hammerling
Companies: University of Colorado Boulder and Rutgers University and Colorado School of Mines
Keywords: nonstationary; empirical orthogonal function; climate model; big data; high dimensional processes
Abstract:

We propose a new modeling framework for highly multivariate spatial processes that synthesizes ideas from recent multiscale and spectral approaches with graphical models. The basis graphical lasso writes a univariate Gaussian process as a linear combination of basis functions weighted with entries of a Gaussian graphical vector whose graph is estimated from optimizing an L1 penalized likelihood. This paper extends the setting to a multivariate Gaussian process where the basis functions are weighted with Gaussian graphical vectors. We motivate a model where the basis functions represent different levels of resolution and the graphical vectors for each level are assumed to be independent. Using an orthogonal basis grants linear complexity and memory usage in the number of spatial locations, the number of basis functions, and the number of realizations. An additional fusion penalty encourages a parsimonious conditional independence structure in the multilevel graphical model. We illustrate our method on a large climate ensemble from the National Center for Atmospheric Research's Community Atmosphere Model that involves 40 spatial processes.


Authors who are presenting talks have a * after their name.

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