Computer-Aided Discovery Tools for Volcano Deformation Studies with InSAR and GPS
Abstract
We present a Computer-Aided Discovery approach that facilitates the cloud-scalable fusion of different data sources, such as GPS time series and Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR), for the purpose of identifying the expansion centers and deformation styles of volcanoes. The tools currently developed at MIT allow the definition of alternatives for data processing pipelines that use various analysis algorithms. The Computer-Aided Discovery system automatically generates algorithmic and parameter variants to help researchers explore multidimensional data processing search spaces efficiently. We present first application examples of this technique using GPS data on volcanoes on the Aleutian Islands and work in progress on combined GPS and InSAR data in Hawaii. In the model search context, we also illustrate work in progress combining time series Principal Component Analysis with InSAR augmentation to constrain the space of possible model explanations on current empirical data sets and achieve a better identification of deformation patterns. This work is supported by NASA AIST-NNX15AG84G and NSF ACI-1442997 (PI: V. Pankratius).
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUFMIN23B1774P
- Keywords:
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- 1914 Data mining;
- INFORMATICSDE: 1916 Data and information discovery;
- INFORMATICSDE: 1936 Interoperability;
- INFORMATICSDE: 1950 Metadata: Quality;
- INFORMATICS