English

Nonlinear blind source separation exploiting spatial nonstationarity

Methodology 2024-04-12 v2

Abstract

In spatial blind source separation the observed multivariate random fields are assumed to be mixtures of latent spatially dependent random fields. The objective is to recover latent random fields by estimating the unmixing transformation. Currently, the algorithms for spatial blind source separation can only estimate linear unmixing transformations. Nonlinear blind source separation methods for spatial data are scarce. In this paper we extend an identifiable variational autoencoder that can estimate nonlinear unmixing transformations to spatially dependent data and demonstrate its performance for both stationary and nonstationary spatial data using simulations. In addition, we introduce scaled mean absolute Shapley additive explanations for interpreting the latent components through nonlinear mixing transformation. The spatial identifiable variational autoencoder is applied to a geochemical dataset to find the latent random fields, which are then interpreted by using the scaled mean absolute Shapley additive explanations. Finally, we illustrate how the proposed method can be used as a pre-processing method when making multivariate predictions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2311.08004,
  title  = {Nonlinear blind source separation exploiting spatial nonstationarity},
  author = {Mika Sipilä and Klaus Nordhausen and Sara Taskinen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2311.08004},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T13:20:31.051Z