- publishing free software manuals
GNU Octave Manual Version 3
by John W. Eaton, David Bateman, Søren Hauberg
Paperback (6"x9"), 568 pages
ISBN 095461206X
RRP £24.95 ($39.95)

Get a printed copy>>>

27.2 Multi-dimensional Interpolation

There are three multi-dimensional interpolation functions in Octave, with similar capabilities. Methods using Delaunay tessellation are described in section 28.4 Interpolation on Scattered Data.

Function File: zi= interp2 (x, y, z, xi, yi)
Function File: zi= interp2 (Z, xi, yi)
Function File: zi= interp2 (Z, n)
Function File: zi= interp2 (..., method)
Function File: zi= interp2 (..., method, extrapval)

Two-dimensional interpolation. x, y and z describe a surface function. If x and y are vectors their length must correspondent to the size of z. x and y must be monotonic. If they are matrices they must have the meshgrid format.

interp2 (x, y, Z, xi, yi, ...)
Returns a matrix corresponding to the points described by the matrices xi, yi. If the last argument is a string, the interpolation method can be specified. The method can be 'linear', 'nearest' or 'cubic'. If it is omitted 'linear' interpolation is assumed.
interp2 (z, xi, yi)
Assumes x = 1:rows (z) and y = 1:columns (z)
interp2 (z, n)
Interleaves the matrix z n-times. If n is omitted a value of n = 1 is assumed.

The variable method defines the method to use for the interpolation. It can take one of the following values

'nearest'
Return the nearest neighbor.
'linear'
Linear interpolation from nearest neighbors.
'pchip'
Piece-wise cubic hermite interpolating polynomial (not implemented yet).
'cubic'
Cubic interpolation from four nearest neighbors.
'spline'
Cubic spline interpolation--smooth first and second derivatives throughout the curve.

If a scalar value extrapval is defined as the final value, then values outside the mesh as set to this value. Note that in this case method must be defined as well. If extrapval is not defined then NA is assumed.

See also interp1

Function File: vi = interp3 (x, y,z, v, xi, yi, zi)
Function File: vi = interp3 (v, xi, yi, zi)
Function File: vi = interp3 (v, m)
Function File: vi = interp3 (v)
Function File: vi = interp3 (..., method)
Function File: vi = interp3 (..., method, extrapval)

Perform 3-dimensional interpolation. Each element of the 3-dimensional array v represents a value at a location given by the parameters x, y, and z. The parameters x, x, and z are either 3-dimensional arrays of the same size as the array v in the 'meshgrid' format or vectors. The parameters xi, etc respect a similar format to x, etc, and they represent the points at which the array vi is interpolated.

If x, y, z are omitted, they are assumed to be x = 1 : size (v, 2), y = 1 : size (v, 1) and z = 1 : size (v, 3). If m is specified, then the interpolation adds a point half way between each of the interpolation points. This process is performed m times. If only v is specified, then m is assumed to be 1.

Method is one of:

'nearest'
Return the nearest neighbour.
'linear'
Linear interpolation from nearest neighbours.
'cubic'
Cubic interpolation from four nearest neighbours (not implemented yet).
'spline'
Cubic spline interpolation--smooth first and second derivatives throughout the curve.

The default method is 'linear'.

If extrap is the string 'extrap', then extrapolate values beyond the endpoints. If extrap is a number, replace values beyond the endpoints with that number. If extrap is missing, assume NA.

See also interp1, interp2, spline, meshgrid

Function File: vi = interpn (x1, x2, ..., v, y1, y2, ...)
Function File: vi = interpn (v, y1, y2, ...)
Function File: vi = interpn (v, m)
Function File: vi = interpn (v)
Function File: vi = interpn (..., method)
Function File: vi = interpn (..., method, extrapval)

Perform n-dimensional interpolation, where n is at least two. Each element of the n-dimensional array v represents a value at a location given by the parameters x1, x2, ..., xn. The parameters x1, x2, ..., xn are either n-dimensional arrays of the same size as the array v in the 'ndgrid' format or vectors. The parameters y1, etc respect a similar format to x1, etc, and they represent the points at which the array vi is interpolated.

If x1, ..., xn are omitted, they are assumed to be x1 = 1 : size (v, 1), etc. If m is specified, then the interpolation adds a point half way between each of the interpolation points. This process is performed m times. If only v is specified, then m is assumed to be 1.

Method is one of:

'nearest'
Return the nearest neighbour.
'linear'
Linear interpolation from nearest neighbours.
'cubic'
Cubic interpolation from four nearest neighbours (not implemented yet).
'spline'
Cubic spline interpolation--smooth first and second derivatives throughout the curve.

The default method is 'linear'.

If extrap is the string 'extrap', then extrapolate values beyond the endpoints. If extrap is a number, replace values beyond the endpoints with that number. If extrap is missing, assume NA.

See also interp1, interp2, spline, ndgrid

A significant difference between interpn and the other two multidimensional interpolation functions is the fashion in which the dimensions are treated. For interp2 and interp3, the 'y' axis is considered to be the columns of the matrix, whereas the 'x' axis corresponds to the rows of the array. As Octave indexes arrays in column major order, the first dimension of any array is the columns, and so interpn effectively reverses the 'x' and 'y' dimensions. Consider the example

x = y = z = -1:1;
f = @(x,y,z) x.^2 - y - z.^2;
[xx, yy, zz] = meshgrid (x, y, z);
v = f (xx,yy,zz);
xi = yi = zi = -1:0.1:1;
[xxi, yyi, zzi] = meshgrid (xi, yi, zi);
vi = interp3(x, y, z, v, xxi, yyi, zzi, 'spline');
[xxi, yyi, zzi] = ndgrid (xi, yi, zi);
vi2 = interpn(x, y, z, v, xxi, yyi, zzi, 'spline');
mesh (zi, yi, squeeze (vi2(1,:,:)));

where vi and vi2 are identical. The reversal of the dimensions is treated in the meshgrid and ndgrid functions respectively.

The support function bicubic that underlies the cubic interpolation of interp2 function can be called directly.

Function File: zi= bicubic (x, y, z, xi, yi, extrapval)

Return a matrix zi corresponding to the bicubic interpolations at xi and yi of the data supplied as x, y and z. Points outside the grid are set to extrapval.

See http://wiki.woodpecker.org.cn/moin/Octave/Bicubic for further information.

See also interp2

ISBN 095461206XGNU Octave Manual Version 3See the print edition