Space, Structure and Randomness: Contributions in Honor of Georges Matheron in the Field of Geostatistics, Random Sets and Mathematical Morphology

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Space, structure, and randomness: these are the three key concepts underlying Georges Matheron’s scientific work. He first encountered them at the beginning of his career when working as a mining engineer, and then they resurfaced in fields ranging from meteorology to microscopy. What could these radically different types of applications possibly have in common? First, in each one only a single realisation of the phenomenon is available for study, but its features repeat themselves in space; second, the sampling pattern is rarely regular, and finally there are problems of change of scale.

This volume is divided in three sections on random sets, geostatistics and mathematical morphology. They reflect his professional interests and his search for underlying unity. Some readers may be surprised to find theoretical chapters mixed with applied ones. We have done this deliberately. GM always considered that the distinction between the theory and practice was purely academic.

When GM tackled practical problems, he used his skill as a physicist to extract the salient features and to select variables which could be measured meaningfully and whose values could be estimated from the available data. Then he used his outstanding ability as a mathematician to solve the problems neatly and efficiently. It was his capacity to combine a physicist’s intuition with a mathematician’s analytical skills that allowed him to produce new and innovative solutions to difficult problems.

The book should appeal to graduate students and researchers working in mathematics, probability, statistics, physics, spatial data analysis, and image analysis. In addition it will be of interest to those who enjoy discovering links between scientific disciplines that seem unrelated at first glance. In writing the book the contributors have tried to put GM’s ideas into perspective. During his working life, GM was a genuinely creative scientist. He developed innovative concepts whose usefulness goes far beyond the confines of the discipline for which they were originally designed. This is why his work remains as pertinent today as it was when it was first written.

Author(s): Danie Krige, Wynand Kleingeld (auth.), Michel Bilodeau, Fernand Meyer, Michel Schmitt (eds.)
Series: Lecture Notes in Statistics 183
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York
Year: 2005

Language: English
Pages: 398
Tags: Statistical Theory and Methods; Statistics for Engineering, Physics, Computer Science, Chemistry & Geosciences; Probability and Statistics in Computer Science; Image Processing and Computer Vision; Signal, Image and Speech Processing

Front Matter....Pages 3-3
The genesis of geostatistics in gold and diamond industries....Pages 5-16
Concepts and Methods of Geostatistics....Pages 17-37
Prediction by conditional simulation: models and algorithms....Pages 39-68
Flow in porous media: An attempt to outline Georges Matheron’s contributions....Pages 69-87
Over Thirty Years of Petroleum Geostatistics....Pages 89-104
The expansion of environmental geostatistics....Pages 105-131
Front Matter....Pages 133-133
Random Closed Sets....Pages 135-149
The Boolean Model: from Matheron till Today....Pages 151-181
Random Structures in Physics....Pages 183-219
Front Matter....Pages 221-221
Mophological Operators for the Segmentation of Colour Images....Pages 223-255
Automatic design of morphological operators....Pages 257-278
Morphological Decomposition Systems with Perfect Reconstruction: From Pyramids to Wavelets....Pages 279-314
Morphological segmentation revisited....Pages 315-347
Ubiquity of the Distance Function in Mathematical Morphology....Pages 349-368
Partial Differential Equations for Morphological Operators....Pages 369-390