Abstract

We propose a method for estimating nonstationary spatial covariance functions by representing a spatial process as a linear combination of some local basis functions with uncorrelated random coefficients and some stationary processes, based on spatial data sampled in space with repeated measurements. By incorporating a large collection of local basis functions with various scales at various locations and stationary processes with various degrees of smoothness, the model is flexible enough to represent a wide variety of nonstationary spatial features. The covariance estimation and model selection are formulated as a regression problem with the sample covariances as the response and the covariances corresponding to the local basis functions and the stationary processes as the predictors. A constrained least squares approach is applied to select appropriate basis functions and stationary processes as well as estimate parameters simultaneously. In addition, a constrained generalized least squares approach is proposed to further account for the dependencies among the response variables. A simulation experiment shows that our method performs well in both covariance function estimation and spatial prediction. The methodology is applied to a U.S. precipitation dataset for illustration. Supplemental materials relating to the application are available online.

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