Novel local calibration optimization from soil mid-infrared spectral library
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Affiliation:

1.Key Laboratory for Geographical Process Analysis & Simulation of Hubei Province, Central China Normal University, Wuhan 430079, China;2.ZJU-Hangzhou Global Scientific and Technological Innovation Center, Hangzhou 311200, China;3.Institute of Remote Sensing and Information Technology, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China;4.Key Laboratory of Spectroscopy Sensing, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Hangzhou 310058, China

Clc Number:

TP79;S151.9

Fund Project:

Supported by the Young Scientists Fund of the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41601370); the Key Laboratory of Spectroscopy Sensing, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, P.R. China (2022ZJUGP003); the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (CCNU22JC022)

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    Abstract:

    Soil mid-infrared (MIR) can provide a rapid, non-polluting, and cost-efficient method for estimating soil properties, such as soil organic carbon (SOC). Although there is a wide interest in using the soil spectral library (SSL) for soil analysis at various scales, the SSL with a general calibration often produces poor predictions at local scales. Therefore, developing methods to ‘localize’ the spectroscopic modelling is a reliable way to improve the use of SSL. In this study, we proposed a new approach that aims to rapidly build the optimal local model from the SSL by calculating the spectral similarity and developing the local calibration, in order to further improve the prediction accuracy. The distance matrix was constructed by three distance algorithms, namely Euclidean distance, Mahalanobis distance, and Cosine distance, which were compared and used to measure the similarity between the local samples and the SSL. The capacity curve, which was taken from the distance matrix, was used with a method called “continuum-removal” to find the feature points. Partial least-squares regression was used to build the spectroscopic models for SOC estimation. We found that for all three distance algorithms combined with the continuum-removal, the local calibration derived from the first feature point gave us a good idea of how accurate the prediction would be. The Mahalanobis distance can effectively develop the optimal local calibration from the MIR SSL, which not only achieved the best accuracy (R2 = 0.764, RMSE = 1.021%) but also used the least number of samples from SSL (14% SSL). On local scales, the approach we proposed can significantly improve both the analytical cost and the accuracy of the soil MIR technique.

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SHEN Jia-Li, CHEN Song-Chao, HONG Yong-Sheng, LI Shuo. Novel local calibration optimization from soil mid-infrared spectral library[J]. Journal of Infrared and Millimeter Waves,2023,42(6):815~823

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History
  • Received:August 25,2022
  • Revised:November 03,2023
  • Adopted:April 11,2023
  • Online: November 02,2023
  • Published: