Interpolate matrix in 4D

51 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Tahariet Sharon
Tahariet Sharon le 8 Mar 2023
Modifié(e) : Matt J le 8 Mar 2023
I have a matrix data of size 20,10,20,10.
It is a 3D object that changes across time (10 time points which represent 10 seconds)
I would like to create a smooth transition interpolating values to subdivide those 10 seconds into e.g., 10th of a second, so 100 time points in total.
How to go about this in Matlab?

Réponses (1)

Matt J
Matt J le 8 Mar 2023
You can use griddedInterpolant (preferable IMHO) or interpn.
  3 commentaires
Tahariet Sharon
Tahariet Sharon le 8 Mar 2023
Thanks. I don't understand this function. what does the [1,1,1,10] mean?
I want to preserve the values in A(:,:,:,1) and in A(:,:,:,10), which must be identical to the values in the Ainterp(:,:,:,1) and Ainterp(:,:,:,100). And the new values should be interpolated accordingly.
Matt J
Matt J le 8 Mar 2023
Modifié(e) : Matt J le 8 Mar 2023
what does the [1,1,1,10] mean?
It means make the 4th dimension 10 times bigger.
I want to preserve the values in A(:,:,:,1) and in A(:,:,:,10), which must be identical to the values in the Ainterp(:,:,:,1) and Ainterp(:,:,:,100). And the new values should be interpolated accordingly.
griddedInterpolant will do that.
A=rand(20,10,20,10);
F=griddedInterpolant(A);
Ainterp=F({1:20,1:10,1:20,linspace(1,10,100)});
whos A Ainterp
Name Size Bytes Class Attributes A 20x10x20x10 320000 double Ainterp 20x10x20x100 3200000 double

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