Clear Filters
Clear Filters

Interpolate matrix in 4D

42 views (last 30 days)
Tahariet Sharon
Tahariet Sharon on 8 Mar 2023
Edited: Matt J on 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?

Answers (1)

Matt J
Matt J on 8 Mar 2023
You can use griddedInterpolant (preferable IMHO) or interpn.
  3 Comments
Tahariet Sharon
Tahariet Sharon on 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 on 8 Mar 2023
Edited: Matt J on 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

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Interpolation in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!