krigingiä
Krigingiä is the Finnish plural form of kriging, a geostatistical interpolation method used to estimate values at unsampled locations based on spatially correlated data. The technique was developed by the South African mathematician Danie G. G. Krige in the 1950s and later formalized by Georges Matheron, who defined its core theoretical framework. Unlike ordinary interpolation methods that assume constant value surfaces, krigingiä incorporates variogram models that quantify spatial autocorrelation, allowing it to provide unbiased predictions with minimum variance.
In practice, krigingiä is applied across a wide range of scientific and engineering disciplines. Geologists use
The key advantage of krigingiä lies in its ability to provide both point estimates and measures of