OASIS: Harnessing Diffusion Adversarial Network for Ocean Salinity Imputation using Sparse Drifter Trajectories
Li, Bo, Feng, Yingqi, Jin, Ming, Zheng, Xin, Tang, Yufei, Cherubin, Laurent, Liew, Alan Wee-Chung, Wang, Can, Lu, Qinghua, Yao, Jingwei, Pan, Shirui, Zhang, Hong, Zhu, Xingquan
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Ocean salinity plays a vital role in circulation, climate, and marine ecosystems, yet its measurement is often sparse, irregular, and noisy, especially in drifter-based datasets. Traditional approaches, such as remote sensing and optimal interpolation, rely on linearity and stationarity, and are limited by cloud cover, sensor drift, and low satellite revisit rates. While machine learning models offer flexibility, they often fail under severe sparsity and lack principled ways to incorporate physical covariates without specialized sensors. In this paper, we introduce the OceAn Salinity Imputation System (OASIS), a novel diffusion adversarial framework designed to address these challenges.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Sep-1-2025
- Country:
- Asia
- China (0.04)
- South Korea > Seoul
- Seoul (0.05)
- Atlantic Ocean
- Gulf of Mexico
- Mississippi River Delta (0.04)
- United States Gulf of Mexico (0.04)
- North Atlantic Ocean > Baltic Sea (0.04)
- Gulf of Mexico
- North America
- Mexico (0.14)
- United States
- California (0.04)
- Florida > Palm Beach County
- Boca Raton (0.04)
- New York > New York County
- New York City (0.04)
- Oceania > Australia (0.05)
- Pacific Ocean > North Pacific Ocean
- East China Sea (0.04)
- Gulf of California (0.04)
- Asia
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.46)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine (0.93)
- Technology: