Comparar métodos
Revisa los métodos seleccionados uno junto a otro; las filas que difieren aparecen resaltadas.
| Mapeo Digital de Suelos× | Random Forest× | |
|---|---|---|
| Campo≠ | Agronomía | Aprendizaje automático |
| Familia≠ | Process / pipeline | Machine learning |
| Año de origen≠ | Late 1990s – early 2000s (formalised ~2003) | 2001 |
| Autor original≠ | Multiple contributors; foundational framework by Alex McBratney and colleagues | Breiman, L. |
| Tipo≠ | Spatial prediction and mapping pipeline | Ensemble (bagging of decision trees) |
| Fuente seminal≠ | McBratney, A. B., Mendonca Santos, M. L., & Minasny, B. (2003). On digital soil mapping. Geoderma, 117(1–2), 3–52. DOI ↗ | Breiman, L. (2001). Random Forests. Machine Learning, 45, 5–32. DOI ↗ |
| Alias | DSM, predictive soil mapping, quantitative soil-landscape modelling, geostatistical soil mapping | Rastgele Orman (Random Forest), rastgele orman, random decision forest, bagged tree ensemble |
| Relacionados≠ | 1 | 4 |
| Resumen≠ | Digital Soil Mapping (DSM) is a quantitative, data-driven pipeline that predicts the spatial distribution of soil properties and classes across a landscape by statistically linking field observations to environmental covariates — terrain attributes, remote sensing imagery, climate surfaces, and geology layers. The approach replaces or augments traditional expert-drawn soil surveys with reproducible, spatially explicit models, and is applied in agronomy, land management, food security, and environmental assessment. | Random Forest is an ensemble learning method, introduced by Leo Breiman in 2001, that grows many decision trees on bootstrap samples of the data and combines their votes to produce strong classification and regression. By pooling many slightly different trees, it produces more accurate and more stable predictions than any single tree. |
| ScholarGateConjunto de datos ↗ |
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