# Option 1: shorter but slower
rasterstack_meansd_slow <- function(x) {mean <- raster::mean(x) sd <- raster::calc(x, sd)
list(mean=mean, sd=sd)
} # Option 2: faster but more code rasterstack_meansd_fast <- function(x) { s0 <- nlayers(x) s1 <- raster(x, layer=1) s2 <- s1^2 for(ri in 2:s0) { r <- raster(x, layer=ri) s1 <- s1 + r s2 <- s2 + r^2 } list(mean=s1/s0, sd=sqrt((s0 * s2 - s1 * s1)/(s0 * (s0 - 1)))) }
As a small example I calculate the mean and standard deviation of the sea surface temperature for different climate scenarios for 2050. The fast version only takes 10 seconds on my machine while the slow version takes 225 seconds to calculate the mean and standard deviation.
library(sdmpredictors) sstfuture <- load_layers(c('BO2_RCP26_2050_tempmean_ss', 'BO2_RCP45_2050_tempmean_ss', 'BO2_RCP60_2050_tempmean_ss', 'BO2_RCP85_2050_tempmean_ss')) system.time({ fast <- rasterstack_meansd_fast(sstfuture) }) # 10 seconds system.time({ slow <- rasterstack_meansd_slow(sstfuture) }) # 225 seconds
2 comments:
Hi there,
what if there are NAs in the raster(s)?
Then the resulting mean value will be NA, this for me ok as I was averaging out different models which had the same cells with value NA.
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