Correlation detectors are becoming a standard method for identifying
seismic signals from repeating sources. These highly sensitive, source-specific
detectors frequently facilitate a reduction in the detection threshold
by around an order of magnitude. Detections are typically declared
when the value of the correlation coefficient (CC), or a related
statistic, exceeds significantly some measure of the variability
of values over a longer time window. The performance of correlation
detectors is often compromised by the presence of short duration,
high-amplitude signals, which influence excessively the value of
the CC. We suggest replacing the original seismograms with waveforms
in which the value of each sample is replaced by the ratio of that
value to a centred moving average of absolute values of the original
waveform. These ratio-to-moving-average (RMA) seismograms are relatively
featureless over long time intervals, but resemble greatly the original
waveforms over short time windows and hence still capture the characteristic
seismic fingerprint of a given source. We demonstrate a correlation
detection calculation, which fails due to the presence of a high-amplitude
signal interfering with part of the correlation window, but which
succeeds when RMA seismograms are used due to the diminished influence
of the interfering signal. We also demonstrate an example from an
aftershock sequence where the CC traces are heavily modulated due
to the high dynamic range of the original waveforms. This makes the
setting of detection thresholds difficult and results in multiple
peaks, which do not correspond to events in the vicinity of the master
event. Repeating the calculation using RMA seismograms results in
CC traces with a more well-defined detection threshold and most of
the spurious detections are lost. The ability to set lower detection
thresholds without increasing greatly the number of false alarms
facilitates the robust detection of lower magnitude events.
%0 Journal Article
%1 gibbons_etal:2012
%A Gibbons, Steven J.
%A Ringdal, Frode
%A Kværna, Tormod
%D 2012
%I Blackwell Publishing Ltd
%J Geophysical Journal International
%K geophysics seismology
%N 1
%P 511--521
%R 10.1111/j.1365-246X.2012.05492.x
%T Ratio-to-moving-average seismograms: a strategy for improving correlation
detector performance
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.2012.05492.x
%V 190
%X Correlation detectors are becoming a standard method for identifying
seismic signals from repeating sources. These highly sensitive, source-specific
detectors frequently facilitate a reduction in the detection threshold
by around an order of magnitude. Detections are typically declared
when the value of the correlation coefficient (CC), or a related
statistic, exceeds significantly some measure of the variability
of values over a longer time window. The performance of correlation
detectors is often compromised by the presence of short duration,
high-amplitude signals, which influence excessively the value of
the CC. We suggest replacing the original seismograms with waveforms
in which the value of each sample is replaced by the ratio of that
value to a centred moving average of absolute values of the original
waveform. These ratio-to-moving-average (RMA) seismograms are relatively
featureless over long time intervals, but resemble greatly the original
waveforms over short time windows and hence still capture the characteristic
seismic fingerprint of a given source. We demonstrate a correlation
detection calculation, which fails due to the presence of a high-amplitude
signal interfering with part of the correlation window, but which
succeeds when RMA seismograms are used due to the diminished influence
of the interfering signal. We also demonstrate an example from an
aftershock sequence where the CC traces are heavily modulated due
to the high dynamic range of the original waveforms. This makes the
setting of detection thresholds difficult and results in multiple
peaks, which do not correspond to events in the vicinity of the master
event. Repeating the calculation using RMA seismograms results in
CC traces with a more well-defined detection threshold and most of
the spurious detections are lost. The ability to set lower detection
thresholds without increasing greatly the number of false alarms
facilitates the robust detection of lower magnitude events.
@article{gibbons_etal:2012,
abstract = {Correlation detectors are becoming a standard method for identifying
seismic signals from repeating sources. These highly sensitive, source-specific
detectors frequently facilitate a reduction in the detection threshold
by around an order of magnitude. Detections are typically declared
when the value of the correlation coefficient (CC), or a related
statistic, exceeds significantly some measure of the variability
of values over a longer time window. The performance of correlation
detectors is often compromised by the presence of short duration,
high-amplitude signals, which influence excessively the value of
the CC. We suggest replacing the original seismograms with waveforms
in which the value of each sample is replaced by the ratio of that
value to a centred moving average of absolute values of the original
waveform. These ratio-to-moving-average (RMA) seismograms are relatively
featureless over long time intervals, but resemble greatly the original
waveforms over short time windows and hence still capture the characteristic
seismic fingerprint of a given source. We demonstrate a correlation
detection calculation, which fails due to the presence of a high-amplitude
signal interfering with part of the correlation window, but which
succeeds when RMA seismograms are used due to the diminished influence
of the interfering signal. We also demonstrate an example from an
aftershock sequence where the CC traces are heavily modulated due
to the high dynamic range of the original waveforms. This makes the
setting of detection thresholds difficult and results in multiple
peaks, which do not correspond to events in the vicinity of the master
event. Repeating the calculation using RMA seismograms results in
CC traces with a more well-defined detection threshold and most of
the spurious detections are lost. The ability to set lower detection
thresholds without increasing greatly the number of false alarms
facilitates the robust detection of lower magnitude events.},
added-at = {2012-09-01T13:08:21.000+0200},
author = {Gibbons, Steven J. and Ringdal, Frode and Kv{\ae}rna, Tormod},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2bf502651cb1f05c81a13a6b532b63afb/nilsma},
doi = {10.1111/j.1365-246X.2012.05492.x},
interhash = {2e3f3b992453e389cedff088e39cfaf1},
intrahash = {bf502651cb1f05c81a13a6b532b63afb},
journal = {Geophysical Journal International},
keywords = {geophysics seismology},
month = jul,
number = 1,
pages = {511--521},
publisher = {Blackwell Publishing Ltd},
timestamp = {2021-02-09T13:24:56.000+0100},
title = {Ratio-to-moving-average seismograms: a strategy for improving correlation
detector performance},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.2012.05492.x},
volume = 190,
year = 2012
}