The origins of the multiple-point statistics (MPS) algorithm

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Abstract

First proposed in the early 1990s, the geostatistical algorithm known as multiple-point statistics (MPS) now enjoys widespread use, particularly in petro- leum studies. It has become part of the toolkit that new practitioners are trained to use in several oil companies; it has been incorporated into commercial software; and research programs in many universities continue to tap into the central MPS idea of extracting statistical information directly from a training image. The inspiration for the development of a proof-of-concept MPS prototype code owes much to several different researchers and research programs in the late 1980s and early 1990s: The sequential algorithms pioneered at Stanford University, the work of Chris Farmer, then at UK Atomic Energy, and the growing use of outcrop studies by several oil companies. This largely accidental confluence of divergent theoretical perspectives, and of distinct practical workflows, serves as an example of how science often advances through the intersection of ideas that are not only disparate but even contradictory.

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Mohan, S. R. (2018). The origins of the multiple-point statistics (MPS) algorithm. In Handbook of Mathematical Geosciences: Fifty Years of IAMG (pp. 655–672). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78999-6_32

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