Ngo Nghi Truyen Huynh

2papers

2 Papers

LGAug 2, 2023
Learning Regionalization using Accurate Spatial Cost Gradients within a Differentiable High-Resolution Hydrological Model: Application to the French Mediterranean Region

Ngo Nghi Truyen Huynh, Pierre-André Garambois, François Colleoni et al.

Estimating spatially distributed hydrological parameters in ungauged catchments poses a challenging regionalization problem and requires imposing spatial constraints given the sparsity of discharge data. A possible approach is to search for a transfer function that quantitatively relates physical descriptors to conceptual model parameters. This paper introduces a Hybrid Data Assimilation and Parameter Regionalization (HDA-PR) approach incorporating learnable regionalization mappings, based on either multi-linear regressions or artificial neural networks (ANNs), into a differentiable hydrological model. This approach demonstrates how two differentiable codes can be linked and their gradients chained, enabling the exploitation of heterogeneous datasets across extensive spatio-temporal computational domains within a high-dimensional regionalization context, using accurate adjoint-based gradients. The inverse problem is tackled with a multi-gauge calibration cost function accounting for information from multiple observation sites. HDA-PR was tested on high-resolution, hourly and kilometric regional modeling of 126 flash-flood-prone catchments in the French Mediterranean region. The results highlight a strong regionalization performance of HDA-PR especially in the most challenging upstream-to-downstream extrapolation scenario with ANN, achieving median Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE) scores from 0.6 to 0.71 for spatial, temporal, spatio-temporal validations, and improving NSE by up to 30% on average compared to the baseline model calibrated with lumped parameters. ANN enables to learn a non-linear descriptors-to-parameters mapping which provides better model controllability than a linear mapping for complex calibration cases.

LGJul 4, 2023
Multi-gauge Hydrological Variational Data Assimilation: Regionalization Learning with Spatial Gradients using Multilayer Perceptron and Bayesian-Guided Multivariate Regression

Ngo Nghi Truyen Huynh, Pierre-André Garambois, François Colleoni et al.

Tackling the difficult problem of estimating spatially distributed hydrological parameters, especially for floods on ungauged watercourses, this contribution presents a novel seamless regionalization technique for learning complex regional transfer functions designed for high-resolution hydrological models. The transfer functions rely on: (i) a multilayer perceptron enabling a seamless flow of gradient computation to employ machine learning optimization algorithms, or (ii) a multivariate regression mapping optimized by variational data assimilation algorithms and guided by Bayesian estimation, addressing the equifinality issue of feasible solutions. The approach involves incorporating the inferable regionalization mappings into a differentiable hydrological model and optimizing a cost function computed on multi-gauge data with accurate adjoint-based spatially distributed gradients.