Efrat Morin

2papers

2 Papers

LGNov 4, 2021
Flood forecasting with machine learning models in an operational framework

Sella Nevo, Efrat Morin, Adi Gerzi Rosenthal et al.

The operational flood forecasting system by Google was developed to provide accurate real-time flood warnings to agencies and the public, with a focus on riverine floods in large, gauged rivers. It became operational in 2018 and has since expanded geographically. This forecasting system consists of four subsystems: data validation, stage forecasting, inundation modeling, and alert distribution. Machine learning is used for two of the subsystems. Stage forecasting is modeled with the Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) networks and the Linear models. Flood inundation is computed with the Thresholding and the Manifold models, where the former computes inundation extent and the latter computes both inundation extent and depth. The Manifold model, presented here for the first time, provides a machine-learning alternative to hydraulic modeling of flood inundation. When evaluated on historical data, all models achieve sufficiently high-performance metrics for operational use. The LSTM showed higher skills than the Linear model, while the Thresholding and Manifold models achieved similar performance metrics for modeling inundation extent. During the 2021 monsoon season, the flood warning system was operational in India and Bangladesh, covering flood-prone regions around rivers with a total area of 287,000 km2, home to more than 350M people. More than 100M flood alerts were sent to affected populations, to relevant authorities, and to emergency organizations. Current and future work on the system includes extending coverage to additional flood-prone locations, as well as improving modeling capabilities and accuracy.

LGMar 21, 2021
Conditional Frechet Inception Distance

Michael Soloveitchik, Tzvi Diskin, Efrat Morin et al.

We consider distance functions between conditional distributions. We focus on the Wasserstein metric and its Gaussian case known as the Frechet Inception Distance (FID). We develop conditional versions of these metrics, analyze their relations and provide a closed form solution to the conditional FID (CFID) metric. We numerically compare the metrics in the context of performance evaluation of modern conditional generative models. Our results show the advantages of CFID compared to the classical FID and mean squared error (MSE) measures. In contrast to FID, CFID is useful in identifying failures where realistic outputs which are not related to their inputs are generated. On the other hand, compared to MSE, CFID is useful in identifying failures where a single realistic output is generated even though there is a diverse set of equally probable outputs.