MLLGAPApr 22, 2021

Enhancing predictive skills in physically-consistent way: Physics Informed Machine Learning for Hydrological Processes

arXiv:2104.11009v1117 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for hybrid modeling in hydrology to improve predictive accuracy for flood risk assessment, though it appears incremental as it combines existing approaches.

The authors tackled the problem of hydrological modeling by developing a Physics Informed Machine Learning (PIML) model that combines conceptual hydrological models with ML algorithms, resulting in outperformance of purely conceptual models and ML algorithms while ensuring physical consistency in outputs.

Current modeling approaches for hydrological modeling often rely on either physics-based or data-science methods, including Machine Learning (ML) algorithms. While physics-based models tend to rigid structure resulting in unrealistic parameter values in certain instances, ML algorithms establish the input-output relationship while ignoring the constraints imposed by well-known physical processes. While there is a notion that the physics model enables better process understanding and ML algorithms exhibit better predictive skills, scientific knowledge that does not add to predictive ability may be deceptive. Hence, there is a need for a hybrid modeling approach to couple ML algorithms and physics-based models in a synergistic manner. Here we develop a Physics Informed Machine Learning (PIML) model that combines the process understanding of conceptual hydrological model with predictive abilities of state-of-the-art ML models. We apply the proposed model to predict the monthly time series of the target (streamflow) and intermediate variables (actual evapotranspiration) in the Narmada river basin in India. Our results show the capability of the PIML model to outperform a purely conceptual model ($abcd$ model) and ML algorithms while ensuring the physical consistency in outputs validated through water balance analysis. The systematic approach for combining conceptual model structure with ML algorithms could be used to improve the predictive accuracy of crucial hydrological processes important for flood risk assessment.

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