AO-PHLGPENov 30, 2021

Surrogate-based optimization using an artificial neural network for a parameter identification in a 3D marine ecosystem model

arXiv:2111.15597v1Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses computational efficiency for validating marine ecosystem models, but is incremental as it builds on existing surrogate-based optimization methods.

The paper tackled parameter identification in a 3D marine ecosystem model by using surrogate-based optimization with an artificial neural network as a low-fidelity model, achieving solutions close to the target and significantly reducing computational effort.

Parameter identification for marine ecosystem models is important for the assessment and validation of marine ecosystem models against observational data. The surrogate-based optimization (SBO) is a computationally efficient method to optimize complex models. SBO replaces the computationally expensive (high-fidelity) model by a surrogate constructed from a less accurate but computationally cheaper (low-fidelity) model in combination with an appropriate correction approach, which improves the accuracy of the low-fidelity model. To construct a computationally cheap low-fidelity model, we tested three different approaches to compute an approximation of the annual periodic solution (i.e., a steady annual cycle) of a marine ecosystem model: firstly, a reduced number of spin-up iterations (several decades instead of millennia), secondly, an artificial neural network (ANN) approximating the steady annual cycle and, finally, a combination of both approaches. Except for the low-fidelity model using only the ANN, the SBO yielded a solution close to the target and reduced the computational effort significantly. If an ANN approximating appropriately a marine ecosystem model is available, the SBO using this ANN as low-fidelity model presents a promising and computational efficient method for the validation.

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