Classification of rainfall variability by using artificial neural networks
Open Access
- 21 September 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Climatology
- Vol. 21 (11), 1401-1414
- https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.702
Abstract
In this paper, the usefulness of artificial neural networks (ANNs) as a suitable tool for the study of the medium and long‐term climatic variability is examined. A method for classifying the inherent variability of climatic data, as represented by the rainfall regime, is investigated. The rainfall recorded at a climatological station in Cyprus over a long time period has been used in this paper as the input for various ANN and cluster analysis models. The analysed rainfall data cover the time span 1917–1995. Using these values, two different procedures were followed for structuring the input vectors for training the ANN models: (a) each 1‐year subset consisting of the 12 monthly elements, and (b) each 2‐year subset consisting of the 24 monthly elements. Several ANN models with a varying number of output nodes have been trained, using an unsupervised learning paradigm, namely, the Kohonen's self‐organizing feature maps algorithm. For both the 1‐ and 2‐year subsets, 16 classes were empirically considered as the optimum for computing the prototype classes of weather variability for this meteorological parameter. The classification established by using the ANN methodology is subsequently compared with the classification generated by using cluster analysis, based on the agglomerative hierarchical clustering algorithm. To validate the classification results, the rainfall distributions for the more recent years 1996, 1997 and 1998 were utilized. The respective 1‐ and 2‐year distributions for these years were assigned to particular classes for both the ANN and cluster analysis procedures. Compared with cluster analysis, the ANN models were more capable of detecting even minor characteristics in the rainfall waveshapes investigated, and they also performed a more realistic categorization of the available data. It is suggested that the proposed ANN methodology can be applied to more climatological parameters, and with longer cycles. Copyright © 2001 Royal Meteorological SocietyThis publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Application example of neural networks for time series analysis:Signal Processing, 1998
- Artificial neural network models of wheat leaf wetnessAgricultural and Forest Meteorology, 1997
- Self-Organizing MapsSpringer Series in Information Sciences, 1995
- Cloud Classification of AVHRR Imagery in Maritime Regions Using a Probabilistic Neural NetworkJournal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology, 1994
- Long-term changes in annual rainfall patterns in southern IsraelTheoretical and Applied Climatology, 1994
- Nonlinear Prediction, Chaos, and NoiseBulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 1992
- The self-organizing mapProceedings of the IEEE, 1990
- Rainfall variations in the Galilee (Israel), II. Variations in the temporal distribution between 1931–1960 and 1951–1980Journal of Hydrology, 1988
- Rainfall variations in the Galilee (Israel), I. Variations in the spatial distribution in the periods 1931–1960, and 1951–1980Journal of Hydrology, 1987
- Solar Activity and PrecipitationPublished by Springer Nature ,1973