TY - JOUR
T1 - Neglecting Model Parametric Uncertainty Can Drastically Underestimate Flood Risks
AU - Sharma, Sanjib
AU - Lee, Benjamin Seiyon
AU - Hosseini-Shakib, Iman
AU - Haran, Murali
AU - Keller, Klaus
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was co-supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science through the Program on Coupled Human and Earth Systems (PCHES) under DOE Cooperative Agreement No. DE-SC0016162 and DE-SC0022141 as well as the Penn State Center for Climate Risk Management. We thank Rob Nicholas, Skip Wishbone, Dave Judi, and the PSIRC team for inputs. All errors and opinions (unless cited) are those of the authors and not of the funding entities.
Funding Information:
This study was co‐supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science through the Program on Coupled Human and Earth Systems (PCHES) under DOE Cooperative Agreement No. DE‐SC0016162 and DE‐SC0022141 as well as the Penn State Center for Climate Risk Management. We thank Rob Nicholas, Skip Wishbone, Dave Judi, and the PSIRC team for inputs. All errors and opinions (unless cited) are those of the authors and not of the funding entities.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Earth's Future published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Geophysical Union.
PY - 2023/1
Y1 - 2023/1
N2 - Floods drive dynamic and deeply uncertain risks for people and infrastructures. Uncertainty characterization is a crucial step in improving the predictive understanding of multi-sector dynamics and the design of risk-management strategies. Current approaches to estimate flood hazards often sample only a relatively small subset of the known unknowns, for example, the uncertainties surrounding the model parameters. This approach neglects the impacts of key uncertainties on hazards and system dynamics. Here we mainstream a recently developed method for Bayesian inference to calibrate a computationally expensive distributed hydrologic model. We compare three different calibration approaches: (a) stepwise line search, (b) precalibration or screening, and (c) the Fast Model Calibrations (FaMoS) approach. FaMoS deploys a particle-based approach that takes advantage of the massive parallelization afforded by modern high-performance computing systems. We quantify how neglecting parametric uncertainty and data discrepancy can drastically underestimate extreme flood events and risks. Precalibration improves prediction skill score over a stepwise line search. The Bayesian calibration improves the uncertainty characterization of model parameters and flood risk projections.
AB - Floods drive dynamic and deeply uncertain risks for people and infrastructures. Uncertainty characterization is a crucial step in improving the predictive understanding of multi-sector dynamics and the design of risk-management strategies. Current approaches to estimate flood hazards often sample only a relatively small subset of the known unknowns, for example, the uncertainties surrounding the model parameters. This approach neglects the impacts of key uncertainties on hazards and system dynamics. Here we mainstream a recently developed method for Bayesian inference to calibrate a computationally expensive distributed hydrologic model. We compare three different calibration approaches: (a) stepwise line search, (b) precalibration or screening, and (c) the Fast Model Calibrations (FaMoS) approach. FaMoS deploys a particle-based approach that takes advantage of the massive parallelization afforded by modern high-performance computing systems. We quantify how neglecting parametric uncertainty and data discrepancy can drastically underestimate extreme flood events and risks. Precalibration improves prediction skill score over a stepwise line search. The Bayesian calibration improves the uncertainty characterization of model parameters and flood risk projections.
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U2 - 10.1029/2022EF003050
DO - 10.1029/2022EF003050
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85147147053
SN - 2328-4277
VL - 11
JO - Earth's Future
JF - Earth's Future
IS - 1
M1 - e2022EF003050
ER -