4.1 Article

The application of a neural network-based ragweed pollen forecast by the Ragweed Pollen Alarm System in the Pannonian biogeographical region

Journal

AEROBIOLOGIA
Volume 36, Issue 2, Pages 131-140

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10453-019-09615-w

Keywords

Ragweed; Pollen; Forecast; Neural network; MLP

Funding

  1. National Public Health Center
  2. Sze chenyi 2020 program [EFOP-1.8.0-VEKOP-17-2017-00001]
  3. City Administration for Environmental Protection, City of Novi Sad
  4. Provincial Secretariat for Urban Planning and Environmental Protection AP Vojvodina
  5. Grant Agency VEGA (Bratislava) [1/0056/20]
  6. National Laboratory of Health, Environment and Food, Slovenia

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Ragweed Pollen Alarm System (R-PAS) has been running since 2014 to provide pollen information for countries in the Pannonian biogeographical region (PBR). The aim of this study was to develop forecast models of the representative aerobiological monitoring stations, identified by analysis based on a neural network computation. Monitoring stations with 7-day Hirst-type pollen trap having 10-year long validated data set of ragweed pollen were selected for the study from the PBR. Variables including forecasted meteorological data, pollen data of the previous days and nearby monitoring stations were used as input of the model. We used the multilayer perceptron model to forecast the pollen concentration. The multilayer perceptron (MLP) is a feedforward artificial neural network. MLP is a data-driven method to forecast the behaviour of complex systems. In our case, it has three layers, one of which is hidden. MLP utilizes a supervised learning technique called backpropagation for training to get better performance. By testing the neural network, we selected different sets of variables to predict pollen levels for the next 3 days in each of the monitoring stations. The predicted pollen level categories (low-medium-high-very high) are shown on isarithmic map. We used the mean square error, mean absolute error and correlation coefficient metrics to show the forecasting system's performance. The average of the Pearson correlations is around 0.6 but shows big variability (0.13-0.88) among different locations. Model uncertainty is mainly caused by the limitation of the available input data and the variability in ragweed season patterns. Visualization of the results of the neural network forecast on isarithmic maps is a good tool to communicate pollen information to general public in the PBR.

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