4.6 Article

Multi-objective downscaling of precipitation time series by genetic programming

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 14, Pages 6162-6182

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/joc.7172

Keywords

genetic programming; machine learning; Pareto optimality; stochastic downscaling

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG) [CRC/TR32]

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Symbolic regression is used to estimate daily precipitation amounts in the Alpine region, generating a set of downscaling models with different achievable trade-offs between low RMSE and consistency in distribution. Deterministic downscaling models perform better with low RMSE, while stochastic models slightly outperform deterministic models in terms of IQD for the majority of cases. No approach is uniquely superior, with stochastic models providing useful distribution estimates capturing stochastic uncertainty similar to or slightly better than GLM-based downscaling.
We use symbolic regression to estimate daily precipitation amounts at six stations in the Alpine region from a global reanalysis. Symbolic regression only prescribes the set of mathematical expressions allowed in the regression model, but not its structure. The regression models are generated by genetic programming (GP) in analogy to biological evolution. The two conflicting objectives of a low root-mean-square error (RMSE) and consistency in the distribution between model and observations are treated as a multi-objective optimization problem. This allows us to derive a set of downscaling models that represents different achievable trade-offs between the two conflicting objectives, a so-called Pareto set. Our GP setup limits the size of the regression models and uses an analytical quotient instead of a standard or protected division operator. With this setup we obtain models that have a generalization performance comparable with generalized linear regression models (GLMs), which are used as a benchmark. We generate deterministic and stochastic downscaling models with GP. The deterministic downscaling models with low RMSE outperform the respective stochastic models. The stochastic models with low IQD, however, perform slightly better than the respective deterministic models for the majority of cases. No approach is uniquely superior. The stochastic models with optimal IQD provide useful distribution estimates that capture the stochastic uncertainty similar to or slightly better than the GLM-based downscaling.

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