Predicting the Earthquake Magnitude along Zagros Fault Using Time Series and Ensemble Model

Predicting the earthquake magnitude is a complex problem, which has been carried out in recent years. The machine learning, geophysical, and regression methods were used to predict earthquake magnitude in literature. Iran is located in a highly seismically active area; thus, earthquake prediction is...

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Main Authors: Aydin Shishegaran, Hamed Taghavizade, Alireza Bigdeli, Arshia Shishegaran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pouyan Press 2019-10-01
Series:Journal of Soft Computing in Civil Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jsoftcivil.com/article_101846_baf743f7abe39ed09fc91a1cb04931ae.pdf
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spelling doaj-194399e821f341f4bd9151cf836c85192021-02-21T16:51:19ZengPouyan PressJournal of Soft Computing in Civil Engineering2588-28722588-28722019-10-0134677710.22115/scce.2020.213197.1152101846Predicting the Earthquake Magnitude along Zagros Fault Using Time Series and Ensemble ModelAydin Shishegaran0Hamed Taghavizade1Alireza Bigdeli2Arshia Shishegaran3Ph.D. Candidate, Environmental Engineering, School of Civil Engineering, Iran University of Science and Technology, Tehran, IranResearch Assistant, Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering, International Institute of Earthquake Engineering and Seismology, Tehran, IranMaster of Science Student, Structural Engineering, School of Civil Engineering, Iran University of Science and Technology, Tehran, IranMaster of Science Student, Structural Engineering, School of Civil Engineering, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, IranPredicting the earthquake magnitude is a complex problem, which has been carried out in recent years. The machine learning, geophysical, and regression methods were used to predict earthquake magnitude in literature. Iran is located in a highly seismically active area; thus, earthquake prediction is considered as a great demand there. In this study, two time series algorithms are utilized to predict the magnitude of the earthquake based on previous earthquakes. These models are autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity (GARCH), autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA), and the combination of ARIMA and GARCH by multiple linear regression (MLR) technique (model 3). The 9017 events are used to train and predict earthquake magnitude. On the other hand, 6188 events are applied for training models, and then 2829 events are utilized for testing it. The statistical parameters, such as correlation coefficient, root mean square error (RMSE), normalized square error (NMSE), and fractional bias, are calculated to evaluate the accuracy of each model. The results demonstrate that the ARIMA and model 3 can predict future earthquake magnitude better than other models.http://www.jsoftcivil.com/article_101846_baf743f7abe39ed09fc91a1cb04931ae.pdfearthquake magnitudetime seriesstatistical parameterspredictionensemble technique
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aydin Shishegaran
Hamed Taghavizade
Alireza Bigdeli
Arshia Shishegaran
spellingShingle Aydin Shishegaran
Hamed Taghavizade
Alireza Bigdeli
Arshia Shishegaran
Predicting the Earthquake Magnitude along Zagros Fault Using Time Series and Ensemble Model
Journal of Soft Computing in Civil Engineering
earthquake magnitude
time series
statistical parameters
prediction
ensemble technique
author_facet Aydin Shishegaran
Hamed Taghavizade
Alireza Bigdeli
Arshia Shishegaran
author_sort Aydin Shishegaran
title Predicting the Earthquake Magnitude along Zagros Fault Using Time Series and Ensemble Model
title_short Predicting the Earthquake Magnitude along Zagros Fault Using Time Series and Ensemble Model
title_full Predicting the Earthquake Magnitude along Zagros Fault Using Time Series and Ensemble Model
title_fullStr Predicting the Earthquake Magnitude along Zagros Fault Using Time Series and Ensemble Model
title_full_unstemmed Predicting the Earthquake Magnitude along Zagros Fault Using Time Series and Ensemble Model
title_sort predicting the earthquake magnitude along zagros fault using time series and ensemble model
publisher Pouyan Press
series Journal of Soft Computing in Civil Engineering
issn 2588-2872
2588-2872
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Predicting the earthquake magnitude is a complex problem, which has been carried out in recent years. The machine learning, geophysical, and regression methods were used to predict earthquake magnitude in literature. Iran is located in a highly seismically active area; thus, earthquake prediction is considered as a great demand there. In this study, two time series algorithms are utilized to predict the magnitude of the earthquake based on previous earthquakes. These models are autoregressive conditional heteroscedasticity (GARCH), autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA), and the combination of ARIMA and GARCH by multiple linear regression (MLR) technique (model 3). The 9017 events are used to train and predict earthquake magnitude. On the other hand, 6188 events are applied for training models, and then 2829 events are utilized for testing it. The statistical parameters, such as correlation coefficient, root mean square error (RMSE), normalized square error (NMSE), and fractional bias, are calculated to evaluate the accuracy of each model. The results demonstrate that the ARIMA and model 3 can predict future earthquake magnitude better than other models.
topic earthquake magnitude
time series
statistical parameters
prediction
ensemble technique
url http://www.jsoftcivil.com/article_101846_baf743f7abe39ed09fc91a1cb04931ae.pdf
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AT alirezabigdeli predictingtheearthquakemagnitudealongzagrosfaultusingtimeseriesandensemblemodel
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