2018
DOI: 10.3390/w10101389
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Dongting Lake Water Level Forecast and Its Relationship with the Three Gorges Dam Based on a Long Short-Term Memory Network

Abstract: To study the Dongting Lake water level variation and its relationship with the upstream Three Gorges Dam (TGD), a deep learning method based on a Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) network is used to establish a model that predicts the daily water levels of Dongting Lake. Seven factors are used as the input for the LSTM model and eight years of daily data (from 2003 to 2012) are used to train the model. Then, the model is applied to the test dataset (from 2011 to 2013) for forecasting and is evaluated using the roo… Show more

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Cited by 91 publications
(46 citation statements)
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References 42 publications
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“…This study used The Coupled Routing and Excess Storage-Soil-Vegetation-Atmosphere-Snow (CREST-SVAS) model driven by NLDAS forcing data to simulate flows in basins of Northeastern United States [13].The objective of this study is to demonstrate a numerical framework for evaluating flood vulnerability in terms of inundation at a site of interest in the Naugatuck River basin featuring critical utility infrastructure and different operation scenarios for an upstream dam. In the past, artificial intelligence (AI) has been used for the forecast of flood inundation [16,17] and dam-controlled reservoir water level [18]. Applying the AI techniques to assess flood vulnerability at this site of interest is however difficult because of the lack of necessary long-term observations at the site of interest and the existence of a major flood control dam upstream.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This study used The Coupled Routing and Excess Storage-Soil-Vegetation-Atmosphere-Snow (CREST-SVAS) model driven by NLDAS forcing data to simulate flows in basins of Northeastern United States [13].The objective of this study is to demonstrate a numerical framework for evaluating flood vulnerability in terms of inundation at a site of interest in the Naugatuck River basin featuring critical utility infrastructure and different operation scenarios for an upstream dam. In the past, artificial intelligence (AI) has been used for the forecast of flood inundation [16,17] and dam-controlled reservoir water level [18]. Applying the AI techniques to assess flood vulnerability at this site of interest is however difficult because of the lack of necessary long-term observations at the site of interest and the existence of a major flood control dam upstream.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(2) Establish a dataset: For each sample set, the training set (60 flood events) and validation set (15 flood events) are restructured to a supervised learning dataset by sliding window method [25]. In the supervised learning dataset, the sample size of the supervised learning training set is about 9000, and the sample size of the supervised learning validation set is about 2000.…”
Section: Model Trainingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Considering the representativeness of the peak discharge, we replaced one flood event of the validation set and two flood events of the test set to the training set (see Figure 4). The data from 75 flood events is restructured to a supervised learning dataset by a sliding window method [25]. The sample size of the training set, validation set and test set is 6595 (45 flood events), 2334 (15 flood events), and 2109 (15 flood events) for a 1 h lead-time, respectively.…”
Section: Training Processmentioning
confidence: 99%