Abstract

Artificial neural networks (ANNs) are powerful tools for the modeling and forecasting of complex engineering systems and have been exploited by researchers to solve a variety of problems over the last couple of decades. In spite of their proven ability to provide superior model performance compared to traditional modeling approaches, they have not become popular among decision makers for operational use. It is probably because of their perceived black box nature that does not explain or consider the underlying physical processes involved. This paper presents the results of a study aimed at a systematic dissection of the massively parallel architectures of trained ANN hydrologic models to determine if they learn the underlying physical subprocesses during training. This has been achieved using simple qualitative and quantitative techniques. The data derived from three contrasting catchments at two different time scales were employed to develop ANN models and test the methodologies employed for knowledge extraction. The results obtained in this study indicate that the number of hidden neurons determined during training for a particular data set correspond to certain subprocesses of the overall physical process being modeled. It has been found that the time scale of the data employed has an effect on optimum ANN architecture and knowledge extracted.

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