Abstract

ABSTRACT Given the increased frequency of extreme rainfall events, pre-disaster countermeasures against landslides triggered by heavy rainfall are important to enhance disaster resilience. This study presents a methodology for economic risk assessment of structures affected by rainfall-induced landslides using machine learning (ML). Random Forest and LightGBM algorithms were applied to develop ML-based landslide prediction models considering the spatial distributions of landslide conditioning and triggering factors. The rainfall index was calculated considering the temporal variation in rainfall and was used as a feature associated with rainfall intensity. The rainfall hazard curve, representing the relationship between the rainfall index and its annual exceedance probability, was statistically estimated using a generalised extreme value distribution. Rainfall-induced landslide susceptibility was assessed using an ML-based landslide prediction model and rainfall hazard curve. Finally, the risk curve associated with the economic loss from structures damaged by rainfall-induced landslides was estimated based on landslide susceptibility and structure distribution maps. In this study, LightGBM showed better prediction performance for evaluating rainfall-induced landslide susceptibility than Random Forest. An illustrative example is presented to demonstrate that the proposed methodology can be used to develop an appropriate risk-based disaster mitigation strategy.

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