Landslide Susceptibility Modeling by Interpretable Neural Network

Authors: Khaled Youssef, Kevin Shao, Seulgi Moon, Louis-Serge Bouchard

79 pages (including SI section); 8 main figures; 12 supplementary figures; 9 supplementary tables
License: CC BY 4.0

Abstract: Landslides are notoriously difficult to predict because numerous spatially and temporally varying factors contribute to slope stability. Artificial neural networks (ANN) have been shown to improve prediction accuracy but are largely uninterpretable. Here we introduce an additive ANN optimization framework to assess landslide susceptibility, as well as dataset division and outcome interpretation techniques. We refer to our approach, which features full interpretability, high accuracy, high generalizability and low model complexity, as superposable neural network (SNN) optimization. We validate our approach by training models on landslide inventory from three different easternmost Himalaya regions. Our SNN outperformed physically-based and statistical models and achieved similar performance to state-of-the-art deep neural networks. The SNN models found the product of slope and precipitation and hillslope aspect to be important primary contributors to high landslide susceptibility, which highlights the importance of strong slope-climate couplings, along with microclimates, on landslide occurrences.

Submitted to arXiv on 18 Jan. 2022

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