Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4526704 Advances in Water Resources 2007 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

Characterizing the dynamic relationship between rainfall and runoff is a highly interesting modeling problem in hydrology. This study develops a deterministic linearized recurrent neural network (denoted as DLRNN) that deals with the system’s nonlinearity by recalibration at each time interval, and relates the weights of DLRNN to unit hydrographs in order to describe the transition of the rainfall–runoff processes. Case studies of 38 events, from 1966 to 1997, are implemented in the Wu-Tu watershed of Taiwan, where the runoff path-lines are short and steep. A comparison between the DLRNN and a feed-forward neural network demonstrates the advantage of DLRNN as a dynamic system model. It is concluded that DLRNN shows superiority in the performance of rainfall–runoff simulations and the ability to recognize transitions in hydrological processes.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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