Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4978300 Environmental Modelling & Software 2016 20 Pages PDF
Abstract
In this study, a hybrid sequential data assimilation and probabilistic collocation (HSDAPC) approach is proposed for analyzing uncertainty propagation and parameter sensitivity of hydrologic models. In HSDAPC, the posterior probability distributions of model parameters are first estimated through a particle filter method based on streamflow discharge data. A probabilistic collocation method (PCM) is further employed to show uncertainty propagation from model parameters to model outputs. The temporal dynamics of parameter sensitivities are then generated based on the polynomial chaos expansion (PCE) generated by PCM, which can reveal the dominant model components for different catchment conditions. The maximal information coefficient (MIC) is finally employed to characterize the correlation/association between model parameter sensitivity and catchment precipitation, potential evapotranspiration and observed discharge. The proposed method is applied to the Xiangxi River located in the Three Gorges Reservoir area. The results show that: (i) the proposed HSDAPC approach can generate effective 2nd and 3rd PCE models which provide accuracy predictions; (ii) 2nd-order PCE, which can run nearly ten time faster than the hydrologic model, can capably represent the original hydrological model to show the uncertainty propagation in a hydrologic simulation; (iii) the slow (Rs) and quick flows (Rq) in Hymod show significant sensitivities during the simulation periods but the distribution factor (α) shows a least sensitivity to model performance; (iv) the model parameter sensitivities show significant correlation with the catchment hydro-meteorological conditions, especially during the rainy period with MIC values larger than 0.5. Overall, the results in this paper indicate that uncertainty propagation and temporal sensitivities of parameters can be effectively characterized through the proposed HSDAPC approach.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Software
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