Litcius/Paper detail

Using Deep Learning for Flexible and Scalable Earthquake Forecasting

Kélian Dascher-Cousineau, Oleksandr Shchur, E. E. Brodsky, Stephan Günnemann

2023Geophysical Research Letters42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Seismology is witnessing explosive growth in the diversity and scale of earthquake catalogs. A key motivation for this community effort is that more data should translate into better earthquake forecasts. Such improvements are yet to be seen. Here, we introduce the Recurrent Earthquake foreCAST (RECAST), a deep‐learning model based on recent developments in neural temporal point processes. The model enables access to a greater volume and diversity of earthquake observations, overcoming the theoretical and computational limitations of traditional approaches. We benchmark against a temporal Epidemic Type Aftershock Sequence model. Tests on synthetic data suggest that with a modest‐sized data set, RECAST accurately models earthquake‐like point processes directly from cataloged data. Tests on earthquake catalogs in Southern California indicate improved fit and forecast accuracy compared to our benchmark when the training set is sufficiently long (>10 4 events). The basic components in RECAST add flexibility and scalability for earthquake forecasting without sacrificing performance.

Topics & Concepts

Benchmark (surveying)ScalabilityEarthquake predictionAftershockComputer scienceData setEarthquake simulationSet (abstract data type)Scale (ratio)Artificial neural networkSeismologyData miningMachine learningArtificial intelligenceGeologyGeographyCartographyDatabaseProgramming languageGeodesyearthquake and tectonic studiesEarthquake Detection and AnalysisSeismology and Earthquake Studies