Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

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environmental science

Evolutionary computational intelligence algorithm coupled with self-tuning predictive model for water quality index determination

Journal of Hydrology, Volume 587, Article 124974, Year 2020

Anthropogenic activities affect the water bodies and result in a drastic reduction of river water quality (WQ). The development of a reliable intelligent model for evaluating the suitability of water remains a challenging task facing hydro-environmental engineers. The current study is investigated the applicability of Extreme Gradient Boosting (XGB) and Genetic Programming (GP) in obtaining feature importance, and then abstracted input variables were imposed into the predictive model (the Extreme Learning Machine (ELM)) for the prediction of water quality index (WQI). The stand-alone modeling schema is compared with the proposed hybrid models where the optimum variables are supplied into the GP, XGB, linear regression (LR), stepwise linear regression (SWLR) and ELM models. The WQ data is obtained from the Department of Environment (DoE) (Malaysia), and results are evaluated in terms of determination coefficient (R2) and root mean square error (RMSE). The results demonstrated that the hybrid GPELM and XGBELM models outperformed the standalone GP, XGB, and ELM models for the prediction of WQI at Kinta River basin. A comparison of the hybrid models showed that the predictive skill of GPELM (RMSE = 3.441 training and RMSE = 3.484 testing) over XGBELM improving the accuracy by decreasing the values of RMSE by 5% and 9% for training and testing, respectively with regards to XGBELM (RMSE = 3.606 training and RMSE = 3.816 testing). Although regressions are often proposed as reference models (LR and SWLR), when combined with computational intelligence, they still provide satisfactory results in this study. The proposed hybrid GPELM and XGBELM models have improved the prediction accuracy with minimum number of input variables and can therefore serve as reliable predictive tools for WQI at Kinta River basin.
Statistics
Citations: 84
Authors: 7
Affiliations: 8
Research Areas
Environmental
Genetics And Genomics