Evaluating Ecohydrological Model Sensitivity to Input Variability with an Information-Theory-Based Approach

Mozhgan A. Farahani, Alireza Vahid, Allison E. Goodwell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ecohydrological models vary in their sensitivity to forcing data and use available information to different extents. We focus on the impact of forcing precision on ecohydrological model behavior particularly by quantizing, or binning, time-series forcing variables. We use rate-distortion theory to quantize time-series forcing variables to different precisions. We evaluate the effect of different combinations of quantized shortwave radiation, air temperature, vapor pressure deficit, and wind speed on simulated heat and carbon fluxes for a multi-layer canopy model, which is forced and validated with eddy covariance flux tower observation data. We find that the model is more sensitive to radiation than meteorological forcing input, but model responses also vary with seasonal conditions and different combinations of quantized inputs. While any level of quantization impacts carbon flux similarly, specific levels of quantization influence heat fluxes to different degrees. This study introduces a method to optimally simplify forcing time series, often without significantly decreasing model performance, and could be applied within a sensitivity analysis framework to better understand how models use available information.

Original languageEnglish
Article number994
JournalEntropy
Volume24
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2022

Keywords

  • ecohydrological modeling
  • information theory
  • quantization
  • rate-distortion theory
  • sensitivity analysis

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