A Silhouette-Width-Induced Hierarchical Clustering for Defining Flood Estimation Regions
Abstract
Flood quantile estimation in ungauged basins is often performed using regional analysis. A regionalization procedure consists of two phases: the definition of homogeneous regions among gauged basins, i.e., clusters of stations, and information transfer to the ungauged sites. Due to its simplicity and widespread use, a combination of hierarchical clustering by Ward's algorithm and the index-flood method is applied in this research. While hierarchical clustering is very efficient, its shortcomings are the lack of flexibility in the definition of clusters/regions and the inability to transfer objects/stations from one cluster center to another. To overcome this, using silhouette width for induced clustering of stations in flood studies is proposed in this paper. A regionalization procedure is conducted on 53 gauging stations under a continental climate in the West Balkans. In the induced clustering, a negative silhouette width is used as an indicator for the relocation of station(s) to an...other cluster. The estimates of mean annual flood and 100-year flood quantiles assessed by the original and induced clustering are compared. A jackknife procedure is applied for mean annual flood estimation and 100-year flood quantiles. Both the Hosking-Wallis and Anderson-Darling bootstrap tests provide better results regarding the homogeneity of the defined regions for the induced clustering compared to the original one. The goodness-of-fit measures indicate improved clustering results by the proposed intervention, reflecting flood quantile estimation at the stations with significant overestimation by the original clustering.
Keywords:
silhouette width / regional analysis / hierarchical clustering / flood quantileSource:
Hydrology, 2023, 10, 6Funding / projects:
- Ministry of Science, Technological Development and Innovation of the Republic of Serbia, institutional funding - 200095 (Univeristy of Niš, Faculty of Civil Engineering and Architecture) (RS-MESTD-inst-2020-200095)
- Ministry of Science, Technological Development and Innovation of the Republic of Serbia, institutional funding - 200169 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Forestry) (RS-MESTD-inst-2020-200169)
DOI: 10.3390/hydrology10060126
ISSN: 2306-5338
WoS: 001017454000001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85163776986
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Šumarski fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Mulaomerović-Seta, Ajla AU - Blagojević, Borislava AU - Mihailović, Vladislava AU - Petroselli, Andrea PY - 2023 UR - https://omorika.sfb.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1419 AB - Flood quantile estimation in ungauged basins is often performed using regional analysis. A regionalization procedure consists of two phases: the definition of homogeneous regions among gauged basins, i.e., clusters of stations, and information transfer to the ungauged sites. Due to its simplicity and widespread use, a combination of hierarchical clustering by Ward's algorithm and the index-flood method is applied in this research. While hierarchical clustering is very efficient, its shortcomings are the lack of flexibility in the definition of clusters/regions and the inability to transfer objects/stations from one cluster center to another. To overcome this, using silhouette width for induced clustering of stations in flood studies is proposed in this paper. A regionalization procedure is conducted on 53 gauging stations under a continental climate in the West Balkans. In the induced clustering, a negative silhouette width is used as an indicator for the relocation of station(s) to another cluster. The estimates of mean annual flood and 100-year flood quantiles assessed by the original and induced clustering are compared. A jackknife procedure is applied for mean annual flood estimation and 100-year flood quantiles. Both the Hosking-Wallis and Anderson-Darling bootstrap tests provide better results regarding the homogeneity of the defined regions for the induced clustering compared to the original one. The goodness-of-fit measures indicate improved clustering results by the proposed intervention, reflecting flood quantile estimation at the stations with significant overestimation by the original clustering. T2 - Hydrology T1 - A Silhouette-Width-Induced Hierarchical Clustering for Defining Flood Estimation Regions IS - 6 VL - 10 DO - 10.3390/hydrology10060126 UR - conv_933 ER -
@article{ author = "Mulaomerović-Seta, Ajla and Blagojević, Borislava and Mihailović, Vladislava and Petroselli, Andrea", year = "2023", abstract = "Flood quantile estimation in ungauged basins is often performed using regional analysis. A regionalization procedure consists of two phases: the definition of homogeneous regions among gauged basins, i.e., clusters of stations, and information transfer to the ungauged sites. Due to its simplicity and widespread use, a combination of hierarchical clustering by Ward's algorithm and the index-flood method is applied in this research. While hierarchical clustering is very efficient, its shortcomings are the lack of flexibility in the definition of clusters/regions and the inability to transfer objects/stations from one cluster center to another. To overcome this, using silhouette width for induced clustering of stations in flood studies is proposed in this paper. A regionalization procedure is conducted on 53 gauging stations under a continental climate in the West Balkans. In the induced clustering, a negative silhouette width is used as an indicator for the relocation of station(s) to another cluster. The estimates of mean annual flood and 100-year flood quantiles assessed by the original and induced clustering are compared. A jackknife procedure is applied for mean annual flood estimation and 100-year flood quantiles. Both the Hosking-Wallis and Anderson-Darling bootstrap tests provide better results regarding the homogeneity of the defined regions for the induced clustering compared to the original one. The goodness-of-fit measures indicate improved clustering results by the proposed intervention, reflecting flood quantile estimation at the stations with significant overestimation by the original clustering.", journal = "Hydrology", title = "A Silhouette-Width-Induced Hierarchical Clustering for Defining Flood Estimation Regions", number = "6", volume = "10", doi = "10.3390/hydrology10060126", url = "conv_933" }
Mulaomerović-Seta, A., Blagojević, B., Mihailović, V.,& Petroselli, A.. (2023). A Silhouette-Width-Induced Hierarchical Clustering for Defining Flood Estimation Regions. in Hydrology, 10(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrology10060126 conv_933
Mulaomerović-Seta A, Blagojević B, Mihailović V, Petroselli A. A Silhouette-Width-Induced Hierarchical Clustering for Defining Flood Estimation Regions. in Hydrology. 2023;10(6). doi:10.3390/hydrology10060126 conv_933 .
Mulaomerović-Seta, Ajla, Blagojević, Borislava, Mihailović, Vladislava, Petroselli, Andrea, "A Silhouette-Width-Induced Hierarchical Clustering for Defining Flood Estimation Regions" in Hydrology, 10, no. 6 (2023), https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrology10060126 ., conv_933 .