Applied Water Science (Jul 2019)

Random forest, M5P and regression analysis to estimate the field unsaturated hydraulic conductivity

  • Parveen Sihag,
  • Sahar Mohsenzadeh Karimi,
  • Anastasia Angelaki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13201-019-1007-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 5
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Hydraulic conductivity of soil reveals its influencing role in the studies related to management of surface and subsurface flow, e.g. irrigation and drainage projects, and solute mass transport models. Direct measurements of hydraulic conductivity have many difficulties due to spatial variation of the property in the field. Pertaining to this problem, in this study, estimation models have been developed using machine learning methods (M5 tree model and random forest model) in an attempt to estimate the accurate values of unsaturated hydraulic conductivity related to basic soil properties (clay, silt and sand content, bulk density and moisture content). Data set was collected from the experimental measurements of cumulative infiltration using mini disc infiltrometer at the study area (Kurukshetra, India). A multivariate nonlinear regression (MNLR) relationship was derived, and the performance of this model was compared with the machine learning-based models. The evaluation of the results, based on statistical criteria (R 2, RMSE, MAE), suggested that random forest regression model is superior in accurate estimations of the unsaturated hydraulic conductivity of field data relative to M5 model tree and MNLR.

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