Journal of Hydroinformatics (Jan 2024)

Algorithms to mimic human interpretation of turbidity events from drinking water distribution systems

  • Killian Gleeson,
  • Stewart Husband,
  • John Gaffney,
  • Joby Boxall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/hydro.2023.159
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 1
pp. 143 – 161

Abstract

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Deriving insight from the increasing volume of water quality time series data from drinking water distribution systems is complex and is usually situation- and individual-specific. This research used crowd-sourcing exercises involving groups of domain experts to identify features of interest within turbidity time series data from operational systems. The resulting labels provide insight and a novel benchmark against which algorithmic approaches to mimic the human interpretation could be evaluated. Reflection of the results of the labelling exercises resulted in the proposal of a turbidity event scale consisting of advisory 4 NTU levels to inform utility response. Automation, for scale up, was designed to enable event detection within these categories, with the <2NTU category being the most challenging. A time-based averaging approach, based on data at the same time of day, was found to be most effective for identifying these advisory events. The automation of event detection and categorisation presented here provides the opportunity to gain actionable insight to safeguard drinking water quality from ageing infrastructure. HIGHLIGHTS Crowd-sourcing captured domain expert interpretations of events within turbidity time series.; A turbidity event scale is proposed to inform reactive and proactive interventions.; Automated algorithms were developed to recreate and scale up domain expertise.;

Keywords