Statistics > Methodology
[Submitted on 13 Apr 2022 (v1), last revised 17 Jun 2022 (this version, v2)]
Title:Time series features for supporting hydrometeorological explorations and predictions in ungauged locations using large datasets
View PDFAbstract:Regression-based frameworks for streamflow regionalization are built around catchment attributes that traditionally originate from catchment hydrology, flood frequency analysis and their interplay. In this work, we deviated from this traditional path by formulating and extensively investigating the first regression-based streamflow regionalization frameworks that largely emerge from general-purpose time series features for data science and, more precisely, from a large variety of such features. We focused on 28 features that included (partial) autocorrelation, entropy, temporal variation, seasonality, trend, lumpiness, stability, nonlinearity, linearity, spikiness, curvature and others. We estimated these features for daily temperature, precipitation and streamflow time series from 511 catchments, and then merged them within regionalization contexts with traditional topographic, land cover, soil and geologic attributes. Precipitation and temperature features (e.g., the spectral entropy, seasonality strength and lag-1 autocorrelation of the precipitation time series, and the stability and trend strength of the temperature time series) were found to be useful predictors of many streamflow features. The same applies to traditional attributes, such as the catchment mean elevation. Relationships between predictor and dependent variables were also revealed, while the spectral entropy, the seasonality strength and several autocorrelation features of the streamflow time series were found to be more regionalizable than others.
Submission history
From: Georgia Papacharalampous [view email][v1] Wed, 13 Apr 2022 17:37:32 UTC (3,458 KB)
[v2] Fri, 17 Jun 2022 20:29:46 UTC (4,109 KB)
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