Abstract
Seismically generated landslides represent one of the most damaging hazards associated with earthquakes in countries with high seismicity. The delineation of prone to coseismic landsliding areas is crucial in order to predict the occurrence of earthquake-induced landslides and consequently reduce the relevant risk. The goal of this study is to investigate the correlation of the pattern of coseismic landslides with geological and topographical variables i.e. lithology, slope angle and slope aspect with the volume of landslides based on fuzzy logic and machine learning techniques. For this task, a real dataset of 421 and 767 instances for years 2003 and 2015 respectively from the island of Lefkada was used. A new approach based on Fuzzy C-Means Algorithm and Ensemble Subspace k-Nearest-Neighbors (Ensemble Subspace k-NN) is proposed. Landslides were classified according to their severity with a success rate of 99.5% and 98.7% for 2003 and 2015 respectively. The performance of the proposed approach was evaluated using “One Versus All” Strategy, calculating Accuracy, Sensitivity, Specificity, Precision and F-1 Score for each cluster.
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Keywords
- Landslides
- Lefkada
- Fuzzy C-Means
- S-Nome
- k-Nearest-Neighbors
- Ensemble Subspace k-NN
- Clustering
- Classification
1 Introduction
It is well known that landslide can be triggered by rainfall, earthquakes, volcanic eruption and man-made activities. Experience has shown that seismically induced landslides represent one of the most damaging hazards associated with earthquakes in countries with high seismicity [1]. According to Jibson et al. [18], the effect of seismically-induced landslides on human lives and facilities may exceed in some cases the damage directly connected to the shaking. The correlation of coseismic landslides with the seismic and morphological parameters has been investigated by several researchers, mainly after the devastating 2008 Wenchuan, China earthquake. The outcome arisen by this correlation is that both the volume and number of landsliding phenomena are relevant to earthquake magnitude. In particular, it was shown that landslide frequencies are higher in areas of highest peak ground acceleration (PGA) and that landslide density decays with the epicentral or fault distance [2, 20, 25, 31].
The delineation of prone to coseismic landsliding areas is crucial in order to predict the occurrence of earthquake-induced landslides and consequently reduce the relevant risk. Nowadays, satellite imagery and GIS technology are considered as basic tools that are used by earth scientist for evaluating the hazard and the risk within an area, initially by the introduction and statistical analyses of geo-environmental and seismologic factors into GIS software [29]. In particular, the characteristics of the landsliding area is statistically related to control factors such as topographic, geologic and seismic parameters e.g. slope angle, slope aspect, curvature, lithology, Peak Ground Acceleration (PGA) and seismic intensity distribution, and distance from the seismic fault or epicenter [27, 39]. These correlations can provide crucial information that can be used for seismic landslide hazard analysis and planning mitigation measures for prone earthquake-induced landslides regions [6, 7, 18, 30].
Frequently, the statistical analysis is based on bivariate and multivariate approaches. The goal of this study is to investigate the correlation of the pattern of coseismic landslides with geological and topographical variables i.e. lithology, slope angle and slope aspect with the volume of landslides based on fuzzy logic and machine learning techniques. In particular, Fuzzy C-Means Algorithm [3, 12] was used for data clustering and Ensemble Subspace k-Nearest-Neighbors (Ensemble Subspace k-NN) was used for the classification [10, 15, 37]. Existing bibliography like [23] and [33] does not exploit the combination of the above algorithms.
The motivation for the development of this research was the need for a more flexible model. More specifically, the existing approaches (e.g. the bivariate analysis) are using crisp values for the determination of slope angle or slope aspect classes. Thus, borderline values can be easily misclassified.
2 Area of Research
The geology of the Lefkada island, comprises: (1) a carbonate sequence of the Ionian zone, (2) limestone of Paxos (Apulia) zone restricted in the SW peninsula of the island, (3) few outcrops of ionian flysch (turbidites) and Miocene marls-sandstones mainly in the northern part of the island [9, 34]. The boundary between the two different geological zones – Ionian and Paxos, runs in an approximate NW- SE direction through this region and outcrops onshore south-central Lefkada Island near Hortata village, in the form of a buried thrust fault by scree and late Quaternary deposits [28]. Pleistocene and especially Holocene coastal deposits are extended in the northern edge of Lefkada, where the homonym capital town is founded, in the valley of Vassiliki and in the coast Nydri.
Regarding the seismicity, it is pointed out that the island of Lefkada is considered as one of the most tectonically active areas in Europe being part of the high seismicity Ionian Sea area, and particularly due to the complex crustal deformation resulting from the subduction of the African plate towards NE and the Apulian platform continental collision further to the northwest [14, 16]. The main active tectonic structure, is the 140 km long dextral strike-slip Cephalonia-Lefkada Transform fault (Fig. 1) (CTF; [24, 36, 38]), which has a GPS slip-rate bracketed between 10 and 25 mm/yr. The steep morphology on the western part of the island, where most of slope failure cases are reported is due to this offshore CTF and its onshore sub-parallel fault; the Athani-Dragano fault [9, 35]. The latter one is a NNE-SSW striking fault forming a narrow elongated continental basin, very well expressed in the region’s morphology and marked on satellite images and aerial photos.
There is reliable detailed information for at least 23 events, since 1612 which induced ground failures at the island of Lefkada [26]. A first conclusion arising from the list of historical events is that earthquakes appear in couples (twin or cluster events) with time period of occurrence ranging between 2 months and 5 years e.g. 1612–1613 (16 months); 1625–1630 (5 years); 1722–1723 (10 months); 1767–1769 (2 years); 1783–1783 (2 months, possible aftershock); 1867–1869 (2 years); 1914–1915 (2 months); 1948–1948 (2 months). Thus, it is crucial to determine the location of coseismic landslides since it will be beneficial for reducing the risk and increasing the resilience at the island.
2.1 Coseismic Landslides at the Island of Lefkada
The most recently occurred and well-studied earthquakes are the ones of 2003 and 2015. The penultimate event triggered extensive slope failures at the western part of the island. The volume of the debris material that moved downwards was larger than the one of the 2015 earthquake. Rock falls were widespread on the whole island and especially in the northwestern and central area, on both natural and cut slopes, as well as, on downstream road embankment slopes. The most characteristic rock falls, with diameters up to 4 m, were observed along the 6 km long road of Tsoukalades-Agios Nikitas, which is within the epicentral area, and are accompanied by gravel, small rock and soil slides [26]. The massive occurrence of these failures is the reason for the closure of the road network at this area of the island for more than 2 years. The reported rock falls followed the trace of a 300 m high morphological scarp, and especially a 10–40 m high artificial slope [26].
Regarding the 2015 earthquake, the dominant geological effects were related to slope failures i.e. rock falls and slides, and shallow and deep-seated landslides on both natural and cut slopes [28]. These failures were documented on the western part of the island, while the most densely concentration of these phenomena was reported on the coastal zone from Porto Katsiki to Egremnoi-Gialos beach and along the 6 km long coastal road of Tsoukalades - Agios Nikitas [28]. Shallow landslides and rock slides were mainly generated in areas where the clastic material covered the bedrock, and particularly in places where the rock mass was heavily jointed. Deep-seated landslides were mainly documented at the area of Egremnoi [29]. At this area, deep-seated landslides were reported, and large amount of debris material moved downslope inducing severe damages to the road network and to residential houses. The debris consists of coarse-grained size material with significant amount of large-diameter gravels and few boulders.
In order to investigate the earthquake-induced landslide density, event-based inventories were developed by taking into account aerial and satellite imagery in Google Earth in order to enrich and update existing landslide datasets, previously compiled for the two earthquakes [27]. In particular, Google Earth imagery of June 12, 2003 and December 19, 2005 was used for mapping 2003 earthquake landslides, and November 15, 2013 and April 15, 2016 for 2015 earthquake, respectively. Landslide activity along the western part of Lefkada is considered as minimal between major earthquakes, as observed on multi-date satellite imagery and confirmed by local residents. Considering this, the short period between each satellite imagery pair (2–3 years) is believed to include only the coseismic landslides, with very few if any at all landslides triggered by other factors. In total, 301 and 596 coseismic landslides were mapped for the 2003 and 2015 earthquakes, respectively. For the extraction of morphological and terrain parameters of the compiled landslide datasets, a detailed digital elevation model (DEM) with spatial resolution of 5 m was used. The 5 m DEM was obtained from Hellenic Cadastre and it was extracted from aerial imagery stereo-pairs, having a vertical accuracy of 4 m [29].
Having completed the polygon-based inventories, a statistical analysis of landslide distribution took place. In total, 596 and 301 landslides were identified covering (planar area) 1.29 km2 and 1.6 km2 for the 2015 and 2003 events, respectively. It is pointed out that these planar-oriented areas are obtained as projected measurements. The minimum and maximum landslide area were evaluated as 40.4 m2 and 42940 m2 for the 2015 earthquake, while for the penultimate event the relevant values are 129.8 m2 and 98300 m2, respectively [29]. The relevant values of minimum and maximum landslide area for the 2015 event, which were evaluated by taking into account the digital elevation model for the delineation of the landslide area, are 1.78 km2 total area, 51.30 m2 minimum and 58330 m2 maximum area, while for the 2003 earthquake the total landsliding area covered 2.28 km2 with minimum area of 140.9 m2 and maximum 148469 m2 [29].
3 Description of Dataset Pre-processing
The initial datasets (*.xlsx files) consist of 6 columns, 4 of which are numeric (Perimeter, Average Slope, Surface, Id) and 2 are nominal (Average Aspect and Geological Form). The 5th column is used only for data processing to determine the distinct incidents. Each vector represents a landslide with a specific Geological Form on the island of Lefkada. As it is already mentioned, 301 and 596 landslides were identified for years 2003 and 2015 respectively. However, numerous landslides are related to more than one types of geological forms. Taking into account this fact, the landsliding areas have been reassigned based on the geological form upon which they were delineated, resulting in 421 and 767 observations for years 2003 and 2015, respectively. The same data pre-processing approach was used for both datasets. However, data handling for each year was applied independently from the other, given that 2003 observations have been mapped on two additional geological forms compared to the case of 2015. Therefore, evaluation of the proposed approach per year has proven its efficiency and consistency. Data processing was performed in three steps. In particular, the first step was applied manually using both *.xlsx files, while second and third steps was achieved by developing code in Matlab R2019a.
3.1 Labeling of Nominal Values
Initially, Average Aspect was transformed from nominal to numeric in a scale from one to eight. Geological Form was similarly transformed to a scale from one to twenty for year 2003 and from one to eighteen for year 2015. The transformations can be seen in Tables 1 and 2.
where al: alluvial; C, Jm, Jc, Jar, J1: limestones of Ionian; Ci, Cs: limestones of Paxos; Csd limestones; E: limestones Eocene; Js: limestone of Paxos; J1d: dolomites; M, Mb: Miocene sandstones; Pc: Pliocene conglomerate; Qc, Qp, Qt: Quaternary sediments; Tc: limestones and dolomites of Triassic; Tg: evaporites.
3.2 Landslides Fuzzy C-Means Clustering
After a statistical pre-processing of data, authors noticed that there were few high values causing a high standard deviation. Therefore, clustering of landslides is deterrent with conventional methods. Τo overcome this hardship, Fuzzy C-Means Clustering was employed to classify landslides according to their severity. Fuzzy C-Means was used because it offers a very flexible methodology, as each data point can be assigned to more than one clusters with different degrees of membership. This task was performed in order to develop the labeled dataset required for the deployment of the machine-learning model. A subset of available data, perimeter and surface, was used in order to apply the Clustering.
Fuzzy clustering (a well-known soft computing method [4]) is an approach in which each data point can belong to more than one cluster. One of the most widely used fuzzy clustering algorithms is the Fuzzy C-means clustering (FCM) Algorithm. This method, developed by Dunn in 1973 [12] and improved by Bezdek [3], is frequently used in pattern recognition. It is based on minimization of the following objective function:
Where m is the fuzzifier (the fuzzifier m determines the level of cluster fuzziness), uij is the degree of membership of xi in the cluster j, xi is the ith of d-dimensional measured data, cj is the d-dimension center of the cluster, and ||*|| is any norm expressing the similarity between any measured data and the center. Fuzzy partitioning is carried out through an iterative optimization of the objective function shown above, with the update of membership uij and the cluster centers cj by:
This iteration will stop when \( \max_{ij} \left\{ {\left| {u_{ij}^{(k + 1)} - u_{ij}^{k} } \right|} \right\} < \varepsilon \), where ε is a termination criterion between 0 and 1, whereas k are the iteration steps. This procedure converges to a local minimum or a saddle point of Jm.
Parameters used for the FCM algorithm are presented in Table 4 while columns Perimeter and Surface, from source data set, were chosen as input parameters. Exponent (m fuzzier) controls the degree of fuzzy overlap between clusters. A large m results in smaller membership values, uij, and hence, fuzzier clusters. In the limit m = 1, the memberships, uij, converge to 0 or 1, which implies a crisp partitioning. maxIterations is the maximum number of optimization iterations and minImprovement is the minimum improvement in the objective function between successive iterations When the objective function improves by a value below this threshold, the optimization stops. A smaller value produces more accurate clustering results, but the clustering can take longer to converge. For parameters’ values, the ones most used in the relevant literature were selected [21, 22].
A script FCM.m was developed in Matlab, aiming the transformation of *.xlsx file in Matlab tables. It has already been mentioned that the goal of this step is to create clusters for the severity of lansdlides. The chosen number of clusters is 6 (calculated as the existing combinations of 2 parameters with 3 states each). Clusters with their labels and their names are presented in Table 5. The first part of the name corresponds to Perimeter and the Second to Surface.
The FCM.m Script is presented in the form of natural language, in Algorithm 1.
Total landslides for each cluster for the years 2003 and 2015 are presented in Table 6.
3.3 Fuzzy Clustering with FCM Algorithm and S-Norm
After creating the clusters it was observed that some instances do not belong exclusively to a cluster (e.g. point (1981, 4.2·104) presented in Fig. 2a or point (2744, 3.3678·104) presented in Fig. 2b), as well as some instances in between 2 clusters with similar membership values for both. Considering the above observation, the re-creation of clusters for all instances is essential. Consequently, we decided that landslides, which have degree of membership, for their dominant class, below a certain threshold will be re-sorted. In order to perform this, it is necessary to use weights on each factor [5, 41].
Equation (3) implements a fuzzy coupling between many fuzzy sets, using a function \( f(\mu_{i} ,w_{i} ) \) which assigns the weight wi to the membership degree μi.
Where i = 1, 2,…, k and k the number of instances examined and n factors’ number [13]. The function f used in the coupling function (Eq. (3)) can be defined as:
where a is the membership degree and w is the corresponding weight.
For the Aggregation function was used Hamacher aggregation as S-Norm operator [40].
Another script S-Norm_Clustering.m was developed in Matlab. The second script is presented in the form of natural language, in Algorithm 2.
After applied S-Norm_Clustering.m, 4 more clusters were created for landslides of 2003 and 5 more for 2015. New clusters were created between the already existing clusters. Therefore, they took their label depending the clusters that are between. For example, cluster between cluster 1 and 2 is labeled as cluster 1.5. Clusters are presented in Fig. 3a, b, and incidents for each cluster in Table 7. It is obvious that new clustering classifies observations more effectively according to severity.
4 Classification Methodology
After having clustering done, we used classification algorithms to ascertain coseismic landslides’ proper classification. The independent variables used for the classification are Perimeter, Average Slope, Surface, Average Aspect and Geological Form of landslides. Average Slope and Average Aspect were labeled as indicated in Tables 1, 2 and 3. The dependable value is the cluster derived from clustering with S-Norm.
A total of 23 classification algorithms have been employed namely: Fine Tree, Medium Tree, Coarse Tree, Linear Discriminant, Quadratic Discriminant, Linear SVM, Quadratic SVM, Cubic SVM, Fine Gaussian SVM, Medium Gaussian SVM, Coarse Gaussian SVM, Cosine KNN, Cubic KNN, Weighted KNN, Fine KNN, Medium KNN, Gaussian Naive Bayes, Kernel Naïve Bayes, Boosted Trees, Bagged Trees, Subspace Discriminant, Subspace KNN, RUSBoost Trees.
However, only the one with the highest values of performance indices will be described herein.
4.1 Ensemble Subspace k-Nearest-Neighbors (Ensemble Subspace k-NN)
Classifying query points based on their distance to specific points (or neighbors) can be a simple but yet effective process. The k-nearest neighbors (k-NN) is a lazy and non-parametric Learning algorithm [8]. It is widely used as a predictive performance benchmark, when we are trying to develop more sophisticated models. Given a set X of n points and a distance function, k-NN search finds the k closest points to a query point or set of them [17]. Dunami [11] first introduced a weighted voting method, called the distance-weighted (DW) k-nearest neighbor rule (Wk-NN). According to this approach, the closer neighbors are weighted more heavily than the farther ones, using the DW function. The weight wi for the i-th nearest neighbor of the query x′ is defined following function 1:
Finally, the classification result of the query is determined by the majority weighted voting as in function 2:
Based on Eq. (7), a neighbor with smaller distance is weighted more heavily than one with greater distance: the nearest neighbor is assigned a weight equal to 1, whereas the furthest one a weight of 0 and the weights of the others are scaled linearly to the interval in between.
Despite its simplicity, k-NN gives competitive results and in some cases even outperforms other complex learning algorithms. However, k-NN is affected by non-informative features in the data, which is something rather common with high dimensional data. Several attempts have been made to improve the performance of nearest neighbors’ classifiers by ensemble techniques. Some related work on ensemble of k-NN classifiers can be found in [10, 15, 17].
Subspace ensembles have the advantage of using less memory than ensembles with all predictors, and can handle missing values (NaNs).
The basic random subspace algorithm uses these parameters.
-
m is the number of dimensions (variables) to sample in each learner.
-
d is the number of dimensions in the data, which is the number of columns (predictors) in the data matrix X.
-
n is the number of learners in the ensemble. Set n using the NLearn input.
The basic random subspace algorithm performs the following steps:
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1.
Choose without replacement a random set of m predictors from the d possible values.
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2.
Train a weak learner using just the m chosen predictors.
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3.
Repeat steps 1 and 2 until there are n weak learners.
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4.
Predict by taking an average of the score prediction of the weak learners, and classify the category with the highest average score.
4.2 Evaluation of the Activity Model Classifiers
Accuracy is the overall index that has been used in evaluation of the developed Machine Learning models. However, additional indices have been used to estimate the efficiency of the algorithms. Given the fact that we are dealing with a multi-class classification problem, the “One Versus All” Strategy [19, 32] was used. The calculated validation indices that have been considered are presented in the following Table 8.
Precision (PREC) is the measure of the correctly identified positive cases from all the predicted positive cases. Thus, it is useful when the cost of False Positives is high.
On the other hand, Sensitivity (also known as Recall) is the measure of the correctly identified positive cases from all the actual positive cases. It is important when the cost of False Negatives is high. Specificity (SPC) is the true negative rate or the proportion of negatives that are correctly identified. Accuracy (ACC) is the measure of all correctly identified from the predicted cases. It represents the closeness of the measurements to a specific value. The F1 score can be interpreted as the harmonic mean (weighted average) of the Precision and Recall. As it is known from the literature, Accuracy can be seriously considered when the class distribution is balanced while F1 score is a better metric when there are imbalanced classes as in the above case. Using it as a metric, we are sure that if its value is high, both precision and recall of the classifier indicate good results. In our case the F1 score is the final overall criterion of good performance evaluation.
5 Experimental Results
The experiments were performed with the use of Matlab R2019a software. The options and hyperparameters set for Ensemble Subspace k-NN are presented in Table 9 below:
The Ensemble Subspace k-NN achieved an accuracy equal to 99.5% and 98.7% for 2003 and 2015 respectively. The Confusion Matrix for each year is presented in the following Figs. 4 and 5.
The following two Tables (10, 11), present the values of the performance indices for the above optimal algorithm.
From Tables (10, 11) it is obvious that the values of all indices clearly show a very good performance in both 2003 and 2015’s instances.
6 Discussion and Conclusion
Classification of coseismic landslides according to their severity is a really interesting, important and challenging task. In this paper an approach based on Fuzzy C-Means Algorithm and Ensemble Subspace k-Nearest-Neighbors (Ensemble Subspace k-NN) Algorithm is proposed and tested. The combination of Fuzzy C-Means and Hamacher aggregation as S-Norm operator, sorted the data to 10 clusters for year 2003 and 11 clusters for 2015. Thereafter, Ensemble Subspace k-NN, using Average Aspect, Average Slope, Geological Form, Perimeter and Surface as independent input variables, managed to achieve high success rates. The overall accuracy is 99.5% and 98.7% for 2003 and 2015 respectively.
The efficiency of the model is also perceivable from Tables 10 and 11, where indices Accuracy, Sensitivity, Specificity, Perception and F1-score range at high levels. However, some ostensibly inaccurate classifications like in Cl2.5 of 2003 or Cl3.5 of 2015 do not affect the overall performance of the model as all indicators range from 0.88 to 1.
Concluding, the research described herein managed to correctly classify coseismic landslides according to their severity to the island of Lefkada. Future work will focus on the development of hybrid and ensembles’ approaches for the forecasting of landslides’ severity or even for forecasting the exact area of a landslide.
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Psathas, A.P., Papaleonidas, A., Papathanassiou, G., Valkaniotis, S., Iliadis, L. (2020). Classification of Coseismic Landslides Using Fuzzy and Machine Learning Techniques. In: Iliadis, L., Angelov, P., Jayne, C., Pimenidis, E. (eds) Proceedings of the 21st EANN (Engineering Applications of Neural Networks) 2020 Conference. EANN 2020. Proceedings of the International Neural Networks Society, vol 2. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-48791-1_2
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