2024 : 4 : 28
Himan Shahabi

Himan Shahabi

Academic rank: Associate Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 23670602300
Faculty: Faculty of Natural Resources
Address: Faculty of Natural Resources, University of Kurdistan, Sanandaj, Iran ORCID ID: orcid.org/0000-0001-5091-6947
Phone: 087-33664600-8 داخلی 4312

Research

Title
A Robust Deep-Learning Model for Landslide Susceptibility Mapping: A Case Study of Kurdistan Province, Iran
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
landslide susceptibility; extreme learning machine; deep belief network; genetic algorithm; GIS; Iran
Year
2022
Journal SENSORS
DOI
Researchers Bahare Qasemyan ، Himan Shahabi ، Ataollah Shirzadi ، Nadhir Al-Ansari ، Abolfazl Jaafari ، Victoria R. Kress ، Marten Geertsema ، Somayeh Ronoud ، Anuar Ahmad

Abstract

We mapped landslide susceptibility in Kamyaran city of Kurdistan Province, Iran, using a robust deep-learning (DP) model based on a combination of extreme learning machine (ELM), deep belief network (DBN), back propagation (BP), and genetic algorithm (GA). A total of 118 landslide locations were recorded and divided in the training and testing datasets. We selected 25 conditioning factors, and of these, we specified the most important ones by an information gain ratio (IGR) technique. We assessed the performance of the DP model using statistical measures including sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, F1-measure, and area under-the-receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). Three benchmark algorithms, i.e., support vector machine (SVM), REPTree, and NBTree, were used to check the applicability of the proposed model. The results by IGR concluded that of the 25 conditioning factors, only 16 factors were important for our modeling procedure, and of these, distance to road, road density, lithology and land use were the four most significant factors. Results based on the testing dataset revealed that the DP model had the highest accuracy (0.926) of the compared algorithms, followed by NBTree (0.917), REPTree (0.903), and SVM (0.894). The landslide susceptibility maps prepared from the DP model with AUC = 0.870 performed the best. We consider the DP model a suitable tool for landslide susceptibility mapping.