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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
New Hybrids of ANFIS with Several Optimization Algorithms for Flood Susceptibility Modeling
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
flood susceptibility modeling; ANFIS; cultural algorithm; bees algorithm; invasive weed optimization; Haraz watershed
Year
2018
Journal Water
DOI
Researchers DieuTien Bui ، Khabat Khosravi ، Shaojun Li ، Himan Shahabi ، Mahdi Panahi ، Vijay P. Singh ، Kamran Chapi ، Ataollah Shirzadi ، Somayeh Panahi ، Wei Chen ، Baharin Ben Ahmad

Abstract

This study presents three new hybrid artificial intelligence optimization models—namely, adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system (ANFIS) with cultural (ANFIS-CA), bees (ANFIS-BA), and invasive weed optimization (ANFIS-IWO) algorithms—for flood susceptibility mapping (FSM) in the Haraz watershed, Iran. Ten continuous and categorical flood conditioning factors were chosen based on the 201 flood locations, including topographic wetness index (TWI), river density, stream power index (SPI), curvature, distance from river, lithology, elevation, ground slope, land use, and rainfall. The step-wise weight assessment ratio analysis (SWARA) model was adopted for the assessment of relationship between flood locations and conditioning factors. The ANFIS model, based on SWARA weights, was employed for providing FSMs with three optimization models to enhance the accuracy of prediction. To evaluate the model performance and prediction capability, root-mean-square error (RMSE) and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (area under the ROC (AUROC)) were used. Results showed that ANFIS-IWO with lower RMSE (0.359) had a better performance, while ANFIS-BA with higher AUROC (94.4%) showed a better prediction capability, followed by ANFIS0-IWO (0.939) and ANFIS-CA (0.921). These models can be suggested for FSM in similar climatic and physiographic areas for developing measures to mitigate flood damages and to sustainably manage floodplains.