Optimal sampling of spatial patterns improves deep learning-based early warning signals of critical transitions

Author:

Deb Smita1ORCID,Mahendru Ekansh2,Goyal Paras2,Guttal Vishwesha3,Dutta Partha Sharathi1ORCID,Krishnan Narayanan C.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics, Indian Institute of Technology Ropar , Rupnagar, Punjab 140001, India

2. Department of Computer Science, Indian Institute of Technology Ropar , Rupnagar, Punjab 140001, India

3. Centre for Ecological Sciences, Indian Institute of Science Campus , Bengaluru, Karnataka 560012, India

4. Department of Data Science, Indian Institute of Technology Palakkad , Palakkad, Kerala 678623, India

Abstract

Complex spatio-temporal systems like lakes, forests and climate systems exhibit alternative stable states. In such systems, as the threshold value of the driver is crossed, the system may experience a sudden (discontinuous) transition or smooth (continuous) transition to an undesired steady state. Theories predict that changes in the structure of the underlying spatial patterns precede such transitions. While there has been a large body of research on identifying early warning signals of critical transitions, the problem of forecasting the type of transitions (sudden versus smooth) remains an open challenge. We address this gap by developing an advanced machine learning (ML) toolkit that serves as an early warning indicator of spatio-temporal critical transitions, Spatial Early Warning Signal Network (S-EWSNet). ML models typically resemble a black box and do not allow envisioning what the model learns in discerning the labels. Here, instead of naively relying upon the deep learning model, we let the deep neural network learn the latent features characteristic of transitions via an optimal sampling strategy (OSS) of spatial patterns. The S-EWSNet is trained on data from a stochastic cellular automata model deploying the OSS, providing an early warning indicator of transitions while detecting its type in simulated and empirical samples.

Publisher

The Royal Society

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