Differentiable modelling to unify machine learning and physical models for geosciences
Chaopeng Shen, Alison P. Appling, Pierre Gentine, Toshiyuki Bandai, Hoshin Gupta, Alexandre M. Tartakovsky, Marco Baity‐Jesi, Fabrizio Fenicia, Daniel Kifer, Li Li, Xiaofeng Liu, Wei Ren, Yi Zheng, C. J. Harman, Martyn P. Clark, Matthew W. Farthing, Dapeng Feng, Kumar Prabhash, Doaa Aboelyazeed, Farshid Rahmani, Yalan Song, Hylke E. Beck, Tadd Bindas, Dipankar Dwivedi, Kuai Fang, Marvin Höge, Chris Rackauckas, Binayak P. Mohanty, Tirthankar Roy, Chonggang Xu, Kathryn Lawson
Abstract
Process-based modelling offers interpretability and physical consistency in many domains of geosciences but struggles to leverage large datasets efficiently. Machine-learning methods, especially deep networks, have strong predictive skills yet are unable to answer specific scientific questions. In this Perspective, we explore differentiable modelling as a pathway to dissolve the perceived barrier between process-based modelling and machine learning in the geosciences and demonstrate its potential with examples from hydrological modelling. ‘Differentiable’ refers to accurately and efficiently calculating gradients with respect to model variables or parameters, enabling the discovery of high-dimensional unknown relationships. Differentiable modelling involves connecting (flexible amounts of) prior physical knowledge to neural networks, pushing the boundary of physics-informed machine learning. It offers better interpretability, generalizability, and extrapolation capabilities than purely data-driven machine learning, achieving a similar level of accuracy while requiring less training data. Additionally, the performance and efficiency of differentiable models scale well with increasing data volumes. Under data-scarce scenarios, differentiable models have outperformed machine-learning models in producing short-term dynamics and decadal-scale trends owing to the imposed physical constraints. Differentiable modelling approaches are primed to enable geoscientists to ask questions, test hypotheses, and discover unrecognized physical relationships. Future work should address computational challenges, reduce uncertainty, and verify the physical significance of outputs. Differentiable modelling is an approach that flexibly integrates the learning capability of machine learning with the interpretability of process-based models. This Perspective highlights the potential of differentiable modelling to improve the representation of processes, parameter estimation, and predictive accuracy in the geosciences.- Cite:
- Chaopeng Shen, Alison P. Appling, Pierre Gentine, Toshiyuki Bandai, Hoshin Gupta, Alexandre M. Tartakovsky, Marco Baity‐Jesi, Fabrizio Fenicia, Daniel Kifer, Li Li, Xiaofeng Liu, Wei Ren, Yi Zheng, C. J. Harman, Martyn P. Clark, Matthew W. Farthing, Dapeng Feng, Kumar Prabhash, Doaa Aboelyazeed, et al.. 2023. Differentiable modelling to unify machine learning and physical models for geosciences. Nature Reviews Earth & Environment, Volume 4, Issue 8, 4(8):552–567.
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@article{Shen-2023-Differentiable, title = "Differentiable modelling to unify machine learning and physical models for geosciences", author = {Shen, Chaopeng and Appling, Alison P. and Gentine, Pierre and Bandai, Toshiyuki and Gupta, Hoshin and Tartakovsky, Alexandre M. and Baity‐Jesi, Marco and Fenicia, Fabrizio and Kifer, Daniel and Li, Li and Liu, Xiaofeng and Ren, Wei and Zheng, Yi and Harman, C. J. and Clark, Martyn P. and Farthing, Matthew W. and Feng, Dapeng and Prabhash, Kumar and Aboelyazeed, Doaa and Rahmani, Farshid and Song, Yalan and Beck, Hylke E. and Bindas, Tadd and Dwivedi, Dipankar and Fang, Kuai and H{\"o}ge, Marvin and Rackauckas, Chris and Mohanty, Binayak P. and Roy, Tirthankar and Xu, Chonggang and Lawson, Kathryn}, journal = "Nature Reviews Earth {\&} Environment, Volume 4, Issue 8", volume = "4", number = "8", year = "2023", publisher = "Springer Science and Business Media LLC", url = "https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G23-27001", doi = "10.1038/s43017-023-00450-9", pages = "552--567", abstract = "Process-based modelling offers interpretability and physical consistency in many domains of geosciences but struggles to leverage large datasets efficiently. Machine-learning methods, especially deep networks, have strong predictive skills yet are unable to answer specific scientific questions. In this Perspective, we explore differentiable modelling as a pathway to dissolve the perceived barrier between process-based modelling and machine learning in the geosciences and demonstrate its potential with examples from hydrological modelling. {`}Differentiable{'} refers to accurately and efficiently calculating gradients with respect to model variables or parameters, enabling the discovery of high-dimensional unknown relationships. Differentiable modelling involves connecting (flexible amounts of) prior physical knowledge to neural networks, pushing the boundary of physics-informed machine learning. It offers better interpretability, generalizability, and extrapolation capabilities than purely data-driven machine learning, achieving a similar level of accuracy while requiring less training data. Additionally, the performance and efficiency of differentiable models scale well with increasing data volumes. Under data-scarce scenarios, differentiable models have outperformed machine-learning models in producing short-term dynamics and decadal-scale trends owing to the imposed physical constraints. Differentiable modelling approaches are primed to enable geoscientists to ask questions, test hypotheses, and discover unrecognized physical relationships. Future work should address computational challenges, reduce uncertainty, and verify the physical significance of outputs. Differentiable modelling is an approach that flexibly integrates the learning capability of machine learning with the interpretability of process-based models. This Perspective highlights the potential of differentiable modelling to improve the representation of processes, parameter estimation, and predictive accuracy in the geosciences.", }
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%0 Journal Article %T Differentiable modelling to unify machine learning and physical models for geosciences %A Shen, Chaopeng %A Appling, Alison P. %A Gentine, Pierre %A Bandai, Toshiyuki %A Gupta, Hoshin %A Tartakovsky, Alexandre M. %A Baity‐Jesi, Marco %A Fenicia, Fabrizio %A Kifer, Daniel %A Li, Li %A Liu, Xiaofeng %A Ren, Wei %A Zheng, Yi %A Harman, C. J. %A Clark, Martyn P. %A Farthing, Matthew W. %A Feng, Dapeng %A Prabhash, Kumar %A Aboelyazeed, Doaa %A Rahmani, Farshid %A Song, Yalan %A Beck, Hylke E. %A Bindas, Tadd %A Dwivedi, Dipankar %A Fang, Kuai %A Höge, Marvin %A Rackauckas, Chris %A Mohanty, Binayak P. %A Roy, Tirthankar %A Xu, Chonggang %A Lawson, Kathryn %J Nature Reviews Earth & Environment, Volume 4, Issue 8 %D 2023 %V 4 %N 8 %I Springer Science and Business Media LLC %F Shen-2023-Differentiable %X Process-based modelling offers interpretability and physical consistency in many domains of geosciences but struggles to leverage large datasets efficiently. Machine-learning methods, especially deep networks, have strong predictive skills yet are unable to answer specific scientific questions. In this Perspective, we explore differentiable modelling as a pathway to dissolve the perceived barrier between process-based modelling and machine learning in the geosciences and demonstrate its potential with examples from hydrological modelling. ‘Differentiable’ refers to accurately and efficiently calculating gradients with respect to model variables or parameters, enabling the discovery of high-dimensional unknown relationships. Differentiable modelling involves connecting (flexible amounts of) prior physical knowledge to neural networks, pushing the boundary of physics-informed machine learning. It offers better interpretability, generalizability, and extrapolation capabilities than purely data-driven machine learning, achieving a similar level of accuracy while requiring less training data. Additionally, the performance and efficiency of differentiable models scale well with increasing data volumes. Under data-scarce scenarios, differentiable models have outperformed machine-learning models in producing short-term dynamics and decadal-scale trends owing to the imposed physical constraints. Differentiable modelling approaches are primed to enable geoscientists to ask questions, test hypotheses, and discover unrecognized physical relationships. Future work should address computational challenges, reduce uncertainty, and verify the physical significance of outputs. Differentiable modelling is an approach that flexibly integrates the learning capability of machine learning with the interpretability of process-based models. This Perspective highlights the potential of differentiable modelling to improve the representation of processes, parameter estimation, and predictive accuracy in the geosciences. %R 10.1038/s43017-023-00450-9 %U https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G23-27001 %U https://doi.org/10.1038/s43017-023-00450-9 %P 552-567
Markdown (Informal)
[Differentiable modelling to unify machine learning and physical models for geosciences](https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G23-27001) (Shen et al., GWF 2023)
- Differentiable modelling to unify machine learning and physical models for geosciences (Shen et al., GWF 2023)
ACL
- Chaopeng Shen, Alison P. Appling, Pierre Gentine, Toshiyuki Bandai, Hoshin Gupta, Alexandre M. Tartakovsky, Marco Baity‐Jesi, Fabrizio Fenicia, Daniel Kifer, Li Li, Xiaofeng Liu, Wei Ren, Yi Zheng, C. J. Harman, Martyn P. Clark, Matthew W. Farthing, Dapeng Feng, Kumar Prabhash, Doaa Aboelyazeed, et al.. 2023. Differentiable modelling to unify machine learning and physical models for geosciences. Nature Reviews Earth & Environment, Volume 4, Issue 8, 4(8):552–567.