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A Two-Stage Data-Driven Spatiotemporal Analysis to Predict Failure Risk of Urban Sewer Systems Leveraging Machine Learning Algorithms.

John E FontechaPuneet AgarwalMaría N TorresSayanti MukherjeeJose L WalterosJuan Pablo Rodríguez
Published in: Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis (2021)
Risk-informed asset management is key to maintaining optimal performance and efficiency of urban sewer systems. Although sewer system failures are spatiotemporal in nature, previous studies analyzed failure risk from a unidimensional aspect (either spatial or temporal), not accounting for bidimensional spatiotemporal complexities. This is owing to the insufficiency of good-quality data, which ultimately leads to under-/overestimation of failure risk. Here, we propose a generalized methodology/framework to facilitate a robust spatiotemporal analysis of urban sewer system failure risk, overcoming the intrinsic challenges of data imperfections-e.g., missing data, outliers, and imbalanced information. The framework includes a two-stage data-driven modeling technique that efficiently models the highly right-skewed sewer system failure data to predict the failure risk, leveraging a bidimensional space-time approach. We implemented our analysis for Bogotá, the capital city of Colombia. We train, test, and validate a battery of machine learning algorithms-logistic regression, decision trees, random forests, and XGBoost-and select the best model in terms of goodness-of-fit and predictive accuracy. Finally, we illustrate the applicability of the framework in planning/scheduling sewer system maintenance operations using state-of-the-art optimization techniques. Our proposed framework can help stakeholders to analyze the failure-risk models' performance under different discrimination thresholds, and provide managerial insights on the model's adequate spatial resolution and appropriateness of decentralized management for sewer system maintenance.
Keyphrases
  • machine learning
  • big data
  • healthcare
  • high resolution
  • single molecule