Session Programme Meeting Programme Personal Programme Search
 
Quick Search
Natural Hazards
Meteorological Hazards
Hydrological Hazards
Landslide Hazards
Earthquake Hazards
Volcanic Hazards
Sea and Ocean Hazards
Snow Avalanches and other Glacial hazards
Other Hazards (e.g. karst topography, heavy-metal contamination, asteroid impacts, ...)
Multidisciplinary Approaches for Risk Assessment, Mapping, Disaster Management & Mitigation Strategies
Historical Information, Databases and Dating Techniques for Natural Hazards and Risk Assessment
New Technologies for Natural Hazards and Risk Assessment
Programme Groups
Great Debates
Union Symposia
Educational Symposia
Atmospheric Sciences
Biogeosciences
Climate: Past, Present, Future
Cryospheric Sciences
Energy, Resources and the Environment
Geochemistry, Mineralogy, Petrology & Volcanology
Geodesy
Geodynamics
Geomorphology
Geophysical Instrumentation
Hydrological Sciences
Magnetism, Palaeomagnetism, Rock Physics & Geomaterials
Natural Hazards
Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics
Ocean Sciences
Planetary and Solar System Sciences
Seismology
Soil System Sciences
Solar-Terrestrial Sciences
Stratigraphy, Sedimentology and Palaeontology
Tectonics and Structural Geology
Medal Lectures
Key Note Lectures
Key Note Sessions
Division Business Meetings
Editorial Board Meetings
Townhall Meetings
Splinter Meetings
Union Meetings
  Information - HS38 Hydroinformatics: computational intelligence and technological developments in water science applications (co-listed in NH)

Event Information
Hydroinformatics has emerged over the last decade to become a recognised and established field of independent research within the hydrological sciences. Hydroinformatics is concerned with the development and hydrological application of mathematical modelling, information technology, systems science and computational intelligence tools. It provides the computer-based decision-support systems that are now entering more and more into the offices of consulting engineers, water authorities and government agencies.

The aim of this session is to provide an active forum in which to demonstrate and discuss the integration and appropriate application of emergent computational technologies in a hydrological modelling context. Topics of interest are expected to cover a broad spectrum of theoretical and practical activities that would be of interest to hydro-scientists and water-engineers. The main topics will address the following classes of methods and technologies:
• Predictive models based on the methods of computational intelligence: neural networks, fuzzy systems, support vector machines, genetic programming, cellular automata, chaos theory, etc.
• Methods for the analysis of complex data sets: principal and independent component analysis, feature extraction, data-infilling, information theory, etc.
• Optimization methods associated with heuristic search procedures: various types of genetic and evolutionary algorithms, randomized and adaptive search, ant colony and particle swarm optimization, etc.
• Hybrid modelling involving different types of models – both process-based and data-driven;
• Novel methods of analysing model uncertainty;
• Appropriate software architectures for linking different types of model.

Applications could belong to any area of hydrology or water resources: rainfall-runoff modelling, flow forecasting, sedimentation modelling, analysis of meteorological and hydrologic data sets, linkages between numerical weather prediction and hydrologic models, model calibration, model uncertainty, optimization of water resources, etc.

Preliminary List of Solicited Speakers

Co-Sponsorship

General Statement
The information contained hereafter has been compiled and uploaded by the Session Organizers via the "Organizer Session Form". The Session Organizers have therefore the sole responsibility that this information is true and accurate at the date of publication, and the conference organizer cannot accept any legal responsibility for any errors or omissions that may be made, and he makes no warranty, expressed or implied, with regard to the material published.



Back to Session Programme

 
 
 
 


©2002-2008 Copernicus Systems + Technology GmbH