Relationship between isoseismal area and magnitude of historical earthquakes in Greece by a hybrid fuzzy neural network method

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Abstract

In this paper we suggest the use of diffusion-neural-networks, (neural networks with intrinsic fuzzy logic abilities) to assess the relationship between isoseismal area and earthquake magnitude for the region of Greece. It is of particular importance to study historical earthquakes for which we often have macroseismic information in the form of isoseisms but it is statistically incomplete to assess magnitudes from an isoseismal area or to train conventional artificial neural networks for magnitude estimation. Fuzzy relationships are developed and used to train a feed forward neural network with a back propagation algorithm to obtain the final relationships. Seismic intensity data from 24 earthquakes in Greece have been used. Special attention is being paid to the incompleteness and contradictory patterns in scanty historical earthquake records. The results show that the proposed processing model is very effective, better than applying classical artificial neural networks since the magnitude macroseismic intensity target function has a strong nonlinearity and in most cases the macroseismic datasets are very small. © 2012 Author(s).

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Tselentis, G. A., & Sokos, E. (2012). Relationship between isoseismal area and magnitude of historical earthquakes in Greece by a hybrid fuzzy neural network method. Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, 12(1), 37–45. https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-12-37-2012

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