4.6 Article

Deep Learning-Based Retrofitting and Seismic Risk Assessment of Road Networks

Journal

Publisher

ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)CP.1943-5487.0001006

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Funding

  1. State of California
  2. Shah Family Fund Fellowship

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This study develops a neural network surrogate model to estimate the impact of bridge damage on traffic performance rapidly and accurately. A modified version of LIME is proposed as a strategy to minimize earthquakes' impact on the system. Testing on the San Francisco Bay Area road network shows that the neural network accurately predicts system performance with significantly reduced computation time, allowing decision-makers to evaluate the impact of retrofitting bridges quickly. Moreover, the proposed LIME-TI metric outperforms other indicators in improving network performance.
Seismic risk assessment of road systems involves computationally expensive traffic simulations to evaluate the performance of the system. To accelerate this process, this paper develops a neural network surrogate model that allows rapid and accurate estimation of changes in traffic performance metrics due to bridge damage. Some of the methodological aspects explored when calibrating this neural network are defining sampling protocols, selecting hyperparameters, and evaluating practical considerations of the model. In addition to the neural network, a modified version of the local interpretable model-agnostic explanation (LIME) is proposed as a retrofitting strategy that minimizes earthquakes' impact on the system. The modified version (LIME-TI) uses traffic impacts (TI) and rates of occurrence to aggregate the importance of individual damage realizations during the computation of variable importance. This study uses the San Francisco Bay Area road network as a testbed. As a conclusion of this study, the neural network accurately predicts the system's performance while taking five orders of magnitude less time to compute traffic metrics, allowing decision-makers to evaluate the impact of retrofitting bridges in the system quickly. Moreover, the proposed LIME-TI metric is superior to others (such as traffic volume or vulnerability) in identifying bridges whose retrofit effectively improves network performance. (C) 2021 American Society of Civil Engineers.

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