Validation, Calibration, and Uncertainty Quantification of the Wofost Crop Simulation Model

The Digital Agriculture in Africa project [44] aims to unlock the agricultural potential in Africa and help farmers improve their crop productivity by enabling them to make more precise and timely decisions about crop management via better prediction tools. The absence of large, comprehensive, and s...

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Main Author: Kahraman, Sule
Other Authors: Hosoi, Anette “Peko”
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139245
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author Kahraman, Sule
author2 Hosoi, Anette “Peko”
author_facet Hosoi, Anette “Peko”
Kahraman, Sule
author_sort Kahraman, Sule
collection MIT
description The Digital Agriculture in Africa project [44] aims to unlock the agricultural potential in Africa and help farmers improve their crop productivity by enabling them to make more precise and timely decisions about crop management via better prediction tools. The absence of large, comprehensive, and structured agricultural data, however, limits the performance of these predictions. To address this problem, we propose a Data Platform that aggregates data from a variety of publicly available resources, processes them into reusable data formats, and augments the sparse data via synthetic data generation tools. In this thesis, we focus on the synthetic generation of agricultural yield data via the WOFOST (WOrld FOod STudies) [20] crop simulation model. Through our validation, calibration, and uncertainty quantification steps, we seek to answer the following question: How can we reliably generate yield data for different regions of the world using simulation models? Due to unavailability of large agricultural data from Africa, we chose to make use of data from the United States for the validation and calibration steps. Our empirical findings from the validation step demonstrated that the off-the-shelf usage of the WOFOST model, which was originally developed in Europe, may not be suitable for the agricultural studies in the United States, when the input parameters are not precise and accurate. This insight led us to perform the calibration step, where we discovered that the performance of the WOFOST model can be improved by estimating the correct crop parameters using evolutionary algorithms. Through our uncertainty quantification step, we shortlisted a number of input parameters that the model seems most sensitive to and developed a simpler but more tractable and effective model to WOFOST that has an analytical solution. Finally, we provided a quantitative analysis of how the uncertainty from the input parameters propagates through our proposed model to the generated data.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1392452022-01-15T03:29:32Z Validation, Calibration, and Uncertainty Quantification of the Wofost Crop Simulation Model Kahraman, Sule Hosoi, Anette “Peko” Dahleh, Munther Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science The Digital Agriculture in Africa project [44] aims to unlock the agricultural potential in Africa and help farmers improve their crop productivity by enabling them to make more precise and timely decisions about crop management via better prediction tools. The absence of large, comprehensive, and structured agricultural data, however, limits the performance of these predictions. To address this problem, we propose a Data Platform that aggregates data from a variety of publicly available resources, processes them into reusable data formats, and augments the sparse data via synthetic data generation tools. In this thesis, we focus on the synthetic generation of agricultural yield data via the WOFOST (WOrld FOod STudies) [20] crop simulation model. Through our validation, calibration, and uncertainty quantification steps, we seek to answer the following question: How can we reliably generate yield data for different regions of the world using simulation models? Due to unavailability of large agricultural data from Africa, we chose to make use of data from the United States for the validation and calibration steps. Our empirical findings from the validation step demonstrated that the off-the-shelf usage of the WOFOST model, which was originally developed in Europe, may not be suitable for the agricultural studies in the United States, when the input parameters are not precise and accurate. This insight led us to perform the calibration step, where we discovered that the performance of the WOFOST model can be improved by estimating the correct crop parameters using evolutionary algorithms. Through our uncertainty quantification step, we shortlisted a number of input parameters that the model seems most sensitive to and developed a simpler but more tractable and effective model to WOFOST that has an analytical solution. Finally, we provided a quantitative analysis of how the uncertainty from the input parameters propagates through our proposed model to the generated data. M.Eng. 2022-01-14T14:59:05Z 2022-01-14T14:59:05Z 2021-06 2021-06-17T20:13:27.124Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139245 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright MIT http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Kahraman, Sule
Validation, Calibration, and Uncertainty Quantification of the Wofost Crop Simulation Model
title Validation, Calibration, and Uncertainty Quantification of the Wofost Crop Simulation Model
title_full Validation, Calibration, and Uncertainty Quantification of the Wofost Crop Simulation Model
title_fullStr Validation, Calibration, and Uncertainty Quantification of the Wofost Crop Simulation Model
title_full_unstemmed Validation, Calibration, and Uncertainty Quantification of the Wofost Crop Simulation Model
title_short Validation, Calibration, and Uncertainty Quantification of the Wofost Crop Simulation Model
title_sort validation calibration and uncertainty quantification of the wofost crop simulation model
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139245
work_keys_str_mv AT kahramansule validationcalibrationanduncertaintyquantificationofthewofostcropsimulationmodel