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Optimizing Heat Alert Issuance for Public Health in the United States with Reinforcement Learning

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Alerting the public when heat may harm their health is a crucial service, especially considering that extreme heat events will be more frequent under climate change. Current practice for issuing heat alerts in the US does not take advantage of modern data science methods for optimizing local alert criteria. Specifically, application of reinforcement learning (RL) has the potential to inform more health-protective policies, accounting for regional and sociodemographic heterogeneity as well as sequential dependence of alerts. In this work, we formulate the issuance of heat alerts as a sequential decision making problem and develop modifications to the RL workflow to address challenges commonly encountered in environmental health settings. Key modifications include creating a simulator that pairs hierarchical Bayesian modeling of low-signal health effects with sampling of real weather trajectories (exogenous features), constraining the total number of alerts issued as well as preventing alerts on less-hot days, and optimizing location-specific policies. Post-hoc contrastive analysis offers insights into scenarios when using RL for heat alert issuance may protect public health better than the current or alternative policies. This work contributes to a broader movement of advancing data-driven policy optimization for public health and climate change adaptation.


Predicting Climate Variability over the Indian Region Using Data Mining Strategies

arXiv.org Machine Learning

In this paper an approach based on expectation maximization (EM) clustering to find the climate regions and a support vector machine to build a predictive model for each of these regions is proposed. To minimize the biases in the estimations a ten cross fold validation is adopted both for obtaining clusters and building the predictive models. The EM clustering could identify all the zones as per the Koppen classification over Indian region. The proposed strategy when employed for predicting temperature has resulted in an RMSE of 1.19 in the Montane climate region and 0.89 in the Humid Sub Tropical region as compared to 2.9 and 0.95 respectively predicted using k-means and linear regression method. Keywords: support vector machine, expectation maximization, k-means, regression, climate regions, climate change, Koppen classification 1. Introduction Regionalization techniques are found to be effective in improving the prediction accuracies of the climate models.