October 8, 2023
2 mins read

New AI algorithm can forecast earthquake with 70% accuracy

The AI, developed by researchers at The University of Texas at Austin, was trained to detect statistical bumps in real-time seismic data that researchers had paired with previous earthquakes…reports Asian Lite News

Researchers have developed a novel artificial intelligence (AI) algorithm that correctly predicted 70 per cent of earthquakes a week before they happened during a seven-month trial in China, raising hopes that the technology could one day be used to limit earthquakes’ impact on lives and economies.

The AI, developed by researchers at The University of Texas at Austin, was trained to detect statistical bumps in real-time seismic data that researchers had paired with previous earthquakes.

The outcome was a weekly forecast in which the AI successfully predicted 14 earthquakes within about 200 miles of where it estimated they would happen and at almost exactly the calculated strength. It missed one earthquake and gave eight false warnings.

It’s not yet known if the same approach will work at other locations, but the effort is a milestone in research for AI-driven earthquake forecasting. “Predicting earthquakes is the holy grail,” said Sergey Fomel, Professor in UT’s Bureau of Economic Geology.

“We’re not yet close to making predictions for anywhere in the world, but what we achieved tells us that what we thought was an impossible problem is solvable in principle.” The findings from the trial are published in the journal Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America.

“You don’t see earthquakes coming,” said Alexandros Savvaidis, a senior research scientist who leads the bureau’s Texas Seismological Network Programme (TexNet) — the state’s seismic network. “It’s a matter of milliseconds, and the only thing you can control is how prepared you are. Even with 70 per cent, that’s a huge result and could help minimise economic and human losses and has the potential to dramatically improve earthquake preparedness worldwide.”

The researchers said that their method had succeeded by following a relatively simple machine learning approach. The AI was given a set of statistical features based on the team’s knowledge of earthquake physics, then told to train itself on a five-year database of seismic recordings.

Once trained, the AI gave its forecast by listening for signs of incoming earthquakes among the background rumblings in the Earth. The researchers are confident that in places with robust seismic tracking networks such as California, Italy, Japan, Greece, Turkey and Texas, the AI could improve its success rate and narrow its predictions to within a few tens of miles.

ALSO READ-Did Xi Derail China’s Path to Global Power?

Previous Story

Starmer pledges 2m extra NHS appointments a year

Next Story

ISRO fights over 100 cyber-attacks every day, says Somanath

Latest from -Top News

Islamabad Welcomes Trump Mediation Move

Pakistan said that it reaffirms that “settlement” of the Kashmir “dispute” should be “in accordance with the relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions…reports Asian Lite News Pakistan on Sunday welcomed US President

‘Dying of thirst’

Palestine Water Authority says Gaza is “dying of thirst” as water systems collapse. Gazans also reject U.S.-Israeli aid distribution plan, call for enhanced UN role The Palestinian Water Authority (PWA) warned that

Rare bone-eroding hits Kenya’s county

The fungal variety is endemic across the so-called “mycetoma belt” — including Somalia, Sudan, Yemen and northern Kenya — with funding and research desperately lacking Joyce Lokonyi sits on an upturned bucket,

30 dead in separatist attack in Nigeria

Amnesty International said that more than 20 vehicles and trucks were set ablaze during the Thursday attack along the Okigwe-Owerri highway in Imo state At least 30 people have been killed after

Congo national park acknowledges rights abuses

An internal investigation by African Parks uncovered cases of torture, rape and forced displacement of Indigenous people who used to inhabit the land A national park associated with Prince Harry in the
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Indian Cooking Goes Smart

These appliances have breathed new life into leftovers, generating step-by-step

Demand for AI jobs up 11% in India

The IT sector is leading with 29 per cent, followed