BIBLIOGRAPHY

Publications, working papers, and other research using data resources from IPUMS.

Full Citation

Title: Predicting and understanding residential water use with interpretable machine learning

Citation Type: Journal Article

Forthcoming?: Yes

ISSN: 1748-9326

DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/AD1434

Abstract: Predicting household water use is critical to efficiently manage urban water resource systems. Simultaneously, understanding the factors driving residential water use is required to plan for future urban change and achieve effective water resource management. Current approaches examining residential water use identify the drivers of household water through parametric or non-parametric statistical approaches. Parametric approaches have high predictive errors and lack the ability to accurately capture interactions between features, but allow for easy interpretation. Non-parametric approaches have lower predictive errors and can capture non-linear feature interactions, but do not allow for easy interpretation. We use non-parametric statistical models of household water use and recent advances in interpretable machine learning (ML) to understand the drivers of residential water use. Specifically, we use post-hoc interpretability methods to examine how drivers of water use interact, focusing on environmental, demographic, physical housing, and utility policy factors. We find all four categories of factors are important for estimating water use with environmental and utility policy factors playing the largest role. Additionally, we identify non-linear interactions between many variables within and across these classes. We show this approach provides both high predictive accuracy and identification of complex water use factors, offering important insight for urban water management.

Url: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/ad1434

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Rachunok, Benjamin; Verma, Aniket; Fletcher, Sarah

Periodical (Full): Environmental Research Letters

Issue:

Volume:

Pages: 1-34

Data Collections: IPUMS International

Topics: Housing and Segregation, Methodology and Data Collection, Natural Resource Management

Countries: United States

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