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Earth Math Technology Science

Can Earthquakes Be Predicted Algorithmically? 94

An anonymous reader with this story about a practical application of big data analysis as applied to the trove of sensor readings taken by satellites and by ground-based senosrs. A company called Terra Seismic says that earthquakes can be predicted 20-30 days before they occur, by sifting data for thermal, ionic, and other abnormalities in areas where quakes are considered likely. Says the linked article: "The company claims to have successfully predicted a number of earthquakes. For example, on 5th of April 2013, the firm issued a forecast for Japan. On 12th April 2013, an earthquake hit the identified area and 33 people were injured. On 4th June 2013, the firm again made a prediction for an earthquake in North Italy. On 21st June, an earthquake hit the identified area. On 3rd March 2013, the firm issued a forecast for an earthquake in Iran. Again, after 35 days, an earthquake hit the identified area."
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Can Earthquakes Be Predicted Algorithmically?

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  • Lists (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 10, 2015 @04:55PM (#49660161)

    how about a list of times they predicted an earthquake and nothing happened.

    without context its meaningless

    • Re:Lists (Score:4, Insightful)

      by stephanruby ( 542433 ) on Sunday May 10, 2015 @07:19PM (#49660883)

      how about a list of times they predicted an earthquake and nothing happened.

      without context its meaningless

      That's incorrect. They do give you all the context you need.

      They say they can predict earthquakes between 20 days and 30 days before they occur. For the Japanese earthquake, they failed. For the North Italy earthquake, they failed. And for the Iran earthquake they failed. Three out of three failures, even taking into account their standard error rate of plus or minus 5 days, I'd say those failure rates are pretty significant.

      Those guys should go into the earthquake insurance and earthquake protection business. It's as if someone was paying actively attention to their predictions, and was actively making sure that no earthquake would ever occur during any of the 10-days windows they predicted. Please don't tell me that's just a coincidence. Nobody can be that unlucky. The entire stock market should just follow these guys, and bet against them consistently.

      • Re:Lists (Score:5, Funny)

        by Livius ( 318358 ) on Sunday May 10, 2015 @07:35PM (#49660959)

        earthquake protection business

        "Nice business you got here. It'd be a shame if an earthquake happened to it."

      • How is it incorrect? I don't know if they stated those predictions in public. The article may give you context, but you are stating context in terms of available data.

        If they are successful, it means they can exclude false positives and include false negatives. Some anonymous fuck can't give us context.

        3 of 3 failures you say, but what is the success rate? I'm absolutely positive that you're absolutely correct, and this is just the next load that the horse shit out of its arse. But we should, if we in

        • 3 of 3 failures you say, but what is the success rate?

          Whether they only made three predictions, or 100,000 predictions, was besides the point for me. I was assuming that they used the best three predictions they could find that backed up their claim (which actually they do not). Had those three predictions been correct, then yes, I would have asked for more data and I would have dug deeper. As it stands, I didn't need to do any of that.

          And please do not take my last paragraph too seriously, I was attempting to make a joke. I do not believe they're able to pred

        • I don't know if they stated those predictions in public.

          If it's not stated in public, then it is not worth the 30-m high letters in which it wasn't painted on the side of a building in down town Geneva.

          Actually, there is a fair point there : there is no recognised forum for posting such predictions. And there are a lot of internet kooks out there who all think that they've got the perfect solution, but not one of them is willing to stand by a "prediction".

          Some ground rules have been proposed about what c

      • They say they can predict earthquakes between 20 days and 30 days before they occur.

        Two possible scenarios I can think of:

        1) They issued the warning after analyzing the data from within the time window.
        2) The statement "between 20 days and 30 days before they occur" may really mean "as far out as 20 to 30 days before they occur."

    • god I hope this firm is based in Italy :D
    • True positives, true negatives, false-positives and false-negatives all contribute to the significance calculation. The problem is that damaging earthquakes are rather rare and it doesnt take much in the way of a missed prediction to clobber the statistics.
  • by wbr1 ( 2538558 ) on Sunday May 10, 2015 @04:58PM (#49660183)
    How often do their algorithms generate a false positive? If that rate is sufficiently high, the system is useless.

    Even if it were used, people would likely begin to ignore it.

    • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
      To add to my earlier comment (since I just read the crap article), not having an exact time limits utility as well, since people are not going to stay in shelters for 20-30 days.

      I am half drunk and tired, can anyone find a better source than one that masturbates with buzz words?

    • by NotInHere ( 3654617 ) on Sunday May 10, 2015 @05:11PM (#49660245)

      Both false positives and true negatives come with a cost. Calculate the probability with which a system is right, and you only have to do basic math to find out whether the prediction system gives you an economic or humanitarian advantage. As the humanitarian cost for false positives is very low compared to the economic one, it is very possible that there will be an unbalance between "most (economically or humanitarian) profitable strategies". Deciding between those can be I guess cause for some political debate.

      • It's not just economics it also strikes at the heart of whether or not the system actually *works*. If I create an algorithm that predicts an earthquake every 30 days in every major earthquake prone region I'll be right every single month because there is a major earthquake in one of the regions every month. It's like putting a bet on every horse in a race. You're guaranteed to win!

      • by Anonymous Coward

        You have to remember that countries like Italy have imprisoned seismologists for making inaccurate predictions.

      • False positives also have a negative humanitarian cost, in having people live in stress and fear of an earthquake that doesn't happen, then losing faith in science/the authorities. And correct predictions over too large a range of dates would also have huge negatives -- because there is no benefit if people can't act on the knowledge.

        As for humanitarian costs, anyone truly concerned with that would probably be donating to a third world country...

    • by tomhath ( 637240 )
      Predict an earthquake in Japan, Northern Italy, or Iran. It will never be a false positive, they have tremors all the time.
    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      It is useless at this point even if it had no false positives. It can only 'predict' earthquakes with an error margin of days. Any seasoned geologist can do that these days, we've known about earthquake predictors for quite some time and given the measurements, you can predict an impending earthquake quite successfully. The problem is what to do with the data. We can't "fix" earthquakes or stop them before they happen. If you predict an earthquake in San Fransisco or Tokyo that may happen in the next 30 day

      • Any seasoned geologist can do that these days, we've known about earthquake predictors for quite some time and given the measurements,

        Citation required.

        If this is true (which I strongly doubt) then the geological press would be more full of it than if NASA launched a faster-then-light space ship and came back with a pointy-eared Buddha. Because there has already been a Buddha, but an effective earthquake prediction methodology would be something startlingly new.

        Citation required. Journal name, volume and

  • Yes i am interested in what they successfully predicted.
    I am also interested in how much they predicted and also crucially their unsuccessful predictions.
  • I'm glad someone's finally taking a crack at it.

    At least the theory seems well grounded.

  • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Sunday May 10, 2015 @05:17PM (#49660283)

    Sensitivity and specificity or it didn't happen.

  • No. (Score:5, Funny)

    by dskoll ( 99328 ) on Sunday May 10, 2015 @05:39PM (#49660405) Homepage

    Betteridge's law.

    • Actually no is the correct answer according to a recent opinion piece in Seismic Research Letters [geoscienceworld.org], which doesn't specifically address Terra Seismic, but which notes operational earthquake forecasting is not very far along, and can at best note regions with increased probability of earthquakes of a certain size, utilizing not only seismic data but also geomorphology, geologic and tectonic studies. And as others have noted, if you frack and actually cause earthquakes, then they are much more predictable.
    • You read one thing on the internet, and have since been using it to bestow upon the ignorant masses some sort of wisdom.

      What happens when you're wrong? You argue statistics?

      Do you have background information on the subject, or are you just going to repeat something that most of the readers here should know? Do you feel better? Do we feel better? What would Betteridge say?

      He'd say sod off.

      • by dskoll ( 99328 )

        If you want a longer response, then I suggest you read a few books on geology and seismology. Earthquakes are far too poorly understood to be predictable and all the interesting events are happening tens or hundreds of kilometres underground with no feasible way to observe or measure them.

        If you want a scientific paper, read this [ucla.edu].

        I was simply trying to save everybody time.

        • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
          You don't have to understand it to predict it. I've had arguments on Slashdot that dogs had to understand physics to catch a ball. Nope, they don't know how to calculate where it's going to land. They just figure it was about that hard, so it'll go about that far, and run and keep looking. You can take information and predict a result without understanding the mechanism of the result.
          • Except that in the case of earthquakes we're practically blind. It would be like a dog catching a ball but not being able to look up. So unless there is some sort of relationship between the average number of Buzzfeed posts in a given week to seismic activity in Brunei you can't accurately predict earthquakes from our very limited information. So far this hasn't been demonstrated.

            • by AK Marc ( 707885 )

              So unless there is some sort of relationship between the average number of Buzzfeed posts in a given week to seismic activity in Brunei you can't accurately predict earthquakes from our very limited information. So far this hasn't been demonstrated.

              Other than things like the article we are discussing now. Where some manner of activity resulted in predictions that were close. Full details aren't available to verify if they are lucky charlatans, or good scientists.

          • Plenty of dogs will consistently catch a ball out of the air - you want to tell me they don't know where it's going to land ?
            Children catch balls many years before we teach them the maths needed to calculate their curves.

            We have an instinctive ability to do that math, an intuitive knack for maths and physics which is quite powerful. If we could apply it to school maths hardly anybody would ever fail.

            The trouble is, it's also imperfect, most people intuitively believe that heavier objects fall faster for exa

            • by AK Marc ( 707885 )

              We have an instinctive ability to do that math, an intuitive knack for maths and physics which is quite powerful. If we could apply it to school maths hardly anybody would ever fail.

              Nope. It's not math. It's about feedback. You "guess" where it's going to land based on previous experience, and adjust as you see it coming. Try playing volleyball with a strobe light. You can see it, watch the path, but will have great trouble hitting it. Or take an adult with a math degree who hasn't played baseball. Hit a long fly ball towards them. They'll run in, as they'll feel like it'll fall short, but it will fly well over their heads.

              Math is unrelated to catching. Catching is a feedback

            • by jbengt ( 874751 )

              Plenty of dogs will consistently catch a ball out of the air - you want to tell me they don't know where it's going to land ? Children catch balls many years before we teach them the maths needed to calculate their curves.

              The argument was that you don't need to understand the physics to predict it. And the dogs don't understand the physics, but can predict where it's going.
              Although I must add, my older dog, whose running days are somewhat behind her, can predict the balls path much better because she a

            • by dskoll ( 99328 )

              Deaf and blind dogs lacking a sense of smell will most certainly have trouble catching a ball. And that's the situation we find ourselves in with respect to earthquakes: All the interesting activity takes place far beyond our ability to measure or even sense.

          • by dskoll ( 99328 )

            You don't have to completely understand the physics to make predictions, but when it comes to earthquakes we cannot even observe the important parts of the system that are precursors to earthquakes. In fact, understanding the physics is most likely not the problem... it's the inability to measure any useful variables that stymies us.

    • Can Betteridge's Law be verified Al Gore Rhythmically?
  • by CanadianMacFan ( 1900244 ) on Sunday May 10, 2015 @06:06PM (#49660521)

    Sure, I can say that I made predictions about earthquakes two years ago. I'd be impressed if they said today that in 10 days that there would be a magnitude 7.5 in a specific area and be right.

  • Fracking = earthquake. It's a rather simple algorithm.
    • by Thagg ( 9904 )

      Technically speaking, the tremendous number of earthquakes in Oklahoma aren't the immediate result of fracking; they are the result of wastewater injection. Now, the wastewater does come from fracking...so...there you go.

      This was seen back in the 60's in the Coalinga area of California.

      • by jbengt ( 874751 )
        To be more accurate (or pedantic, depending on your point of view), only 20% of the deep well-injected waste water in Oklahoma is coming from fracking. The rest is coming from regular old traditional oil fields.
  • by wvmarle ( 1070040 ) on Monday May 11, 2015 @03:01AM (#49662411)

    FTA:

    With the recent Nepal earthquake claiming more than 6,000 lives, many of us have often wondered why earthquakes cannot be predicted the same way as Tsunamis or cyclones are predicted?

    This already tells a lot on how much the authors of the article know about forecasting vs predicting - this opening line is wrong in so many ways. Tropical cyclones (which grow into typhoons aka hurricanes), tsunamis, tornadoes and other such natural events can not be predicted any more accurate than earthquakes.

    Tropical cyclones can be predicted with a similar accuracy as earthquakes: this are the key areas, and they happen with that frequency. That's how much you can predict a cyclone to happen: Hong Kong is affected by about eight tropical cyclones per year, and about two a year will give rise to a T8 or higher signal. That's predicting: we've had years with five such typhoons hitting, and years without any hitting the city. When a cyclone forms (which is never predicted, only observed as it happens - like an earthquake is observed as it happens), meteorologists indeed are able to forecast with reasonable accuracy where it will head, and what strength it takes. This usually leaves a few days for people to react.

    Tsunamis can be predicted with even less accuracy: when an earthquake or similar event has happened the presence of a tsunami can be measured, and a quick forecast can be made of when and where it will hit shorelines, and an alert may be issued. This leaves usually a few hours to half a day for people to react.

    Tornadoes form without much warning, leaving often mere minutes for people to get out of the way and into shelters - if the alarms sound at all. They, too can not be predicted.

    Earthquakes happen so fast, and end so fast, that there is nothing to forecast, no alarm to sound when it happens. By the time an alert is out, the quake is pretty much over.

    And there we have the difference between prediction and forecasting. Forecasting is a lot more accurate by nature, as it is reacting to what is already happening, and works quite well for following slow processes such as the formation of a tropical cyclone. I'm used to know about an incoming typhoon a few days ahead, so plenty of time to prepare. Forecasting earthquakes, well, that doesn't work like that.

    • The company claims that earthquakes do not "happen fast", but that things start to happen a good while (20-30) days before the actual quake hits. These telltale signs can be picked up and (apparently) with the proper analysis be used to predict the quake. Or forecast, if you're picky. The point is that they claim that there is time to issue a useful warning.
      • I think it would be really neat if one day, there are systems and machines that can gather enough data about what's happening beneath the earths' crust, around the tectonic plates (especially high risk areas) that scientists can create models to forecast possible earthquakes and magnitudes for a given area, using probabilities just like in weather forecasting.

        It makes sense that earthquakes don't JUST happen out of nowhere; perhaps there are a lot of realistic signs going on that science can use to see the

    • Yes - and.... These seismic activities take place - which they measure. Are they not Forecasting which one will become an Earthquake? A tropical storm begins to form (Prediction by your definition) - and then teams begin to Forecast its path, how strong, and other damages (storm surge etc).

      Does a "tropical storm" form beneath the earth - these gases, heat, micro-quakes. And from that information Forecast "this will be an earthquake, it will take place [here], and damages are likely to be [y]" ?

      Scienti

  • I own a camping trailer with a stove, fridge, heater, etc. Have a generator to power my home and enough frozen and canned foods to last for weeks. If or when there's a big quake on SoCal I'd be OK.
  • Why does /. even post this crap? There's nothing in the article that shows any evidence that this is real.

  • Do you think perhaps Siesmologists have not done this already, with better worldwide data, and better resources, and found that it does not work ?

    Saying there will be an earthquake in a band of 30 days and getting it right 1/3 times is useless, if the mass evacuations cost more in time, money and lives than the earthquake itself ...

    And eventually people are going to accuse them of crying wolf and ignore them ...

  • I remember the Chinese claims of preduiction from folk observations and Russian claims from seismic velocity speed changes from stress microcracks in the 1970s. Although they may have "predicted" one or two qquakes, they did not work very well when intensely studied.

    The most likely methods seem to be based on previous seismicitty- future quakes will occur where previous quakes have occurred, e.g. tectonic bondaries. There are tighter algorithms such as fore-shock and after-shock statistics: a larger qua
  • Seismologists have crushed rocks in labs and heavily instrumented likely fault areas. These have found some physical purcursors of quakes, but not reliable forecasts yet. The most famous and costly experiemnt was a segment of San Andreas near Garfield that broke four times reviously in apparent twenty year cycles. It was 13 years late the time it was instrumented in the 1980s and 1990s. The USGS was heavily criticized on devoting so much money to a single experiment.

    Pattern recognis more pragmatic. I

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