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Applying Waveform Correlation to Reduce Seismic Analyst Workload Due to Repeating Mining Blasts

Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America

Sundermier, Amy S.; Tibi, Rigobert T.; Brogan, Ronald A.; Young, Christopher J.

Agencies that monitor for underground nuclear tests are interested in techniques that automatically characterize mining blasts to reduce the human analyst effort required to produce high-quality event bulletins. Waveform correlation is effective in finding similar waveforms from repeating seismic events, including mining blasts. We report the results of an experiment to detect and identify mining blasts for two regions, Wyoming (U.S.A.) and Scandinavia, using waveform templates recorded by multiple International Monitoring System stations of the Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO PrepCom) for up to 10 yr prior to the time of interest. We discuss approaches for template selection, threshold setting, and event detection that are specialized for characterizing mining blasts using a sparse, global network. We apply the approaches to one week of data for each of the two regions to evaluate the potential for establishing a set of standards for waveform correlation processing of mining blasts that can be generally applied to operational monitoring systems with a sparse network. We compare candidate events detected with our processing methods to the Reviewed Event Bulletin of the International Data Centre to assess potential reduction in analyst workload.

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Applying Waveform Correlation to Mining Blasts Using a Global Sparse Network

Sundermier, Amy S.; Tibi, Rigobert T.; Young, Christopher J.

Agencies that monitor for underground nuclear tests are interested in techniques that automatically characterize mining blasts to reduce the human analyst effort required to produce high-quality event bulletins. Waveform correlation is effective in finding similar waveforms from repeating seismic events, including mining blasts. We report the results of an experiment that uses waveform templates recorded by multiple International Monitoring System stations of the Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization for up to 10 years prior to the time period of interest to detect and identify mining blasts that occur during single weeks of study. We discuss approaches for template selection, threshold setting, and event detection that are specialized for mining blasts and a sparse, global network. We apply the approaches to two different weeks of study for each of two geographic regions, Wyoming and Scandinavia, to evaluate the potential for establishing a set of standards for waveform correlation processing of mining blasts that can be effective for operational monitoring systems with a sparse network. We compare candidate events detected with our processing methods to the Reviewed Event Bulletin of the International Data Centre to develop an intuition about potential reduction in analyst workload.

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Applying Waveform Correlation to Mining Blasts Using a Global Sparse Network

Sundermier, Amy S.; Tibi, Rigobert T.; Young, Christopher J.

Agencies that monitor for underground nuclear tests are interested in techniques that automatically characterize mining blasts to reduce the human analyst effort required to produce high-quality event bulletins. Waveform correlation is effective in finding similar waveforms from repeating seismic events, including mining blasts. We report the results of an experiment that uses waveform templates recorded by multiple International Monitoring System stations of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty for up to 10 years prior to detect and identify mining blasts that occur during single weeks of study. We discuss approaches for template selection, threshold setting, and event detection that are specialized for mining blasts and a sparse, global network. We apply the approaches to two different weeks of study for each of two geographic regions, Wyoming and Scandinavia, to evaluate the potential for establishing a set of standards for waveform correlation processing of mining blasts that can be effective for operational monitoring systems with a sparse network. We compare candidate events detected with our processing methods to the Reviewed Event Bulletin of the International Data Centre to develop an intuition about potential reduction in analyst workload.

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The iterative processing framework: A new paradigm for automatic event building

Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America

Tibi, Rigobert T.; Encarnacao, Andre V.; Ballard, Sanford B.; Young, Christopher J.; Brogan, Ronald; Sundermier, Amy S.

In a traditional data-processing pipeline, waveforms are acquired, a detector makes the signal detections (i.e., arrival times, slownesses, and azimuths) and passes them to an associator. The associator then links the detections to the fitting-event hypotheses to generate an event bulletin. Most of the time, this traditional pipeline requires substantial human-analyst involvement to improve the quality of the resulting event bulletin. For the year 2017, for example, International Data Center (IDC) analysts rejected about 40% of the events in the automatic bulletin and manually built 30% of the legitimate events. We propose an iterative processing framework (IPF) that includes a new data-processing module that incorporates automatic analyst behaviors (auto analyst [AA]) into the event-building pipeline. In the proposed framework, through an iterative process, the AA takes over many of the tasks traditionally performed by human analysts. These tasks can be grouped into two major processes: (1) evaluating small events with a low number of location-defining arrival phases to improve their formation; and (2) scanning for and exploiting unassociated arrivals to form potential events missed by previous association runs. To test the proposed framework, we processed a two-week period (15–28 May 2010) of the signal-detections dataset from the IDC. Comparison with an expert analyst-reviewed bulletin for the same time period suggests that IPF performs better than the traditional pipelines (IDC and baseline pipelines). Most of the additional events built by the AA are low-magnitude events that were missed by these traditional pipelines. The AA also adds additional signal detections to existing events, which saves analyst time, even if the event locations are not significantly affected.

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Alternate null hypothesis correlation: A new approach to automatic seismic event detection

Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America

Ganter, Tyler; Sundermier, Amy S.; Ballard, Sanford

This article describes a new method of seismic signal detection that improves upon the conventional waveform correlation method. Recent studies suggested that a significant limiting factor in the application of waveform correlation to regional and global scale monitoring is the false alarm rate. The false alarms do not originate from detections on noise but rather from seismic arrivals with unrelated source locations. This article presents results from an approach to waveform correlation that exploits techniques from signal processing and machine learning to improve the accuracy of detecting seismic arrivals. We modify the detection model for waveform correlation such that transient signals from noncollocated seismicity are considered when designing the detectors. The new approach uses waveform templates from known catalog events to train a supervised machine learning algorithm that derives a new set of detectors to represent the unique characteristics of the template waveforms; these new detectors maximize the likelihood of detecting only the desired events, thereby minimizing false alarms. We train a waveform correlation template library for a single three-component seismic monitoring station. We then review results from applying the new detectors, known as alternate null hypothesis correlation (ANCorr) templates, to a test set of seismic waveforms. We compare ANCorr results with those from application of the conventional waveform correlation matched filter technique.

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29 Results
29 Results