Using artificial neural networks to combine acoustic and trawl data in the Barents and North Seas

Groundfish have a wide and variable distribution making the use of trawling alone a highly inadequate sampling method. Trawl data provide species identification and numbers over a very small area and habitat type while acoustic data provide a wider coverage of the ecosystem, but fail to identify spe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Neville, Suzanna, Hjellvik, Vidar, Mackinson, Steven, Kooij, Jeroen van der
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: ICES 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/100719
Description
Summary:Groundfish have a wide and variable distribution making the use of trawling alone a highly inadequate sampling method. Trawl data provide species identification and numbers over a very small area and habitat type while acoustic data provide a wider coverage of the ecosystem, but fail to identify species. Both methods provide essential information required for assessing fish stock abundance and distribution, but no systematic method of combining these data has yet been identified. Acoustic and trawl data were collected for both the North and Barents Seas and their relationships investigated using artificial neural networks (ANNs). ANNs are information processing systems that were inspired by the structure of the brain. They can incorporate multiple variables and explore complex interactions between variables in far greater depth than many traditional statistical techniques. This modelling tool has had many successes in environmental modelling and is increasingly being applied in situations where the underlying relationships are poorly known. Network architectures, optimisation of connection weights (learning), model validation, and the reasons for the difference in performance between the North Sea and Barents Sea models are discussed.