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Landslide Susceptibility Assessment in Zunyi City Incorporating MT-InSAR-Based Physical Constraints and Explainable Analysis
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Landslide Susceptibility Assessment in Zunyi City Incorporating MT-InSAR-Based Physical Constraints and Explainable Analysis

Zirui Zhang, Qingfeng Hu, Haoran Fang, Wenkai Liu, Shoukai Chen, Qifan Wu, Peng Wang, Weiqiang Lu, Weibo Yin, Tangjing Ma, …
Remote sensing (Basel, Switzerland), Vol.18(3), pp.1-30
02/05/2026

Abstract

Landslide susceptibility maps (LSMs) are crucial for risk mitigation, but integrating Multi-temporal Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (MT-InSAR) data is often hampered by a lack of physical interpretation. To address this issue, this study proposes an enhanced modeling framework that integrates multi-source monitoring data by coupling dynamic deformation features. Ground deformation velocity is obtained using MT-InSAR and embedded as dynamic physical constraints into the loss function of a Multi-Layer Perceptron (MLP) model. This approach enables the joint optimization of static geological factors and dynamic deformation characteristics in landslide susceptibility prediction. The proposed framework was applied to Zunyi City, Guizhou Province, China, utilizing an inventory of landslide hazard sites and a dataset of 16 susceptibility factors for model training and evaluation. The results demonstrated that the dynamically constrained model significantly improved predictive performance (AUC = 0.976, an increase of 0.032 compared to the baseline model), and enhanced spatial consistency, reflected by an average increase of 0.0184 in predicted susceptibility for inventoried landslide hazard sites. The framework also outperformed other conventional machine learning models across multiple evaluation metrics. Furthermore, SHAP (SHapley Additive exPlanations) analysis revealed that slope (18.68%), DEM (13.26%), rainfall (11.57%), and mining activities (8.79%) were the primary contributing factors in high-susceptibility areas. This study offers a physically interpretable and robust methodology that advances landslide risk assessment and contributes to disaster prevention strategies.
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https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18030515View
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