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Statistical Postprocessing of Ensemble Precipitation Forecasts by Fitting Censored, Shifted Gamma Distributions
by
Scheuerer, Michael
, Hamill, Thomas M.
in
Climate
/ Climatic analysis
/ Climatology
/ Datasets
/ Distribution
/ Ensemble forecasting
/ Ensemble precipitation
/ Mean
/ Precipitable water
/ Precipitation
/ Precipitation forecasting
/ Probability theory
/ Regression models
/ Skewness
/ Statistical analysis
/ Statistical methods
/ Statistics
/ Weather forecasting
2015
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Statistical Postprocessing of Ensemble Precipitation Forecasts by Fitting Censored, Shifted Gamma Distributions
by
Scheuerer, Michael
, Hamill, Thomas M.
in
Climate
/ Climatic analysis
/ Climatology
/ Datasets
/ Distribution
/ Ensemble forecasting
/ Ensemble precipitation
/ Mean
/ Precipitable water
/ Precipitation
/ Precipitation forecasting
/ Probability theory
/ Regression models
/ Skewness
/ Statistical analysis
/ Statistical methods
/ Statistics
/ Weather forecasting
2015
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Statistical Postprocessing of Ensemble Precipitation Forecasts by Fitting Censored, Shifted Gamma Distributions
by
Scheuerer, Michael
, Hamill, Thomas M.
in
Climate
/ Climatic analysis
/ Climatology
/ Datasets
/ Distribution
/ Ensemble forecasting
/ Ensemble precipitation
/ Mean
/ Precipitable water
/ Precipitation
/ Precipitation forecasting
/ Probability theory
/ Regression models
/ Skewness
/ Statistical analysis
/ Statistical methods
/ Statistics
/ Weather forecasting
2015
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Statistical Postprocessing of Ensemble Precipitation Forecasts by Fitting Censored, Shifted Gamma Distributions
Journal Article
Statistical Postprocessing of Ensemble Precipitation Forecasts by Fitting Censored, Shifted Gamma Distributions
2015
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Overview
A parametric statistical postprocessing method is presented that transforms raw (and frequently biased) ensemble forecasts from the Global Ensemble Forecast System (GEFS) into reliable predictive probability distributions for precipitation accumulations. Exploratory analysis based on 12 years of reforecast data and ⅛° climatology-calibrated precipitation analyses shows that censored, shifted gamma distributions can well approximate the conditional distribution of observed precipitation accumulations given the ensemble forecasts. A nonhomogeneous regression model is set up to link the parameters of this distribution to ensemble statistics that summarize the mean and spread of predicted precipitation amounts within a certain neighborhood of the location of interest, and in addition the predicted mean of precipitable water. The proposed method is demonstrated with precipitation reforecasts over the conterminous United States using common metrics such as Brier skill scores and reliability diagrams. It yields probabilistic forecasts that are reliable, highly skillful, and sharper than the previously demonstrated analog procedure. In situations with limited predictability, increasing the size of the neighborhood within which ensemble forecasts are considered as predictors can further improve forecast skill. It is found, however, that even a parametric postprocessing approach crucially relies on the availability of a sufficiently large training dataset.
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