1 / 17

PERFORMANCE OF NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECASTS VERSUS MODEL OUTPUT STATISTICS

PERFORMANCE OF NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECASTS VERSUS MODEL OUTPUT STATISTICS. Jeff Baars Cliff Mass Mark Albright University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

robert-ward
Download Presentation

PERFORMANCE OF NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECASTS VERSUS MODEL OUTPUT STATISTICS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PERFORMANCE OF NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECASTS VERSUS MODEL OUTPUT STATISTICS Jeff Baars Cliff Mass Mark Albright University of Washington, Seattle, Washington This work was supported in part by the DoD Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) program administered by the Office of Naval Research Under Grant N00014-01-10745.

  2. The point of it all… • Vislocky and Fritsch (1997), using 1990-1992 data, saw that an average of 2 or more MOS’s (CMOS) outperformed individual MOS’s and many human forecasters in a forecasting competition. • How has the story changed since then? • And how well do CMOS, MOS & the NWS perform during extreme conditions? In different seasons? In different regions?

  3. Data • July 1 2003 – Jan 1 2004 (6 months). • 30 stations, all at major WFO sites. • Maximum and minimum temperature, and POP.

  4. Data (con’t) • Consensus MOS (CMOS)– simply an average of 4 MOS’s: AMOS, EMOS, MMOS, NMOS. • 12Z-issued forecast from NWS matched against previous 00Z forecast from models. • NWS has 00Z model data available, and has added advantage of watching conditions develop since 00Z. • Models of course can’t look at NWS, but NWS looks at models. • Forecasts going out 48 (60) hours, so in the analysis there are: • Two maximum temperatures (MAX-T), • Two minimum temperatures (MIN-T), and • Four 12-hr POP forecasts.

  5. Data (con’t) • NWS MOS definition for MAX-T and MIN-T and for POP. • Observed precipitation data converted to binary rain/no-rain data for Brier Score calculations.

  6. Maximum and Minimum Temperature

  7. Total MAE for the 6 forecasts Maximum temperature Minimum temperature

  8. MAE, temperature, by forecast period

  9. Bias Time Series, all stations

  10. MAE, Maximum temperature period 1, by station MtnWest South-west West South Mid-west East

  11. MAE by forecast period, large departure from climatology

  12. Probability of Precipitation

  13. Total Brier Score for all 6 forecasts

  14. Brier Scores by forecast period

  15. Brier Scores by forecast period, large departure from climatology

  16. Conclusion • CMOS shows equal or superior forecast skill compared to NWS and individual MOS’s when all time periods are considered. • True for max and min temperatures and POPs. • The NWS forecasts show superior forecast skill for max. temperatures during large departures from climatology. • http://www.atmos.washington.edu/~jbaars/mos_vs_nws.html

  17. Future Work • Simple weighting correction to CMOS. • Remove worst model from CMOS.

More Related