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A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

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A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS. Michael G. Duda, Kevin W. Manning, and Jordan G. Powers Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division, NCAR AMPS Users’ Workshop 2004 June 8-10, 2004. Introduction. Purpose: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS Michael G. Duda, Kevin W. Manning, and Jordan G. Powers Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division, NCAR AMPS Users’ Workshop 2004 June 8-10, 2004
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Page 1: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Michael G. Duda, Kevin W. Manning, and Jordan G. Powers

Mesoscale and Microscale Meteorology Division, NCARAMPS Users’ Workshop 2004

June 8-10, 2004

Page 2: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Introduction• Purpose:

– Demonstrate the usefulness of statistical significance testing in comparing biases of two domains

– Determine where biases at McMurdo Station are significantly different in the 3.3-km and 10-km AMPS domains

– Examine a 7 day period beginning 12Z Nov. 27, 2003 when McMurdo Station was affected by a snowstorm

• Methodology:– Use hypothesis testing to identify statistically significant

differences in mean bias– Consider only differences that are statistically significant

Page 3: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Domain Configuration

Compaq OSF/Alpha Linux/Xeon (SPAWAR machine)

Page 4: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Forecast Analysis Times

Page 5: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Why Consider Statistical Significance?

•Mean bias curves do not indicate the variance in the biases

•Some differences between curves are not as relevant

Page 6: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Hypothesis Testing

• Consider biases to be from a hypothetical population (assumed to be normally distributed)

• Let d = x3.3 – x10

– x3.3 and x10 are biases in 3.3-km and 10-km domains at a given time

• Perform one-sample Student’s t test• H0: d=0

• Reject H0 with 95% confidence if t t

• Test statistic: 0

/dts n

Page 7: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Hypothesis Testing Example

Circled pressure levels will be examined in the next two slides

Page 8: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Example: 150 hPa Temperature

differences between curves

•For this data we can reject the null hypothesis at the 5 percent level

•This means we reject the hypothesis that the means of the 3.3-km and 10-km bias populations are the same

Page 9: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Example: 850 hPa Temperature

differences between curves

•For this data we cannot reject the null hypothesis at the 5 percent level

•This means we cannot reject the hypothesis that the 3.3-km and 10-km bias populations have the same mean

Page 10: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Comparison Results: Temperature

• Statistically significant differences– Surface: 3.3-km grid has warm bias while 10-

km grid has a cool bias at hours 24, 36– 925 hPa: 3.3-km grid has warm bias while 10-

km grid has a cool bias at hours 24, 36 – 300 hPa: 3.3-km grid has larger warm bias than

10-km grid

• No statistically significant differences– At hours 24 and 36, no significant differences in

MAE at any level

Page 11: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

24hr Temperature (Mean Bias)

Page 12: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

36hr Temperature (Mean Bias)

Page 13: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

24hr Temperature (MAE)

Page 14: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Comparison Results: Wind U-Component

• Statistically significant differences– Surface: 3.3-km grid has lower positive bias

than 10-km grid at forecast hours 12, 24, 36– 850 hPa: 3.3-km grid has larger negative bias

at forecast hours 12, 24, 36– 500 hPa: 3.3-km grid has smaller bias, but

MAEs of both grids are similarly large

• Differences at other levels are not statistically significant

Page 15: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

24hr Wind U-Component (Mean Bias)

Page 16: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

36hr Wind U-Component (Mean Bias)

Page 17: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

24hr Wind U-Component (MAE)

Page 18: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Example: Surface Temperature

35 hr forecast valid 23Z Dec 01, 2003

10-km domain 3.3-km domain

Page 19: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Summary

• Use a Student’s t test (at 5 percent level) to perform statistical significance testing on difference between 3.3-km and 10-km biases

• Identify statistically significant differences on model bias v. pressure plots for McMurdo

• Consider only statistically significant differences between mean biases to improve objectivity– Apparently large differences in mean bias may be

statistically insignificant and misleading

Page 20: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Questions?

Page 21: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Hypothesis Testing Example

*

*

* Biases at these pressure levels will be examined in the following slides

Page 22: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Example: 400 hPa Wind V-Component

differences between curves

For this data we do not reject the null hypothesis at the 95 percent level

Page 23: A STATISTICAL COMPARISON OF AMPS 10-KM AND 3.3-KM DOMAINS

Example: 925 hPa Wind V-Component

differences between curves

For this data we do reject the null hypothesis at the 95 percent level


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