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contributor authorZamo, Michaël
contributor authorBel, Liliane
contributor authorMestre, Olivier
contributor authorStein, Joël
date accessioned2017-06-09T17:37:23Z
date available2017-06-09T17:37:23Z
date copyright2016/12/01
date issued2016
identifier issn0882-8156
identifier otherams-88240.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4231998
description abstractumerical weather forecast errors are routinely corrected through statistical postprocessing by several national weather services. These statistical postprocessing methods build a regression function called model output statistics (MOS) between observations and forecasts that is based on an archive of past forecasts and associated observations. Because of limited spatial coverage of most near-surface parameter measurements, MOS have been historically produced only at meteorological station locations. Nevertheless, forecasters and forecast users increasingly ask for improved gridded forecasts. The present work aims at building improved hourly wind speed forecasts over the grid of a numerical weather prediction model. First, a new observational analysis, which performs better in terms of statistical scores than those operationally used at Météo-France, is described as gridded pseudo-observations. This analysis, which is obtained by using an interpolation strategy that was selected among other alternative strategies after an intercomparison study conducted internally at Météo-France, is very parsimonious since it requires only two additive components, and it requires little computational resources. Then, several scalar regression methods are built and compared, using the new analysis as the observation. The most efficient MOS is based on random forests trained on blocks of nearby grid points. This method greatly improves forecasts compared with raw output of numerical weather prediction models. Furthermore, building each random forest on blocks and limiting those forests to shallow trees does not impair performance compared with unpruned and pointwise random forests. This alleviates the storage burden of the objects and speeds up operations.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleImproved Gridded Wind Speed Forecasts by Statistical Postprocessing of Numerical Models with Block Regression
typeJournal Paper
journal volume31
journal issue6
journal titleWeather and Forecasting
identifier doi10.1175/WAF-D-16-0052.1
journal fristpage1929
journal lastpage1945
treeWeather and Forecasting:;2016:;volume( 031 ):;issue: 006
contenttypeFulltext


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