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    Deep Learning for Spatially Explicit Prediction of Synoptic-Scale Fronts

    Source: Weather and Forecasting:;2019:;volume 034:;issue 004::page 1137
    Author:
    Lagerquist, Ryan
    ,
    McGovern, Amy
    ,
    Gagne II, David John
    DOI: 10.1175/WAF-D-18-0183.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: AbstractThis paper describes the use of convolutional neural nets (CNN), a type of deep learning, to identify fronts in gridded data, followed by a novel postprocessing method that converts probability grids to objects. Synoptic-scale fronts are often associated with extreme weather in the midlatitudes. Predictors are 1000-mb (1 mb = 1 hPa) grids of wind velocity, temperature, specific humidity, wet-bulb potential temperature, and/or geopotential height from the North American Regional Reanalysis. Labels are human-drawn fronts from Weather Prediction Center bulletins. We present two experiments to optimize parameters of the CNN and object conversion. To evaluate our system, we compare the objects (predicted warm and cold fronts) with human-analyzed warm and cold fronts, matching fronts of the same type within a 100- or 250-km neighborhood distance. At 250 km our system obtains a probability of detection of 0.73, success ratio of 0.65 (or false-alarm rate of 0.35), and critical success index of 0.52. These values drastically outperform the baseline, which is a traditional method from numerical frontal analysis. Our system is not intended to replace human meteorologists, but to provide an objective method that can be applied consistently and easily to a large number of cases. Our system could be used, for example, to create climatologies and quantify the spread in forecast frontal properties across members of a numerical weather prediction ensemble.
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      Deep Learning for Spatially Explicit Prediction of Synoptic-Scale Fronts

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    contributor authorLagerquist, Ryan
    contributor authorMcGovern, Amy
    contributor authorGagne II, David John
    date accessioned2019-10-05T06:45:03Z
    date available2019-10-05T06:45:03Z
    date copyright6/13/2019 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2019
    identifier otherWAF-D-18-0183.1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4263304
    description abstractAbstractThis paper describes the use of convolutional neural nets (CNN), a type of deep learning, to identify fronts in gridded data, followed by a novel postprocessing method that converts probability grids to objects. Synoptic-scale fronts are often associated with extreme weather in the midlatitudes. Predictors are 1000-mb (1 mb = 1 hPa) grids of wind velocity, temperature, specific humidity, wet-bulb potential temperature, and/or geopotential height from the North American Regional Reanalysis. Labels are human-drawn fronts from Weather Prediction Center bulletins. We present two experiments to optimize parameters of the CNN and object conversion. To evaluate our system, we compare the objects (predicted warm and cold fronts) with human-analyzed warm and cold fronts, matching fronts of the same type within a 100- or 250-km neighborhood distance. At 250 km our system obtains a probability of detection of 0.73, success ratio of 0.65 (or false-alarm rate of 0.35), and critical success index of 0.52. These values drastically outperform the baseline, which is a traditional method from numerical frontal analysis. Our system is not intended to replace human meteorologists, but to provide an objective method that can be applied consistently and easily to a large number of cases. Our system could be used, for example, to create climatologies and quantify the spread in forecast frontal properties across members of a numerical weather prediction ensemble.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleDeep Learning for Spatially Explicit Prediction of Synoptic-Scale Fronts
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume34
    journal issue4
    journal titleWeather and Forecasting
    identifier doi10.1175/WAF-D-18-0183.1
    journal fristpage1137
    journal lastpage1160
    treeWeather and Forecasting:;2019:;volume 034:;issue 004
    contenttypeFulltext
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