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Activity Number: 240 - Making the Case for Professional Climate Statisticians
Type: Topic-Contributed
Date/Time: Wednesday, August 11, 2021 : 10:00 AM to 11:50 AM
Sponsor: Section on Statistics and the Environment
Abstract #317098
Title: Detecting Changes in Spatial Extremes with Attribution to Both Anthropogenic Influences and Natural Modes of Climate Variability
Author(s): Mark Risser* and Likun Zhang and Chris Paciorek
Companies: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and University of California, Berkeley
Keywords:
Abstract:

In spite of the diverse literature on spatial extreme value analysis, characterizing the extremes of an environmental process like daily precipitation for a large network of monitoring stations over a heterogeneous spatial domain remains a challenging statistical problem. Here, we compare and contrast two methods that are scalable to high-dimensional, heterogenous spatial data sets, namely conditional independence-based GEV methods that utilize bootstrapping and hierarchical Bayesian methods for block maxima. Both approaches are used to detect long-term trends and year-to-year changes in precipitation extremes over the contiguous United States for a large network of several thousand weather stations. Locally, in spite of significant noise and the fact that changes due to natural climate variability are a similar order of magnitude, we are able to detect statistically significant anthropogenic influence on seasonal precipitation extremes. Human-induced climate change generally results in larger and more frequent extreme events, although there are also important areas where the opposite is true.


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