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Department of Statistics, The Ohio State University
Statistics and Biostatistics Colloquium Series
Analyzing Regional Climate Experiments via Multivariate
Spatial Models
Stephan Sain
National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO
3:30PM - Thursday, November 15, 2007
Room 170, Eighteenth Avenue Bldg. (EA 170)
ABSTRACT
The North American Regional Climate Change Assessment Program (NARCCAP)
seeks to examine the uncertainty in the output of regional climate models
and projections of future climate and climate change. At the heart of the
program is an ambitious experiment that seeks to use a number of regional
climate models (RCMs) with boundary conditions supplied by different
atmosphere-ocean general circulation models (GCMs) to produce a wide range
of model output over North America. Our goal within this program is to
develop statistical methodology to analyze this model output and assess
the sources of uncertainty. To that end, we are developing a Bayesian
hierarchical framework that is based upon a multivariate spatial model.
This allows us to capture the complex distribution of the spatial fields
produced by these regional climate models and make inferences about the
model differences as well as projections of climate change. In this talk,
the methodology will be discussed and examples of the implementation
presented. In particular, we will examine the changes in temperature and
precipitation over the western US based on the MM5 regional climate model
and a "business as usual" scenario that involves a 1% annual increase in
greenhouse gases.
Meet the speaker in Room 212 Cockins Hall at 4:30
p.m. Refreshments will be served.
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