Analog forecasting of extreme-causing weather patterns using deep learning

26 Jul 2019  ·  Ashesh Chattopadhyay, Ebrahim Nabizadeh, Pedram Hassanzadeh ·

Numerical weather prediction (NWP) models require ever-growing computing time/resources, but still, have difficulties with predicting weather extremes. Here we introduce a data-driven framework that is based on analog forecasting (prediction using past similar patterns) and employs a novel deep learning pattern-recognition technique (capsule neural networks, CapsNets) and impact-based auto-labeling strategy. CapsNets are trained on mid-tropospheric large-scale circulation patterns (Z500) labeled $0-4$ depending on the existence and geographical region of surface temperature extremes over North America several days ahead. The trained networks predict the occurrence/region of cold or heat waves, only using Z500, with accuracies (recalls) of $69\%-45\%$ $(77\%-48\%)$ or $62\%-41\%$ $(73\%-47\%)$ $1-5$ days ahead. CapsNets outperform simpler techniques such as convolutional neural networks and logistic regression. Using both temperature and Z500, accuracies (recalls) with CapsNets increase to $\sim 80\%$ $(88\%)$, showing the promises of multi-modal data-driven frameworks for accurate/fast extreme weather predictions, which can augment NWP efforts in providing early warnings.

PDF Abstract

Datasets


  Add Datasets introduced or used in this paper

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods


No methods listed for this paper. Add relevant methods here