Weather Radar Spatiotemporal Saliency: A First Look at an Information Theory–Based Human Attention Model Adapted to Reflectivity Images

Author:

Schvartzman David1,Torres Sebastián1,Yu Tian-You2

Affiliation:

1. Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies, University of Oklahoma, and NOAA/OAR/National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma

2. School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and Advanced Radar Research Center, and School of Meteorology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

Abstract

AbstractForecasters often monitor and analyze large amounts of data, especially during severe weather events, which can be overwhelming. Thus, it is important to effectively allocate their finite perceptual and cognitive resources for the most relevant information. This paper introduces a novel analysis tool that quantifies the amount of spatial and temporal information in time series of constant-elevation weather radar reflectivity images. The proposed Weather Radar Spatiotemporal Saliency (WR–STS) is based on the mathematical model of the human attention system (referred to as saliency) adapted to radar reflectivity images and makes use of information theory concepts. It is shown that WR-STS highlights spatially and temporally salient (attention attracting) regions in weather radar reflectivity images, which can be associated with meteorologically important regions. Its skill in highlighting current regions of interest is assessed by analyzing the WR-STS values within regions in which severe weather is likely to strike in the near future as defined by National Weather Service forecasters. The performance of WR-STS is demonstrated for a severe weather case and analyzed for a set of 10 diverse cases. Results support the hypothesis that WR-STS can identify regions with meteorologically important echoes and could assist in discerning fast-changing, highly structured weather echoes during complex severe weather scenarios, ultimately allowing forecasters to focus their attention and spend more time analyzing those regions.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Ocean Engineering

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