An approach to the verification of high-resolution ocean models using spatial methods
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Published:2020-07-17
Issue:4
Volume:16
Page:831-845
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ISSN:1812-0792
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Container-title:Ocean Science
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Ocean Sci.
Author:
Crocker Ric, Maksymczuk Jan, Mittermaier MarionORCID, Tonani MarinaORCID, Pequignet ChristineORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The Met Office currently runs two operational ocean forecasting
configurations for the North West European Shelf: an eddy-permitting model
with a resolution of 7 km (AMM7) and an eddy-resolving model at 1.5 km
(AMM15). Whilst qualitative assessments have demonstrated the benefits brought by the
increased resolution of AMM15, particularly in the ability to resolve
finer-scale features, it has been difficult to show this quantitatively,
especially in forecast mode. Applications of typical assessment metrics such
as the root mean square error have been inconclusive, as the high-resolution
model tends to be penalised more severely, referred to as the double-penalty
effect. This effect occurs in point-to-point comparisons whereby features
correctly forecast but misplaced with respect to the observations are
penalised twice: once for not occurring at the observed location, and
secondly for occurring at the forecast location, where they have not been
observed. An exploratory assessment of sea surface temperature (SST) has been made at
in situ observation locations using a
single-observation neighbourhood-forecast (SO-NF) spatial verification
method known as the High-Resolution Assessment (HiRA) framework. The primary
focus of the assessment was to capture important aspects of methodology to
consider when applying the HiRA framework. Forecast grid points within
neighbourhoods centred on the observing location are considered as pseudo
ensemble members, so that typical ensemble and probabilistic forecast
verification metrics such as the continuous ranked probability score (CRPS)
can be utilised. It is found that through the application of HiRA it is
possible to identify improvements in the higher-resolution model which were
not apparent using typical grid-scale assessments. This work suggests that future comparative assessments of ocean models with
different resolutions would benefit from using HiRA as part of the
evaluation process, as it gives a more equitable and appropriate reflection
of model performance at higher resolutions.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Embryology,Anatomy
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