scholarly journals Sequential Aggregation of Probabilistic Forecasts - Applicaton to Wind Speed Ensemble Forecasts

Author(s):  
Michael Zamo ◽  
Liliane Bel ◽  
Olivier Mestre

<p>Sequential aggregation is a theoretically-grounded means to combine several forecasts of a quantity to achieve better forecast performance as evaluated by a loss function. This theory has been mainly applied to point forecasts with a scalar forecast quantity, but rarely to forecasts expressed in a probabilistic form. In this work, we show how this theory can be readily adapted to forecasts expressed as step-wise cumulative distribution function (CDF), with the continuous ranked probabilistic score (CRPS) as performance measure.</p><p>Ensemble weather forecasts estimate the outcome of future observed quantities in a way that can be interpreted as step-wise CDF. Since those forecast CDFs are biased, statistical postprocessing methods are used to improve their statistical coherency with the observed quantity. Since many ensembles and many postprocessing methods exist, one can combine raw and post-processed ensembles in order to get even better forecast performance. To illustrate this point and the advantages of blending CDFs, sequential aggregation is applied to wind-speed ensemble weather forecasts with the CRPS as a performance measure alongside the Jolliffe-Primo test to assess the reliability of the various (raw, post-processed or aggregated) forecasts.</p>

2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1757 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neeraj Bokde ◽  
Andrés Feijóo ◽  
Daniel Villanueva

The representation of a wind turbine power curve by means of the cumulative distribution function of a Weibull distribution is investigated in this paper, after having observed the similarity between such a function and real WT power curves. The behavior of wind speed is generally accepted to be described by means of Weibull distributions, and this fact allows researchers to know the frequency of the different wind speeds. However, the proposal of this work consists of using these functions in a different way. The goal is to use Weibull functions for representing wind speed against wind power, and due to this, it must be clear that the interpretation is quite different. This way, the resulting functions cannot be considered as Weibull distributions, but only as Weibull functions used for the modeling of WT power curves. A comparison with simulations carried out by assuming logistic functions as power curves is presented. The reason for using logistic functions for this validation is that they are very good approximations, while the reasons for proposing the use of Weibull functions are that they are continuous, simpler than logistic functions and offer similar results. Additionally, an explanation about a software package has been discussed, which makes it easy to obtain Weibull functions for fitting WT power curves.


Author(s):  
RONALD R. YAGER

We look at the issue of obtaining a variance like measure associated with probability distributions over ordinal sets. We call these dissonance measures. We specify some general properties desired in these dissonance measures. The centrality of the cumulative distribution function in formulating the concept of dissonance is pointed out. We introduce some specific examples of measures of dissonance.


2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 939-951
Author(s):  
Amal Almarwani ◽  
Bashair Aljohani ◽  
Rasha Almutairi ◽  
Nada Albalawi ◽  
Alya O. Al Mutairi

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