On the data-driven inference of modulatory networks in climate science: An application to West African rainfall

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Abstract

Decades of hypothesis-driven and/or first-principles research have been applied towards the discovery and explanation of the mechanisms that drive climate phenomena, such as western African Sahel summer rainfall∼variability. Although connections between various climate factors have been theorized, not all of the key relationships are fully understood. We propose a data-driven approach to identify candidate players in this climate system, which can help explain underlying mechanisms and/or even suggest new relationships, to facilitate building a more comprehensive and predictive model of the modulatory relationships influencing a climate phenomenon of interest. We applied coupled heterogeneous association rule mining (CHARM), Lasso multivariate regression, and dynamic Bayesian networks to find relationships within a complex system, and explored means with which to obtain a consensus result from the application of such varied methodologies. Using this fusion of approaches, we identified relationships among climate factors that modulate Sahel rainfall. These relationships fall into two categories: well-known associations from prior climate knowledge, such as the relationship with the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and putative links, such as North Atlantic Oscillation, that invite further research.

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APA

González, D. L., Angus, M. P., Tetteh, I. K., Bello, G. A., Padmanabhan, K., Pendse, S. V., … Samatova, N. F. (2015). On the data-driven inference of modulatory networks in climate science: An application to West African rainfall. Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics, 22(1), 33–46. https://doi.org/10.5194/npg-22-33-2015

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