2001
DOI: 10.1175/1520-0442(2001)014<4341:baoush>2.0.co;2
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Bayesian Analysis of U.S. Hurricane Climate

Abstract: Predictive climate distributions of U.S. landfalling hurricanes are estimated from observational records over the period 1851-2000. The approach is Bayesian, combining the reliable records of hurricane activity during the twentieth century with the less precise accounts of activity during the nineteenth century to produce a best estimate of the posterior distribution on the annual rates. The methodology provides a predictive distribution of future activity that serves as a climatological benchmark. Results are… Show more

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Cited by 85 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…This has been previously used in the description of atmospheric phenomena as hurricanes (Elsner and Bossak, 2001) or extremely cold days . Poisson processes are characterized by one parameter, Poisson parameter k. The expected frequency of event's occurrence, which is the average number of events per unit time, coincides with the k parameter.…”
Section: Vcds As Poisson Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This has been previously used in the description of atmospheric phenomena as hurricanes (Elsner and Bossak, 2001) or extremely cold days . Poisson processes are characterized by one parameter, Poisson parameter k. The expected frequency of event's occurrence, which is the average number of events per unit time, coincides with the k parameter.…”
Section: Vcds As Poisson Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One may assume the annual storm counts for a region to be Poissondistributed (Elsner and Bossak 2001;, with the mean estimated by the TC risk model. The probability density function (PDF) of TC hazards appears to be characterized by a fat upper tail, which tends to control the risk .…”
Section: Tc Hazard Risk Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Storms are selected for a given year only if a randomly generated number from 0 to 1 exceeds the probability determined for a storm occurrence. The arrival of a storm to the site is treated as a Poisson process [Bove et al, 1998;Elsner and Bossak, 2001], such that the probability, P, for k number of storms to occur during any given year is obtained by: Here A is the average annual storm occurrence frequency determined by hurricane model (i.e., 0.284 storms a-').…”
Section: Monte Carlo Simulations For Hurricane Depositionmentioning
confidence: 99%