climpred.metrics._msess¶
-
climpred.metrics.
_msess
(forecast, verif, dim=None, **metric_kwargs)[source]¶ Mean Squared Error Skill Score (MSESS).
where is 1 when using comparisons involving the ensemble mean (
m2e
,e2c
,e2o
) and 2 when using comparisons involving individual ensemble members (m2c
,m2m
,m2o
). See_get_norm_factor()
.This skill score can be intepreted as a percentage improvement in accuracy. I.e., it can be multiplied by 100%.
Note
climpred
uses a single-valued internal reference forecast for the MSSS, in the terminology of Murphy 1988. I.e., we use a single climatological variance of the verification data within the experimental window for normalizing MSE.- Parameters
forecast (xarray object) – Forecast.
verif (xarray object) – Verification data.
dim (str) – Dimension(s) to perform metric over.
comparison (str) – Name comparison needed for normalization factor fac, see
_get_norm_factor()
(Handled internally by the compute functions)
- Details:
minimum
-∞
maximum
1.0
perfect
1.0
orientation
positive
better than climatology
> 0.0
equal to climatology
0.0
worse than climatology
< 0.0
- Reference:
Griffies, S. M., and K. Bryan. “A Predictability Study of Simulated North Atlantic Multidecadal Variability.” Climate Dynamics 13, no. 7–8 (August 1, 1997): 459–87. https://doi.org/10/ch4kc4.
Murphy, Allan H. “Skill Scores Based on the Mean Square Error and Their Relationships to the Correlation Coefficient.” Monthly Weather Review 116, no. 12 (December 1, 1988): 2417–24. https://doi.org/10/fc7mxd.
Pohlmann, Holger, Michael Botzet, Mojib Latif, Andreas Roesch, Martin Wild, and Peter Tschuck. “Estimating the Decadal Predictability of a Coupled AOGCM.” Journal of Climate 17, no. 22 (November 1, 2004): 4463–72. https://doi.org/10/d2qf62.
Bushuk, Mitchell, Rym Msadek, Michael Winton, Gabriel Vecchi, Xiaosong Yang, Anthony Rosati, and Rich Gudgel. “Regional Arctic Sea–Ice Prediction: Potential versus Operational Seasonal Forecast Skill. Climate Dynamics, June 9, 2018. https://doi.org/10/gd7hfq.