Statistical approximation of high-dimensional climate models
DOI10.1016/J.JECONOM.2019.05.005zbMATH Open1456.62263OpenAlexW2566847903WikidataQ127792542 ScholiaQ127792542MaRDI QIDQ2280602FDOQ2280602
Authors: Alena Miftakhova, Kenneth L. Judd, Thomas S. Lontzek, Karl Schmedders
Publication date: 19 December 2019
Published in: Journal of Econometrics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeconom.2019.05.005
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Applications of statistics to environmental and related topics (62P12) Climate science and climate modeling (86A08)
Cites Work
- Approximation theory and approximation practice
- An approximate dynamic programming framework for modeling global climate policy under decision-dependent uncertainty
- Parameter estimation for computationally intensive nonlinear regression with an application to climate modeling
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- Numerically stable and accurate stochastic simulation approaches for solving dynamic economic models
- Compression and Conditional Emulation of Climate Model Output
- Merging simulation and projection approaches to solve high-dimensional problems with an application to a New Keynesian model
- Using adaptive sparse grids to solve high-dimensional dynamic models
- Econometric modelling of climate systems: the equivalence of energy balance models and cointegrated vector autoregressions
Cited In (11)
- Compression and Conditional Emulation of Climate Model Output
- Is future climate predictable with statistics?
- Mini-minimax uncertainty quantification for emulators
- Emulation and interpretation of high-dimensional climate model outputs
- Parametric smoothness and self-scaling of the statistical properties of a minimal climate model: what beyond the mean field theories?
- Temperatures in transient climates: improved methods for simulations with evolving temporal covariances
- Global space-time models for climate ensembles
- Evolving Bayesian emulators for structured chaotic time series, with application to large climate models
- INFERENCE VERSUS IMPRINT IN CLIMATE MODELING
- Using Proper Divergence Functions to Evaluate Climate Models
- Emulation to simulate low-resolution atmospheric data
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