"Predicting Storm Surges" - Information and Links:

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Chaos, Computational Intelligence, Data Assimilation and Ensembles

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The cover of “Predicting Storm Surges” - Google Books.

"Predicting Storm Surges" was published by Taylor & Francis Group in 2017, the book is classified in Electronic books genre, it has 213 pages and the language of the book is English.


“Predicting Storm Surges” Metadata:

  • Title: Predicting Storm Surges
  • Author:
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: 213
  • Is Family Friendly: Yes - No Mature Content
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Group
  • Publish Date:
  • Genres: Electronic books

“Predicting Storm Surges” Subjects and Themes:

Edition Specifications:

  • Weight: 0.455

Edition Identifiers:

AI-generated Review of “Predicting Storm Surges”:


Snippets and Summary:

Some children seem different, detached, disinterested in the games of other children.

"Predicting Storm Surges" Description:

Google Books:

Accurate predictions of storm surge are of importance in many coastal areas in the world to avoid and mitigate its destructive impacts. For this purpose the physically-based (process) numerical models are typically utilized. However, in data-rich cases, one may use data-driven methods aiming at reconstructing the internal patterns of the modelled processes and relationships between the observed descriptive variables. This book focuses on data-driven modelling using methods of nonlinear dynamics and chaos theory. First, some fundamentals of physical oceanography, nonlinear dynamics and chaos, computational intelligence and European operational storm surge models are covered. After that a number of improvements in building chaotic models are presented: nonlinear time series analysis, multi-step prediction, phase space dimensionality reduction, techniques dealing with incomplete time series, phase error correction, finding true neighbours, optimization of chaotic model, data assimilation and multi-model ensemble prediction. The major case study is surge prediction in the North Sea, with some tests on a Caribbean Sea case. The modelling results showed that the enhanced predictive chaotic models can serve as an efficient tool for accurate and reliable short and mid-term predictions of storm surges in order to support decision-makers for flood prediction and ship navigation.

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