4.6 Article

Interpreting variability in global SST data using independent component analysis and principal component analysis

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 3, Pages 333-346

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1001/joc.1888

Keywords

sea surface temperature; principal component analysis; independent component analysis; varimax; El Nino-Southern Oscillation; climate variability

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council
  2. Sydney Catchment Authority

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Component extraction techniques are used widely in the analysis and interpretation of high-dimensional climate datasets such as global sea surface temperatures (SSTs). Principal component abalysis (PCA), a frequently used component extraction technique, provides an orthogonal representation of the multivariate data set and maximizes the variance explained by successive components. A disadvantage of PCA, however, is that the interpretability of the second and higher components may be limited. For this reason, a Varimax rotation is often applied to the PCA solution to enhance the interpretability of the components by maximizing a simple structure. An alternative rotational approach in known as independent component analysis (ICA), which finds a set of underlying 'source signals' which drive the multivariate 'mixed' dataset. Here we compare the capacity of PCA, the Varimax rotation and ICA in explaining climate variability present in globally distributed SST anomaly (SSTA) data. We find that phenomena which are global in extent, such as the global warming trend and the El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), are well represented using PCA. In contrast, the Varimax rotation provides distinct advantages in interpreting more localized phenomena such as variability in the tropical Atlantic. Finally, our analysis suggests that the interpretability of independent components (ICs) appears to be low. This does not diminish the statistical advantages of deriving components that are mutually independent, with potential applications ranging from synthetically generating multivariate datasets, developing statistical forecasts, and reconstructing spatial datasets from patchy observations at multiple point locations. Copyright (C) 2009 Royal Meterological Society.

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