4.4 Article

SPATIAL MODELING OF EXTREME SNOW DEPTH

Journal

ANNALS OF APPLIED STATISTICS
Volume 5, Issue 3, Pages 1699-1725

Publisher

INST MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
DOI: 10.1214/11-AOAS464

Keywords

Climate space; extremal coefficient; extreme value theory; Max-stable process; pairwise likelihood; snow depth data

Funding

  1. Swiss FNS
  2. ETH domain Competence Center

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The spatial modeling of extreme snow is important for adequate risk management in Alpine and high altitude countries. A natural approach to such modeling is through the theory of max-stable processes, an infinite-dimensional extension of multivariate extreme value theory. In this paper we describe the application of such processes in modeling the spatial dependence of extreme snow depth in Switzerland, based on data for the winters 1966-2008 at 101 stations. The models we propose rely on a climate transformation that allows us to account for the presence of climate regions and for directional effects, resulting from synoptic weather patterns. Estimation is performed through pairwise likelihood inference and the models are compared using penalized likelihood criteria. The max-stable models provide a much better fit to the joint behavior of the extremes than do independence or full dependence models.

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