4.5 Article

Bringing physical reasoning into statistical practice in climate-change science

期刊

CLIMATIC CHANGE
卷 169, 期 1-2, 页码 -

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-021-03226-6

关键词

Climate change; Statistics; Uncertainty; Inference; Bayes factor; Bayes theorem

资金

  1. Grantham Chair in Climate Science at the University of Reading

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The treatment of uncertainty in climate-change science is heavily influenced by the 'frequentist' tradition in statistics, but this method may not always be meaningful and can lead to a disconnect between physical reasoning and statistical practice. Embedding frequentist statistical methods within the framework of probability theory can help integrate physical reasoning into statistical practice in a transparent way.
The treatment of uncertainty in climate-change science is dominated by the far-reaching influence of the 'frequentist' tradition in statistics, which interprets uncertainty in terms of sampling statistics and emphasizes p-values and statistical significance. This is the normative standard in the journals where most climate-change science is published. Yet a sampling distribution is not always meaningful (there is only one planet Earth). Moreover, scientific statements about climate change are hypotheses, and the frequentist tradition has no way of expressing the uncertainty of a hypothesis. As a result, in climate-change science, there is generally a disconnect between physical reasoning and statistical practice. This paper explores how the frequentist statistical methods used in climate-change science can be embedded within the more general framework of probability theory, which is based on very simple logical principles. In this way, the physical reasoning represented in scientific hypotheses, which underpins climate-change science, can be brought into statistical practice in a transparent and logically rigorous way. The principles are illustrated through three examples of controversial scientific topics: the alleged global warming hiatus, Arctic-midlatitude linkages, and extreme event attribution. These examples show how the principles can be applied, in order to develop better scientific practice. La theorie des probabilites n'est que le bon sens reduit au calcul. (Pierre-Simon Laplace, Essai Philosophiques sur les Probabilites, 1819). It is sometimes considered a paradox that the answer depends not only on the observations but on the question; it should be a platitude. (Harold Jeffreys, Theory of Probability, 1st edition, 1939).

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