Catégorie
DATAIA Seminars

DATAIA Seminar - Jakob Runge

Bandeau image
Date de tri
Lieu de l'événement
DIGITEO MOULON - Building 660

Share

twlkml
Chapo
Jakob Runge leads this DATAIA seminar's session on "Perspectives for causal inference on time series in Earth system sciences"
Contenu
Corps de texte

Jakob Runge (DLR Institute of Data Science) will host a seminar on climate, data, and causal methods, organized by DATAIA with the support of the TAU Team of Inria-Saclay.

Jakob will analyse the problems and the challenges where causal methods have the potential to enrich Earth system sciences. He will also present a new benchmark platform, and discuss and illustrate recent methods and novel insights in Earth sciences.

 

"The heart of the scientific enterprise is a rational effort to understand the causes behind the phenomena we observe. In disciplines dealing with complex dynamical systems, such as the Earth system, replicated real experiments are rarely feasible. However, a rapidly increasing amount of observational and simulated time series data opens up the use of observational causal inference methods beyond the commonly adopted correlation techniques. Observational causal inference is a rapidly growing field with enormous potential to help answer long-standing scientific questions. Unfortunately, many methods are still little known and therefore rarely adopted in Earth system sciences. In this talk I will present a Perspective Paper in Nature Communications which identifies key generic problems and major challenges where causal methods have the potential to advance the state-of-the-art in Earth system sciences. I will also present a novel causal inference benchmark platform that aims to assess the performance of causal inference methods and to help practitioners choose the right method for a particular problem. Some recent methods that address particular challenges of Earth system data will be discussed and illustrated by application examples where causal methods have already led to novel insights in Earth sciences."

Runge, J., S. Bathiany, E. Bollt, G. Camps-Valls, D. Coumou, E. Deyle, C. Glymour, M. Kretschmer, M. D. Mahecha, J. Muñoz-Marı́, E. H. van Nes, J. Peters, R. Quax, M. Reichstein, M. Scheffer, B. Schölkopf, P. Spirtes, G. Sugihara, J. Sun, K. Zhang, and J. Zscheischler (2019). Inferring causation from time series in earth system sciences. Nature Communications 10 (1), 2553.