New paper makes a hockey sticky wicket of Mann et al 98/99/08

NOTE: This has been running two weeks at the top of WUWT, discussion has slowed, so I’m placing it back in regular que.  – Anthony

UPDATES:

Statistician William Briggs weighs in here

Eduardo Zorita weighs in here

Anonymous blogger “Deep Climate” weighs in with what he/she calls a “deeply flawed study” here

After a week of being “preoccupied” Real Climate finally breaks radio silence here. It appears to be a prelude to a dismissal with a “wave of the hand”

Supplementary Info now available: All data and code used in this paper are available at the Annals of Applied Statistics supplementary materials website:

http://www.imstat.org/aoas/supplements/default.htm

=========================================

Sticky Wicket – phrase, meaning: “A difficult situation”.

Oh, my. There is a new and important study on temperature proxy reconstructions (McShane and Wyner 2010) submitted into the Annals of Applied Statistics and is listed to be published in the next issue. According to Steve McIntyre, this is one of the “top statistical journals”. This paper is a direct and serious rebuttal to the proxy reconstructions of Mann. It seems watertight on the surface, because instead of trying to attack the proxy data quality issues, they assumed the proxy data was accurate for their purpose, then created a bayesian backcast method. Then, using the proxy data, they demonstrate it fails to reproduce the sharp 20th century uptick.

Now, there’s a new look to the familiar “hockey stick”.

Before:

Multiproxy reconstruction of Northern Hemisphere surface temperature variations over the past millennium (blue), along with 50-year average (black), a measure of the statistical uncertainty associated with the reconstruction (gray), and instrumental surface temperature data for the last 150 years (red), based on the work by Mann et al. (1999). This figure has sometimes been referred to as the hockey stick. Source: IPCC (2001).

After:

FIG 16. Backcast from Bayesian Model of Section 5. CRU Northern Hemisphere annual mean land temperature is given by the thin black line and a smoothed version is given by the thick black line. The forecast is given by the thin red line and a smoothed version is given by the thick red line. The model is fit on 1850-1998 AD and backcasts 998-1849 AD. The cyan region indicates uncertainty due to t, the green region indicates uncertainty due to β, and the gray region indicates total uncertainty.

Not only are the results stunning, but the paper is highly readable, written in a sensible style that most laymen can absorb, even if they don’t understand some of the finer points of bayesian and loess filters, or principal components. Not only that, this paper is a confirmation of McIntyre and McKitrick’s work, with a strong nod to Wegman. I highly recommend reading this and distributing this story widely.

Here’s the submitted paper:

A Statistical Analysis of Multiple Temperature Proxies: Are Reconstructions of Surface Temperatures Over the Last 1000 Years Reliable?

(PDF, 2.5 MB. Backup download available here: McShane and Wyner 2010 )

It states in its abstract:

We find that the proxies do not predict temperature significantly better than random series generated independently of temperature. Furthermore, various model specifications that perform similarly at predicting temperature produce extremely different historical backcasts. Finally, the proxies seem unable to forecast the high levels of and sharp run-up in temperature in the 1990s either in-sample or from contiguous holdout blocks, thus casting doubt on their ability to predict such phenomena if in fact they occurred several hundred years ago.

Here are some excerpts from the paper (emphasis in paragraphs mine):

This one shows that M&M hit the mark, because it is independent validation:

In other words, our model performs better when using highly autocorrelated

noise rather than proxies to ”predict” temperature. The real proxies are less predictive than our ”fake” data. While the Lasso generated reconstructions using the proxies are highly statistically significant compared to simple null models, they do not achieve statistical significance against sophisticated null models.

We are not the first to observe this effect. It was shown, in McIntyre

and McKitrick (2005a,c), that random sequences with complex local dependence

structures can predict temperatures. Their approach has been

roundly dismissed in the climate science literature:

To generate ”random” noise series, MM05c apply the full autoregressive structure of the real world proxy series. In this way, they in fact train their stochastic engine with significant (if not dominant) low frequency climate signal rather than purely non-climatic noise and its persistence. [Emphasis in original]

Ammann and Wahl (2007)

On the power of the proxy data to actually detect climate change:

This is disturbing: if a model cannot predict the occurrence of a sharp run-up in an out-of-sample block which is contiguous with the insample training set, then it seems highly unlikely that it has power to detect such levels or run-ups in the more distant past. It is even more discouraging when one recalls Figure 15: the model cannot capture the sharp run-up even in-sample. In sum, these results suggest that the ninety-three sequences that comprise the 1,000 year old proxy record simply lack power to detect a sharp increase in temperature. See Footnote 12

Footnote 12:

On the other hand, perhaps our model is unable to detect the high level of and sharp run-up in recent temperatures because anthropogenic factors have, for example, caused a regime change in the relation between temperatures and proxies. While this is certainly a consistent line of reasoning, it is also fraught with peril for, once one admits the possibility of regime changes in the instrumental period, it raises the question of whether such changes exist elsewhere over the past 1,000 years. Furthermore, it implies that up to half of the already short instrumental record is corrupted by anthropogenic factors, thus undermining paleoclimatology as a statistical enterprise.

FIG 15. In-sample Backcast from Bayesian Model of Section 5. CRU Northern Hemisphere annual mean land temperature is given by the thin black line and a smoothed version is given by the thick black line. The forecast is given by the thin red line and a smoothed version is given by the thick red line. The model is fit on 1850-1998 AD.

We plot the in-sample portion of this backcast (1850-1998 AD) in Figure 15. Not surprisingly, the model tracks CRU reasonably well because it is in-sample. However, despite the fact that the backcast is both in-sample and initialized with the high true temperatures from 1999 AD and 2000 AD, it still cannot capture either the high level of or the sharp run-up in temperatures of the 1990s. It is substantially biased low. That the model cannot capture run-up even in-sample does not portend well for its ability

to capture similar levels and run-ups if they exist out-of-sample.

Conclusion.

Research on multi-proxy temperature reconstructions of the earth’s temperature is now entering its second decade. While the literature is large, there has been very little collaboration with universitylevel, professional statisticians (Wegman et al., 2006; Wegman, 2006). Our paper is an effort to apply some modern statistical methods to these problems. While our results agree with the climate scientists findings in some

respects, our methods of estimating model uncertainty and accuracy are in sharp disagreement.

On the one hand, we conclude unequivocally that the evidence for a ”long-handled” hockey stick (where the shaft of the hockey stick extends to the year 1000 AD) is lacking in the data. The fundamental problem is that there is a limited amount of proxy data which dates back to 1000 AD; what is available is weakly predictive of global annual temperature. Our backcasting methods, which track quite closely the methods applied most recently in Mann (2008) to the same data, are unable to catch the sharp run up in temperatures recorded in the 1990s, even in-sample.

As can be seen in Figure 15, our estimate of the run up in temperature in the 1990s has

a much smaller slope than the actual temperature series. Furthermore, the lower frame of Figure 18 clearly reveals that the proxy model is not at all able to track the high gradient segment. Consequently, the long flat handle of the hockey stick is best understood to be a feature of regression and less a reflection of our knowledge of the truth. Nevertheless, the temperatures of the last few decades have been relatively warm compared to many of the thousand year temperature curves sampled from the posterior distribution of our model.

Our main contribution is our efforts to seriously grapple with the uncertainty involved in paleoclimatological reconstructions. Regression of high dimensional time series is always a complex problem with many traps. In our case, the particular challenges include (i) a short sequence of training data, (ii) more predictors than observations, (iii) a very weak signal, and (iv) response and predictor variables which are both strongly autocorrelated.

The final point is particularly troublesome: since the data is not easily modeled by a simple autoregressive process it follows that the number of truly independent observations (i.e., the effective sample size) may be just too small for accurate reconstruction.

Climate scientists have greatly underestimated the uncertainty of proxy based reconstructions and hence have been overconfident in their models. We have shown that time dependence in the temperature series is sufficiently strong to permit complex sequences of random numbers to forecast out-of-sample reasonably well fairly frequently (see, for example, Figure 9). Furthermore, even proxy based models with approximately the same amount of reconstructive skill (Figures 11,12, and 13), produce strikingly dissimilar historical backcasts: some of these look like hockey sticks but most do not (Figure 14).

Natural climate variability is not well understood and is probably quite large. It is not clear that the proxies currently used to predict temperature are even predictive of it at the scale of several decades let alone over many centuries. Nonetheless, paleoclimatoligical reconstructions constitute only one source of evidence in the AGW debate. Our work stands entirely on the shoulders of those environmental scientists who labored untold years to assemble the vast network of natural proxies. Although we assume the reliability of their data for our purposes here, there still remains a considerable number of outstanding questions that can only be answered with a free and open inquiry and a great deal of replication.

===============================================================

Commenters on WUWT report that Tamino and Romm are deleting comments even mentioning this paper on their blog comment forum. Their refusal to even acknowledge it tells you it has squarely hit the target, and the fat lady has sung – loudly.

(h/t to WUWT reader “thechuckr”)

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August 23, 2010 6:30 am

The “main truck” has a reference in this pirate song by the late, great Stan Rogers. A truck also referred to the small wheeled carriage that carried a ship’s cannon.

Ziiex Zebur
August 23, 2010 7:04 am

Russel Seitz,
as a graduate of Beijing Science and Technology I find it very difficult to understand your reasoning, you project a mindset that is definitely not that of a inquisitive academic, but more of a arrogant freshman. I hope those that engage you for advice receive a better impression than you portray here.
Zebur

Richard S Courtney
August 23, 2010 8:28 am

RR Kampen:
You ask me:
“I took a look at the figures again and we can both see most warming at lower levels is in the Arctic, as expected (e.g. when I was student meteorology/oceangraphy around 1998-1992). In the figures this is de lower left corner. Red. I cannot make anything else of those figures. What am I overlooking?”
Answer:
the bl**dy great blob of red at altitude in the tropics.
Richard

anna v
August 23, 2010 8:37 am

tonyb says:
August 23, 2010 at 1:12 am
I firmly believe there are two complementary forces at work here;
Firstly, the ‘We know best’ syndrome deeply embedded amongst the leaders of Britain and nowhere better observed than in our MP’s, political appointees, mmedia and such as Phil Jones.
Second has been the incestous nature of the ‘we know best’ brigade who peer review (endorse) each others work whether at a political, social or scientific level.

At the risk of seeming elitist, I have to add a third and mainly the main reason: too many graduate students and degrees. It starts with professors who need graduate students to get tenure, and the standards for accepting students have fallen with the rate that new universities and professorial positions have appeared.
Too many graduates with politically and centrally controlled finance further dilute the quality of the level of the student body. Sociological factors enter, like: who has the gift of gab, who has connections and protexia. These existed in the academy fragmented and thus of limited influence. When the financing of the academy is centrally controlled the ball can be lost on the scientific level of decisions which is what has happened with the climate community. The Lysenko effect is the result.

August 23, 2010 9:55 am

Bill Tuttle says:
August 23, 2010 at 12:49 am
What extreme heat? It’s 45°C, which isn’t bad for this part of Iraq — I won’t even need a sweater by noontime…

LOL! Yeah I was always amazed at how cool 32°C could feel in Baghdad on a summer night after a day hovering around 50°C with almost 100% humidity. Made me want to break out the jacket! A North Carolina summer is quite cool by comparison.

Gary Pearse
August 23, 2010 11:55 am

It seems the only statistician who chimed in was Briggs and he agreed with the new papaer. The others, out of their depth, picked around at peripherals in an impotent and derisory fashion.

kwik
August 23, 2010 12:08 pm

Anthony Watts says:
August 21, 2010 at 3:53 pm
“Since Dr. Seitz wants to practice wordplay here, I thought it worth revisiting what Willis Eschenbach thought of his bubbles…”
Aha. So this Dr. Seitz is the character with the bubbles? No wonder he seems so aggrevated after being debunked by Willis’ simple calculations.

Brewster
August 23, 2010 2:05 pm

Talk about RC dismissing things, this is a Gavin reply to a question on why the GISS ‘adjusts’ old temperatures down to correct for UHI instead of adjusting the modern readings. It’s nice to know that incorrectly modified data has absolutely no effects:
blockquote cite=”One more question; in your GISS-USA-temp-anom-adjusted-for-UHI data set, why do you adjust the early part of the century down and the latter portion up? If you are correcting for UHI shouldn’t it be the other way around? Why cool the 1930s when cities were smaller, wouldn’t it have been even warmer if the cities were larger yet you adjust down? Makes no sense.
[Response: These are anomalies. It makes no difference whatsoever. Please at least try and address issues in the post. – gavin]”

JDN
August 23, 2010 7:33 pm

Lucy,
You’re looking for the reason people can abandon reason when it comes to climate. I attribute it to misantrhopy. Misanthropy has a long tradition, never isolated to just one group, and can paradoxically be made to serve as a uniting principle for a group. You know the examples, I’m sure. It’s a constant part of the human condition, with individuals being misanthropic to varying degrees.
So, let’s ask where it exists in the world today. AGW is a perfect fit for misanthropists. (People suck and they’re messing up a perfectly stable planet.) It doesn’t matter whether there is a conspiracy to commit fraud using AGW, it’s appeal is that it gives voice to what would otherwise be indefensible. Ironically, the anti-AGW positions are also good for misanthropy, because such a large portion of the human race has bought into foolishness. (Should such fools not be left to rot in their stupidity? 🙂
I’ve been agitating for years to have a university level philosophy class dedicated to misanthropy, specifically because of the AGW stuff. It would be a very popular course by the title alone and would shine a light on what is normally dismissed as distasteful to think about.

Tom in Texas
August 23, 2010 8:05 pm

“1,616 Responses to Breaking News Story: CRU has apparently been hacked – hundreds of files released”
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/11/19/breaking-news-story-hadley-cru-has-apparently-been-hacked-hundreds-of-files-released/

I think I’ll reread this (and the comments) on Nov. 19th
I think I have a couple of early comments.
Then I’ll hit Anthony’s tip jar.
BTW, have they caught that Russian hacker yet? :]

Bill H
August 23, 2010 8:51 pm

After a couple of hours and over one thousand posts I have come to the conclusion that statistical analysis avoidance by Mann/Briffa/Jones/Hansen and the IPCC was purposeful and intentional. They knew that it would expose the lie that is AGW along with discredit their political agenda.
McIntyre and company reverse engineered the mess and exposed the lie. Now others are doing the same. While this is specific to Mann et al papers, it also hits the CRU/MET, NASA/GISS data and its short comings. Maybe now we can get real scientific discussion.
The thing about statistical evaluational is no matter how you skew the numbers the method can be revealed with only 1/2 the data and the answers. The attempt at hiding the method and destroying the data was an attempt to make it impossible to determine and replicate the outcome. it was meant to kill the scientific process.. and that to me is unconscionable…
Kudos Anthony….. keep putting it into the light…

Pamela Gray
August 23, 2010 9:21 pm

Wallowa County had a bit o’frost on the non-existent pumpkins and we had to start a fire in the wood stove to ward off the chill! Several outlying ranches attempting to get a 3rd cutting of hay were sadly mistaken this morning and flowers everywhere were growing limp as the Sun warmed the frosty air. The air is unbelievably dry, even uncomfortably dry. Dare I say, we will experience a bit of extreme weather up here in the non-existent clouds this winter. When your sewer pipes freeze, everything from tender stems to tree trunk size flora is frozen solid, furry winter animals are succumbing to the chill, and there is no precip on the ground whatsoever (no rain, no frozen dew, no snow, no sleet or hail – just frozen Earth), you know you have experienced a bit of Antarctica up here near the 45th parallel. I wonder….

Vince Whirlwind
August 23, 2010 9:36 pm

Terry Oldberg:
“In a reversal of the burden that lies upon a scientist to provide evidence that his hypothesis is not wrong, Arrhenius declared that his hypothesis was right until proven wrong.”
&
“An “effect” partners with a “cause” in a “cause and effect relationship.” The existence of such a relationship implies: a) the event of the cause preceeds the event of the cause and b) given the event of the cause, the event of the effect occurs with a probability of 1.”
Terry, your first paragraph is absolutely the reverse of what is fact; and by the logic of your second paragraph, if I were to say “Sunrise tomorrow is at 0617” and tomorrow happens to be a cloudy day, then sunrise has not occurred. You really seem to be struggling with some very basic intellectual skills here.

RR Kampen
August 24, 2010 2:25 am

Richard S Courtney says:
August 23, 2010 at 8:28 am
Answer:
the bl**dy great blob of red at altitude in the tropics.

Sorry. I was talking sea level.

August 24, 2010 3:02 am

Vince Whirlwind says:
“Terry, your first paragraph is absolutely the reverse of what is fact; and by the logic of your second paragraph, if I were to say “Sunrise tomorrow is at 0617″ and tomorrow happens to be a cloudy day, then sunrise has not occurred. You really seem to be struggling with some very basic intellectual skills here.”
Vince, I am not sure if you understand the arguments
1) Arrhenius formula was wrong
2) nobody after him, including the IPCC, has understood why he was wrong
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/08/17/breaking-new-paper-makes-a-hockey-sticky-wicket-of-mann-et-al-99/#comment-463985

August 24, 2010 4:04 am

JDN says:
August 23, 2010 at 7:33 pm
Norman Cohn, Pursuit of the Millennium, and Charles Mackay, Extraordinary Popular Delusions (esp the chapter on the genesis of the Crusades movement) have interesting things to say IMHO that relate to the rise of the AGW delusion. I’ve been reading a book on “the New Age” that is basically supportive but also talks about aspects he dislikes: an endemic appearance of groups who see the New Age (or the “millennium” of Cohn) in terms of awful things about to happen, that we have caused, and/or that we need to act over, to cleanse us from our “sin” in order to usher in the new age / millennium.
Also, never attribute to malice what can be attributed to stupidity.

Richard S Courtney
August 24, 2010 5:42 am

RR Kampen:
At August 24, 2010 at 2:25 am you quote my pointing out that you were wrong and I answered your question as to what you were missing by saying August 23, 2010 at 8:28 am
“Answer:
the bl**dy great blob of red at altitude in the tropics.”
To which your reply says;
“Sorry. I was talking sea level.”
SAY WHAT!?
This was about your dispute of my saying at August 19, 2010 at 7:46 am
“5.
The pattern of atmospheric warming predicted by the AGW hypothesis is absent.
The hypothesis predicts most warming of the air relative to the surface at altitude in the tropics. Measurements from weather balloons and from satellites both show slight cooling relative to the surface at altitude in the tropics.”
Tyical warmer. You were proved wrong so you pretend the discussion was about something else.
Richard

RR Kampen
August 24, 2010 6:13 am

No Richard, I missed the word altitude. I am stupid, not malevolent. And you? I think you already suggested it (look in a mirror).
Not interested in altitude warming anyway. Predictions of temperature change with altitude pertaining to AGW differ wildly according to model.

RR Kampen
August 24, 2010 6:16 am

And, Richard, we were discussing this part of the debate:

Richard S Courtney says:
August 19, 2010 at 7:46 am
Thank you for your elaborate response. I will pick out two lines:
The hypothesis predicts most warming of the air relative to the surface at altitude in the tropics.
In reality the hypothesis predicts most warming at high latitudes, particularly northern high latitudes. The hypothesis does so now and it did so when I studied climatology in an era the IPCC still had to be set up. The observations are conform hypothesis.

Who slipped in ‘altitude’?

JDN
August 24, 2010 6:42 am

Lucy Skywalker says:
August 24, 2010 at 4:04 am
[snip]
Also, never attribute to malice what can be attributed to stupidity.
I can’t tell if you’re agreeing with me or not. My point is that misanthropy is it’s own category and is part of the human condition. It is poorly studied (AFAIK) and has not been advanced as a source of doomsday hysterias.

August 24, 2010 7:18 am

Lucy Skywalker: August 24, 2010 at 4:04 am
Also, never attribute to malice what can be attributed to stupidity.
It’s more properly, “Never attribute to malice that which can be *adequately* explained by stupidity.”
Which makes some of the more hubristic pontifications over at RC even funnier…

stephen richards
August 24, 2010 7:33 am

PaulM
What a sad individual you are. I would have thought life difficult enough without exaggerating the problems. You need to get out a bit man. Read some interesting books, enjoy a sherbert or two.

August 24, 2010 7:39 am

‘On the one hand, we conclude unequivocally that the evidence for a ”long-handled” hockey stick (where the shaft of the hockey stick extends to the year 1000 AD) is lacking in the data.
‘Nevertheless, the temperatures of the last few decades have been relatively warm compared to many of the thousand year temperature curves sampled from the posterior distribution of our model.’
_McShane&Wyner
WoW…..You guys need to go back and read the paper!

August 24, 2010 8:35 am

Henry Walters
You have to be kidding me.
Please go through all 1000 odd comments here and tell me you still believe in man made global warming?

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