EGU22-4795
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-4795
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Robust Causal Inference for Irregularly Sampled Time Series: Applications in Climate and Paleoclimate Data Analysis

Aditi Kathpalia, Pouya Manshour, and Milan Paluš
Aditi Kathpalia et al.
  • Institute of Computer Science of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Department of Complex Systems, Prague, Czechia (kathpaliaaditi@gmail.com)

To predict and determine the major drivers of climate has become even more important now as climate change poses a big challenge to humankind and our planet earth. Different studies employ either correlation, causality methods or modelling approaches to study the interaction between climate and climate forcing variables (anthropogenic or natural). This includes the study of interaction between global surface temperatures and CO2; rainfall in different locations and El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomena. The results produced by different studies have been found to be different and debatable, presenting an ambiguous situation. In this work, we develop and apply a novel robust causality estimation technique for time-series data (to estimate causal influence between given observables), that can help to resolve the ambiguity. The discrepancy in existing results arises due to challenges with the acquired data and limitations of the causal inference/ modelling approaches. Our novel approach combines the use of a recently proposed causality method, Compression-Complexity Causality (CCC) [1], and Ordinal/ Permutation pattern-based coding [2]. CCC estimates have been shown to be robust for bivariate systems with low temporal resolution, missing samples, long-term memory and finite length data [1]. The use of ordinal patterns helps to extend bivariate CCC to the multivariate case by capturing the multidimensional dynamics of the given variables’ systems in the symbolic temporal sequence of a single variable. This methodology is tested on dynamical systems data which are short in length and have been corrupted with missing samples or subsampled to different levels. The superior performance of ‘Permutation CCC’ on such data relative to other causality estimation methods, strengthens our trust in the method. We apply the method to study the interaction between CO2-temperature recordings on three different time scales, CH4-temperature on the paleoclimate scale, ENSO-South Asian monsoon on monthly and yearly time scales, North Atlantic Oscillation-surface temperature on daily and monthly time scales. These datasets are either short in length, have been sampled irregularly, have missing samples or have a combination of the above factors. Our results are interesting, which validate some existing studies while contradicting others. In addition, the development of the novel permutation-CCC approach opens the possibility of its application for making useful inferences on other challenging climate datasets.


This study is supported by the Czech Science Foundation, Project No.~GA19-16066S and by the Czech Academy of Sciences, Praemium Academiae awarded to M. Paluš.


References:
[1] Kathpalia, A., & Nagaraj, N. (2019). Data-based intervention approach for Complexity-Causality measure. PeerJ Computer Science, 5, e196.
[2] Bandt, C., & Pompe, B. (2002). Permutation entropy: a natural complexity measure for time series. Physical review letters, 88(17), 174102.

How to cite: Kathpalia, A., Manshour, P., and Paluš, M.: Robust Causal Inference for Irregularly Sampled Time Series: Applications in Climate and Paleoclimate Data Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-4795, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-4795, 2022.