Judgment and Decision Making in Dynamic Tasks: The Case of Forecasting the Microburst

Cynthia M. Lusk, Thomas R. Stewart, Kenneth R. Hammond, Rodney J. Potts
1990 Weather and forecasting  
Two studies of microbunt forecasting were conducted in order to demonstrate the utility of applying theoretical and methodological concepts from judgment and decision making to meteorology. A hierarchical model of the judgment process is outlined in which a precursor identification phase is separated from the prediction phase. In the first study, forecasters were provided with specific, unambiguous precursor values and were asked to provide judgments regarding the probability of a microburst.
more » ... sults indicated that the meteorologists' forecasts were adequately predicted by a linear model. Modest agreement was observed among the forecasters' judgments. In the second study, forecasters viewed storms under dynamic conditions representative of their usual operational setting. They made judgments regarding precursor values, as well as of the probability ofa microburst occurring. The forecasters' agreement regarding microbunt predictions was found to be lower than in the first study. Surprisingly, agreement regarding the (subjectively) most important precursor value was near zero. These results indicate that there are indeed practical advantages to be gained from a better understanding of the precursor identification and prediction phases of the forecasting process.
doi:10.1175/1520-0434(1990)005<0627:jadmid>2.0.co;2 fatcat:uqn6l6d6zrelxditnsuwkeh6gy