OU’s Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies will be well-represented when the National Weather Association’s Annual Meeting kicks off on Saturday, October 17, 2015 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. There are 26 CIMMS researchers who will present their work – some more than once! A total of 35 presentations on the meeting agenda are linked to us here at CIMMS. Another great display of all our hard work!
On Social Science and Operational Forecasting
Charles A Doswell III
Operational uses of Spectrum Width to Improve Warnings for Quasi-Linear Convection in the Western Great Lakes
Brett Borchardt
Preparing for the Future: Recommendations for NWS Training on GOES-R 1-Minute Satellite Imagery
Katie L Crandall
Using Social Media to Empower the Public’s Decision Making
Stephen R Mullens
The Multi-Year Reanalysis of Remotely Sensed Storms: Data Processing and Severe Weather-related Projects
Kiel L Ortega
Evaluation of a Hail Size Discrimination Algorithm for the Polarimetric WSR-88D
Kiel L Ortega
Building a Database of Flash Flood Observations Using Twitter
Brandon R Smith
Eye-tracking during the Forecaster Warning Decision Process: A Pilot Experiment
Katie A Bowden
Tornadogenesis on 19 May 2013 in central Oklahoma as Seen by Nearby Radars
Donald W Burgess
Forecaster Decision-Making with Automated Probabilistic Guidance in the 2015 Hazardous Weather Testbed Probabilistic Hazard Information Experiment
Christopher D Karstens
On the Use of 1-Minute Satellite Imagery in the Storm Prediction Center
William E Line
Storm-scale data assimilation and ensemble forecasting with the NSSL Experimental Warn-on-Forecast System for ensembles
Dustan M Wheatley
Total Lightning R20 development and evaluation in the HWT and NWS
Kristin M Calhoun
Feedback on the Use of Earth Network’s Total Lightning Data and Products in the NOAA Hazardous Weather Testbed
Tiffany C Meyer
Insights Regarding the Use of Ground-Based Spectral Infrared Thermodynamic Sounders in Forecasting Deep Convection
William G Blumberg
Explicit electrification and lightning forecast implemented within the WRF-ARW model.
Alexandre O Fierro
Rapid-Scan, Dual-Polarization Radar Observations of Tornadic and Nontornadic Supercells in the Context of Forecaster Conceptual Models
Charles M Kuster
Results from GOES-R Proving Ground Demonstrations at the 2015 HWT Spring Experiment
William E Line
Improving MRMS Cloud-to-Ground Lightning Probabilities
Tiffany C Meyer
Automated Detection of the Polarimetric Tornado Debris Signature
Jeffrey C Snyder
MRMS QPE Performance during the 2014 Warm Season
Stephen B Cocks
Conducting Site Visits to Facilitate the Operations to Research Process with MRMS QPE
Stephen B Cocks
mPING Three Years Later
Kimberly L Elmore
The potential for unnecessary casualties in hazard response-related traffic jams: the 31 May 2013 tornadoes near Oklahoma City
Gabe Garfield
Probabilistic Hazard Information Processing System (PHIPS): Rapid Generation and Blending of Probabilistic Forecasts for Severe Convective Hazards
Christopher D Karstens
Assessing the significance of “mini tornado alleys” in the observational record
Corey K Potvin
Sensitivity of idealized supercell simulations to horizontal grid spacing: Implications for Warn-on-Forecast
Corey K Potvin
The NSSL Multiple-Radar / Multiple-Sensor (MRMS) Algorithm System: First Year of NWS Operations
Greg Stumpf
Integrating High Resolution Ground Radar and Satellite Observations for Rapidly Updating Precipitation Estimates in Data Sparse Regions
Heather M Grams
Discrimination of surface hydrometeor type using spectral bin microphysics
Heather D Reeves
Advantages of Rapid-Scan Phased Array Radar Data During a Severe Hail and Wind Event from a Warning Forecaster’s Perspective
Charles M Kuster
Automated ZDR Column Detection: Algorithm Description and Examples
Jeffrey C Snyder
To view the entire NWA agenda: https://www.nwas.org/meetings/nwas15/agenda.html