< Back to news
Machine learning
Improved by AI
This article can be read on the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam website.


13 November 2023
Better weather forecast thanks to AI
Using AI, it is possible to better predict warm weather. For this, atmospheric scientist Chiem van Straaten developed a method that learns from wrong weather predictions and leads to more reliable information.
Weather forecasts are often unreliable. But to reduce the impact of extreme weather, such as drought or heat, it is precisely important to know in time when extreme weather is coming. Van Straaten uses a combination of physical and statistical weather models for this purpose. With these, he shows that the distribution of cold and warm air can be better predicted when looking at longer periods and larger areas.
Machine learning
Using machine learning techniques, Van Straaten and his fellow researchers discovered that processes in the Pacific Ocean are important in steering that distribution between cold and warm air. This link in the climate system was found to be missing in the model used for forecasting by many weather apps. They developed, in collaboration with KNMI, a method that corrects that model statistically and makes it more useful.
Improved by AI
This method also provides more insights into the errors of weather forecasts, including by comparing forecasts and actual measured weather. According to Van Straaten, the method is a clear way in which classical physics-based weather models can be improved with AI. 'All buyers of weather forecasts, from water boards, to farmers, to ordinary citizens, can benefit. They will have early access to reliable information'.
This article can be read on the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam website.
Vergelijkbaar >
Similar news items

August 13
Volkswagen’s self-driving e-shuttles — coming to Amsterdam next?
Volkswagen is testing autonomous e-shuttles in Hamburg and aims to roll them out across European cities within two years, Amsterdam included.
read more >

August 13
Podcast: finding religious meaning and identity through AI
How can AI help rediscover religious texts and identity? In the latest episode of Studio VU, Yusuf Çelik shares his story.
read more >

July 22
Veni grants for 28 UvA and Amsterdam UMC researchers
The Dutch Research Council (NWO) has awarded Veni grants to 28 researchers from the University of Amsterdam and Amsterdam UMC.
read more >