Published January 29, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

pyCSEP: A Python Toolkit For Earthquake Forecast Developers

  • 1. Southern California Earthquake Center
  • 2. University of Bristol
  • 3. GFZ Potsdam

Description

For government officials and the public to act on real-time forecasts of earthquakes, the seismological community needs to develop confidence in the underlying scientific hypotheses of the forecast generating models by assessing their predictive skill. For this purpose, the Collaboratory for the Study of Earthquake Predictability (CSEP) provides cyberinfrastructure and computational tools to evaluate earthquake forecasts. Here, we introduce pyCSEP, a Python package to help earthquake forecast developers embed model evaluation into the model development process. The package contains the following modules: (1) earthquake catalog access and processing, (2) data models for earthquake forecasts, (3) statistical tests for evaluating earthquake forecasts, and (4) visualization routines. pyCSEP can evaluate earthquake forecasts expressed as expected rates in space-magnitude bins, and simulation-based forecasts that produce thousands of synthetic seismicity catalogs. Most importantly, pyCSEP contains community-endorsed implementations of statistical tests to evaluate earthquake forecasts, and provides well defined file formats and standards to facilitate model comparisons. The toolkit will facilitate integrating new forecasting models into testing centers, which evaluate forecast models and prediction algorithms in an automated, prospective and independent manner, forming a critical step towards reliable operational earthquake forecasting.

Notes

This research was supported by the Southern California Earthquake Center (Contribution No. 11030). SCEC is funded by NSF Cooperative Agreement EAR-1600087 & USGS Cooperative Agreement G17AC00047. Maximilian J. Werner and Danijel Schorlemmer received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (Number 821115, RISE: Real-Time Earthquake Risk Reduction for a Resilient Europe).

Files

Savran_etal_JOSS_2022.pdf

Files (140.0 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:5aac72ec8d89b36acc515cf08054e913
140.0 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Funding

Southern California Earthquake Center 8920136
National Science Foundation
RISE – Real-time Earthquake Risk Reduction for a Resilient Europe 821115
European Commission