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Forecasting

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Forecasting is the process of making predictions based on past and present data. Later these can be compared with what actually happens. For example, a company might estimate their revenue in the next year, then compare it against the actual results creating a variance actual analysis. Prediction is a similar but more general term. Forecasting might refer to specific formal statistical methods employing time series, cross-sectional or longitudinal data, or alternatively to less formal judgmental methods or the process of prediction and assessment of its accuracy. Usage can vary between areas of application: for example, in hydrology the terms "forecast" and "forecasting" are sometimes reserved for estimates of values at certain specific future times, while the term "prediction" is used for more general estimates, such as the number of times floods will occur over a long period.

Risk and uncertainty are central to forecasting and prediction; it is generally considered a good practice to indicate the degree of uncertainty attaching to forecasts. In any case, the data must be up to date in order for the forecast to be as accurate as possible. In some cases the data used to predict the variable of interest is itself forecast.[1] A forecast is not to be confused with a Budget; budgets are more specific, fixed-term financial plans used for resource allocation and control, while forecasts provide estimates of future financial performance, allowing for flexibility and adaptability to changing circumstances. Both tools are valuable in financial planning and decision-making, but they serve different functions.

Applications

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Forecasting has applications in a wide range of fields where estimates of future conditions are useful. Depending on the field, accuracy varies significantly. If the factors that relate to what is being forecast are known and well understood and there is a significant amount of data that can be used, it is likely the final value will be close to the forecast. If this is not the case or if the actual outcome is affected by the forecasts, the reliability of the forecasts can be significantly lower.[2]

Climate change and increasing energy prices have led to the use of Egain Forecasting for buildings. This attempts to reduce the energy needed to heat the building, thus reducing the emission of greenhouse gases. Forecasting is used in customer demand planning in everyday business for manufacturing and distribution companies.

While the veracity of predictions for actual stock returns are disputed through reference to the efficient-market hypothesis, forecasting of broad economic trends is common. Such analysis is provided by both non-profit groups as well as by for-profit private institutions.[citation needed]

Forecasting foreign exchange movements is typically achieved through a combination of historical and current data (summarized in charts) and fundamental analysis. An essential difference between chart analysis and fundamental economic analysis is that chartists study only the price action of a market, whereas fundamentalists attempt to look to the reasons behind the action.[3] Financial institutions assimilate the evidence provided by their fundamental and chartist researchers into one note to provide a final projection on the currency in question.[4]

Forecasting has also been used to predict the development of conflict situations.[5] Forecasters perform research that uses empirical results to gauge the effectiveness of certain forecasting models.[6] However research has shown that there is little difference between the accuracy of the forecasts of experts knowledgeable in the conflict situation and those by individuals who knew much less.[7] Similarly, experts in some studies argue that role thinking — standing in other people's shoes to forecast their decisions — does not contribute to the accuracy of the forecast.[8]

An important, albeit often ignored aspect of forecasting, is the relationship it holds with planning. Forecasting can be described as predicting what the future will look like, whereas planning predicts what the future should look like.[6] There is no single right forecasting method to use. Selection of a method should be based on your objectives and your conditions (data etc.).[9] A good way to find a method is by visiting a selection tree. An example of a selection tree can be found here.[10]

Forecasting has application in many situations:

Forecasting as training, betting and futarchy

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In several cases, the forecast is either more or less than a prediction of the future.

In Philip E. Tetlock's Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction, he discusses forecasting as a method of improving the ability to make decisions. A person can become better calibrated [citation needed]i.e. having things they give 10% credence to happening 10% of the time. Or they can forecast things more confidently [citation needed] — coming to the same conclusion but earlier. Some have claimed that forecasting is a transferable skill with benefits to other areas of discussion and decision making. [citation needed]

Betting on sports or politics is another form of forecasting. Rather than being used as advice, bettors are paid based on if they predicted correctly. While decisions might be made based on these bets (forecasts), the main motivation is generally financial.

Finally, futarchy is a form of government where forecasts of the impact of government action are used to decide which actions are taken. Rather than advice, in futarchy's strongest form, the action with the best forecasted result is automatically taken.[citation needed]

Forecast improvements

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Forecast improvement projects have been operated in a number of sectors: the National Hurricane Center's Hurricane Forecast Improvement Project (HFIP) and the Wind Forecast Improvement Project sponsored by the US Department of Energy are examples.[12] In relation to supply chain management, the Du Pont model has been used to show that an increase in forecast accuracy can generate increases in sales and reductions in inventory, operating expenses and commitment of working capital.[13] The Groceries Code Adjudicator in the United Kingdom, which regulates supply chain management practices in the groceries retail industry, has observed that all the retailers who fall within the scope of his regulation "are striving for continuous improvement in forecasting practice and activity in relation to promotions".[14]

Categories of forecasting methods

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Qualitative vs. quantitative methods

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Qualitative forecasting techniques are subjective, based on the opinion and judgment of consumers and experts; they are appropriate when past data are not available. They are usually applied to intermediate- or long-range decisions. Examples of qualitative forecasting methods are [citation needed] informed opinion and judgment, the Delphi method, market research, and historical life-cycle analogy.

Quantitative forecasting models are used to forecast future data as a function of past data. They are appropriate to use when past numerical data is available and when it is reasonable to assume that some of the patterns in the data are expected to continue into the future. These methods are usually applied to short- or intermediate-range decisions. Examples of quantitative forecasting methods are[citation needed] last period demand, simple and weighted N-Period moving averages, simple exponential smoothing, Poisson process model based forecasting[15] and multiplicative seasonal indexes. Previous research shows that different methods may lead to different level of forecasting accuracy. For example, GMDH neural network was found to have better forecasting performance than the classical forecasting algorithms such as Single Exponential Smooth, Double Exponential Smooth, ARIMA and back-propagation neural network.[16]

Average approach

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In this approach, the predictions of all future values are equal to the mean of the past data. This approach can be used with any sort of data where past data is available. In time series notation:

[17]

where is the past data.

Although the time series notation has been used here, the average approach can also be used for cross-sectional data (when we are predicting unobserved values; values that are not included in the data set). Then, the prediction for unobserved values is the average of the observed values.

Naïve approach

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Naïve forecasts are the most cost-effective forecasting model, and provide a benchmark against which more sophisticated models can be compared. This forecasting method is only suitable for time series data.[17] Using the naïve approach, forecasts are produced that are equal to the last observed value. This method works quite well for economic and financial time series, which often have patterns that are difficult to reliably and accurately predict.[17] If the time series is believed to have seasonality, the seasonal naïve approach may be more appropriate where the forecasts are equal to the value from last season. In time series notation:

Drift method

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A variation on the naïve method is to allow the forecasts to increase or decrease over time, where the amount of change over time (called the drift) is set to be the average change seen in the historical data. So the forecast for time is given by

[17]

This is equivalent to drawing a line between the first and last observation, and extrapolating it into the future.

Seasonal naïve approach

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The seasonal naïve method accounts for seasonality by setting each prediction to be equal to the last observed value of the same season. For example, the prediction value for all subsequent months of April will be equal to the previous value observed for April. The forecast for time is[17]

where =seasonal period and is the smallest integer greater than .

The seasonal naïve method is particularly useful for data that has a very high level of seasonality.

Deterministic approach

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A deterministic approach is when there is no stochastic variable involved and the forecasts depend on the selected functions and parameters.[18][19] For example, given the function


The short term behaviour and the is the medium-long term trend are

where are some parameters.

This approach has been proposed to simulate bursts of seemingly stochastic activity, interrupted by quieter periods. The assumption is that the presence of a strong deterministic ingredient is hidden by noise. The deterministic approach is noteworthy as it can reveal the underlying dynamical systems structure, which can be exploited for steering the dynamics into a desired regime.[18]

Time series methods

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Time series methods use historical data as the basis of estimating future outcomes. They are based on the assumption that past demand history is a good indicator of future demand.

e.g. Box–Jenkins
Seasonal ARIMA or SARIMA or ARIMARCH,

Relational methods

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Some forecasting methods try to identify the underlying factors that might influence the variable that is being forecast. For example, including information about climate patterns might improve the ability of a model to predict umbrella sales. Forecasting models often take account of regular seasonal variations. In addition to climate, such variations can also be due to holidays and customs: for example, one might predict that sales of college football apparel will be higher during the football season than during the off season.[20]

Several informal methods used in causal forecasting do not rely solely on the output of mathematical algorithms, but instead use the judgment of the forecaster. Some forecasts take account of past relationships between variables: if one variable has, for example, been approximately linearly related to another for a long period of time, it may be appropriate to extrapolate such a relationship into the future, without necessarily understanding the reasons for the relationship.

Causal methods include:

Quantitative forecasting models are often judged against each other by comparing their in-sample or out-of-sample mean square error, although some researchers have advised against this.[22] Different forecasting approaches have different levels of accuracy. For example, it was found in one context that GMDH has higher forecasting accuracy than traditional ARIMA.[23]

Judgmental methods

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Judgmental forecasting methods incorporate intuitive judgement, opinions and subjective probability estimates. Judgmental forecasting is used in cases where there is a lack of historical data or during completely new and unique market conditions.[24]

Judgmental methods include:

Artificial intelligence methods

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Often these are done today by specialized programs loosely labeled

Geometric extrapolation with error prediction

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Can be created with 3 points of a sequence and the "moment" or "index". This type of extrapolation has 100% accuracy in predictions in a big percentage of known series database (OEIS).[25]

Other methods

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Forecasting accuracy

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The forecast error (also known as a residual) is the difference between the actual value and the forecast value for the corresponding period:

where E is the forecast error at period t, Y is the actual value at period t, and F is the forecast for period t.

A good forecasting method will yield residuals that are uncorrelated. If there are correlations between residual values, then there is information left in the residuals which should be used in computing forecasts. This can be accomplished by computing the expected value of a residual as a function of the known past residuals, and adjusting the forecast by the amount by which this expected value differs from zero.

A good forecasting method will also have zero mean. If the residuals have a mean other than zero, then the forecasts are biased and can be improved by adjusting the forecasting technique by an additive constant that equals the mean of the unadjusted residuals.

Measures of aggregate error:

Scaled-dependent errors

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The forecast error, E, is on the same scale as the data, as such, these accuracy measures are scale-dependent and cannot be used to make comparisons between series on different scales.

Mean absolute error (MAE) or mean absolute deviation (MAD):

Mean squared error (MSE) or mean squared prediction error (MSPE):

Root mean squared error (RMSE):

Average of Errors (E):

Percentage errors

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These are more frequently used to compare forecast performance between different data sets because they are scale-independent. However, they have the disadvantage of being extremely large or undefined if Y is close to or equal to zero.

Mean absolute percentage error (MAPE):

Mean absolute percentage deviation (MAPD):

Scaled errors

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Hyndman and Koehler (2006) proposed using scaled errors as an alternative to percentage errors.

Mean absolute scaled error (MASE):

where m=seasonal period or 1 if non-seasonal

Other measures

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Forecast skill (SS):

Business forecasters and practitioners sometimes use different terminology. They refer to the PMAD as the MAPE, although they compute this as a volume weighted MAPE. For more information, see Calculating demand forecast accuracy.

When comparing the accuracy of different forecasting methods on a specific data set, the measures of aggregate error are compared with each other and the method that yields the lowest error is preferred.

Training and test sets

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When evaluating the quality of forecasts, it is invalid to look at how well a model fits the historical data; the accuracy of forecasts can only be determined by considering how well a model performs on new data that were not used when fitting the model. When choosing models, it is common to use a portion of the available data for fitting, and use the rest of the data for testing the model, as was done in the above examples.[26]

Cross-validation

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Cross-validation is a more sophisticated version of training a test set.

For cross-sectional data, one approach to cross-validation works as follows:

  1. Select observation i for the test set, and use the remaining observations in the training set. Compute the error on the test observation.
  2. Repeat the above step for i = 1,2,..., N where N is the total number of observations.
  3. Compute the forecast accuracy measures based on the errors obtained.

This makes efficient use of the available data, as only one observation is omitted at each step

For time series data, the training set can only include observations prior to the test set. Therefore, no future observations can be used in constructing the forecast. Suppose k observations are needed to produce a reliable forecast; then the process works as follows:

  1. Starting with i=1, select the observation k + i for the test set, and use the observations at times 1, 2, ..., k+i–1 to estimate the forecasting model. Compute the error on the forecast for k+i.
  2. Repeat the above step for i = 2,...,T–k where T is the total number of observations.
  3. Compute the forecast accuracy over all errors.

This procedure is sometimes known as a "rolling forecasting origin" because the "origin" (k+i -1) at which the forecast is based rolls forward in time.[26] Further, two-step-ahead or in general p-step-ahead forecasts can be computed by first forecasting the value immediately after the training set, then using this value with the training set values to forecast two periods ahead, etc.

See also

Seasonality and cyclic behaviour

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Seasonality

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Seasonality is a characteristic of a time series in which the data experiences regular and predictable changes which recur every calendar year. Any predictable change or pattern in a time series that recurs or repeats over a one-year period can be said to be seasonal. It is common in many situations – such as grocery store[27] or even in a Medical Examiner's office[28]—that the demand depends on the day of the week. In such situations, the forecasting procedure calculates the seasonal index of the "season" – seven seasons, one for each day – which is the ratio of the average demand of that season (which is calculated by Moving Average or Exponential Smoothing using historical data corresponding only to that season) to the average demand across all seasons. An index higher than 1 indicates that demand is higher than average; an index less than 1 indicates that the demand is less than the average.

Cyclic behaviour

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The cyclic behaviour of data takes place when there are regular fluctuations in the data which usually last for an interval of at least two years, and when the length of the current cycle cannot be predetermined. Cyclic behavior is not to be confused with seasonal behavior. Seasonal fluctuations follow a consistent pattern each year so the period is always known. As an example, during the Christmas period, inventories of stores tend to increase in order to prepare for Christmas shoppers. As an example of cyclic behaviour, the population of a particular natural ecosystem will exhibit cyclic behaviour when the population decreases as its natural food source decreases, and once the population is low, the food source will recover and the population will start to increase again. Cyclic data cannot be accounted for using ordinary seasonal adjustment since it is not of fixed period.

Limitations

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Limitations pose barriers beyond which forecasting methods cannot reliably predict. There are many events and values that cannot be forecast reliably. Events such as the roll of a die or the results of the lottery cannot be forecast because they are random events and there is no significant relationship in the data. When the factors that lead to what is being forecast are not known or well understood such as in stock and foreign exchange markets forecasts are often inaccurate or wrong as there is not enough data about everything that affects these markets for the forecasts to be reliable, in addition the outcomes of the forecasts of these markets change the behavior of those involved in the market further reducing forecast accuracy.[2]

The concept of "self-destructing predictions" concerns the way in which some predictions can undermine themselves by influencing social behavior.[29] This is because "predictors are part of the social context about which they are trying to make a prediction and may influence that context in the process".[29] For example, a forecast that a large percentage of a population will become HIV infected based on existing trends may cause more people to avoid risky behavior and thus reduce the HIV infection rate, invalidating the forecast (which might have remained correct if it had not been publicly known). Or, a prediction that cybersecurity will become a major issue may cause organizations to implement more security cybersecurity measures, thus limiting the issue.

Performance limits of fluid dynamics equations

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As proposed by Edward Lorenz in 1963, long range weather forecasts, those made at a range of two weeks or more, are impossible to definitively predict the state of the atmosphere, owing to the chaotic nature of the fluid dynamics equations involved. Extremely small errors in the initial input, such as temperatures and winds, within numerical models double every five days.[30]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ French, Jordan (2017). "The time traveller's CAPM". Investment Analysts Journal. 46 (2): 81–96. doi:10.1080/10293523.2016.1255469. S2CID 157962452.
  2. ^ a b Forecasting: Principles and Practice.
  3. ^ Helen Allen; Mark P. Taylor (1990). "Charts, Noise and Fundamentals in the London Foreign Exchange Market". The Economic Journal. 100 (400): 49–59. doi:10.2307/2234183. JSTOR 2234183.
  4. ^ Pound Sterling Live. "Euro Forecast from Institutional Researchers", A list of collated exchange rate forecasts encompassing technical and fundamental analysis in the foreign exchange market.
  5. ^ T. Chadefaux (2014). "Early warning signals for war in the news". Journal of Peace Research, 51(1), 5-18
  6. ^ a b J. Scott Armstrong; Kesten C. Green; Andreas Graefe (2010). "Answers to Frequently Asked Questions" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-07-11. Retrieved 2012-01-23.
  7. ^ Kesten C. Greene; J. Scott Armstrong (2007). "The Ombudsman: Value of Expertise for Forecasting Decisions in Conflicts" (PDF). Interfaces: 1–12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-20. Retrieved 2011-12-29.
  8. ^ Kesten C. Green; J. Scott Armstrong (1975). "Role thinking: Standing in other people's shoes to forecast decisions in conflicts". International Journal of Forecasting. 39: 111–116. SSRN 1596623.
  9. ^ "FAQ". Forecastingprinciples.com. 1998-02-14. Retrieved 2012-08-28.[dead link]
  10. ^ "Selection Tree". Forecastingprinciples.com. 1998-02-14. Retrieved 2012-08-28.[dead link]
  11. ^ J. Scott Armstrong (1983). "Relative Accuracy of Judgmental and Extrapolative Methods in Forecasting Annual Earnings" (PDF). Journal of Forecasting. 2 (4): 437–447. doi:10.1002/for.3980020411. S2CID 16462529.
  12. ^ Department of Energy, The Wind Forecast Improvement Project (WFIP): A Public–Private Partnership Addressing Wind Energy Forecast Needs, published 30 October 2015, accessed 9 December 2022
  13. ^ Logility, Inc. (2016), Beyond Basic Forecasting, accessed 9 December 2022
  14. ^ Groceries Code Adjudicator, Best practice statement: Forecasting and promotions, published on 25 June 2018, accessed on 6 November 2024
  15. ^ Mahmud, Tahmida; Hasan, Mahmudul; Chakraborty, Anirban; Roy-Chowdhury, Amit (19 August 2016). A poisson process model for activity forecasting. 2016 IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP). IEEE. doi:10.1109/ICIP.2016.7532978.
  16. ^ Li, Rita Yi Man; Fong, Simon; Chong, Kyle Weng Sang (2017). "Forecasting the REITs and stock indices: Group Method of Data Handling Neural Network approach". Pacific Rim Property Research Journal. 23 (2): 123–160. doi:10.1080/14445921.2016.1225149. S2CID 157150897.
  17. ^ a b c d e Hyndman, Rob J; Athanasopoulos, George. "2.3 Some simple forecasting methods". Forecasting: Principles and Practice. OTexts. Archived from the original on Aug 13, 2017. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  18. ^ a b Stoop, Ruedi; Orlando, Giuseppe; Bufalo, Michele; Della Rossa, Fabio (2022-11-18). "Exploiting deterministic features in apparently stochastic data". Scientific Reports. 12 (1): 19843. Bibcode:2022NatSR..1219843S. doi:10.1038/s41598-022-23212-x. hdl:11311/1233353. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 9674651. PMID 36400910.
  19. ^ Orlando, Giuseppe; Bufalo, Michele; Stoop, Ruedi (2022-02-01). "Financial markets' deterministic aspects modeled by a low-dimensional equation". Scientific Reports. 12 (1): 1693. Bibcode:2022NatSR..12.1693O. doi:10.1038/s41598-022-05765-z. hdl:20.500.11850/531723. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 8807815. PMID 35105929.
  20. ^ Steven Nahmias; Tava Lennon Olsen (15 January 2015). Production and Operations Analysis: Seventh Edition. Waveland Press. ISBN 978-1-4786-2824-8.
  21. ^ Ellis, Kimberly (2008). Production Planning and Inventory Control Virginia Tech. McGraw Hill. ISBN 978-0-390-87106-0.
  22. ^ J. Scott Armstrong and Fred Collopy (1992). "Error Measures For Generalizing About Forecasting Methods: Empirical Comparisons" (PDF). International Journal of Forecasting. 8: 69–80. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.423.508. doi:10.1016/0169-2070(92)90008-w. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-06.
  23. ^ 16. Li, Rita Yi Man, Fong, S., Chong, W.S. (2017) Forecasting the REITs and stock indices: Group Method of Data Handling Neural Network approach, Pacific Rim Property Research Journal, 23(2), 1-38
  24. ^ Hyndman, Rob J; Athanasopoulos, George. "3.1 Introduction". Forecasting: Principles and Practice. OTexts. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  25. ^ V. Nos (2021-06-02). "Probnet: Geometric Extrapolation of Integer Sequences with error prediction". Hackage. Haskell. Archived from the original on 2022-08-14. Retrieved 2022-12-06.
  26. ^ a b "2.5 Evaluating forecast accuracy". OTexts. Retrieved 2016-05-14.
  27. ^ Erhun, F.; Tayur, S. (2003). "Enterprise-Wide Optimization of Total Landed Cost at a Grocery Retailer". Operations Research. 51 (3): 343. doi:10.1287/opre.51.3.343.14953.
  28. ^ Omalu, B. I.; Shakir, A. M.; Lindner, J. L.; Tayur, S. R. (2007). "Forecasting as an Operations Management Tool in a Medical Examiner's Office". Journal of Health Management. 9: 75–84. doi:10.1177/097206340700900105. S2CID 73325253.
  29. ^ a b Overland, Indra (2019-03-01). "The geopolitics of renewable energy: Debunking four emerging myths". Energy Research & Social Science. 49: 36–40. Bibcode:2019ERSS...49...36O. doi:10.1016/j.erss.2018.10.018. hdl:11250/2579292. ISSN 2214-6296.
  30. ^ Cox, John D. (2002). Storm Watchers. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 222–224. ISBN 978-0-471-38108-2.

Sources

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