LGFeb 11, 2025

Advancing climate model interpretability: Feature attribution for Arctic melt anomalies

arXiv:2502.07741v12 citationsh-index: 3ICDM
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for better interpretability in climate models to understand Arctic melt dynamics, which is crucial for predicting sea level rise, but it is incremental as it builds on existing attribution techniques.

The researchers tackled the problem of interpreting anomalies in climate models for Arctic melt events by developing a novel unsupervised attribution method, which identified key climate features driving melt anomalies and was validated against ground-truth data and established methods like XGBoost and Shapley values.

The focus of our work is improving the interpretability of anomalies in climate models and advancing our understanding of Arctic melt dynamics. The Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets are experiencing rapid surface melting and increased freshwater runoff, contributing significantly to global sea level rise. Understanding the mechanisms driving snowmelt in these regions is crucial. ERA5, a widely used reanalysis dataset in polar climate studies, offers extensive climate variables and global data assimilation. However, its snowmelt model employs an energy imbalance approach that may oversimplify the complexity of surface melt. In contrast, the Glacier Energy and Mass Balance (GEMB) model incorporates additional physical processes, such as snow accumulation, firn densification, and meltwater percolation/refreezing, providing a more detailed representation of surface melt dynamics. In this research, we focus on analyzing surface snowmelt dynamics of the Greenland Ice Sheet using feature attribution for anomalous melt events in ERA5 and GEMB models. We present a novel unsupervised attribution method leveraging counterfactual explanation method to analyze detected anomalies in ERA5 and GEMB. Our anomaly detection results are validated using MEaSUREs ground-truth data, and the attributions are evaluated against established feature ranking methods, including XGBoost, Shapley values, and Random Forest. Our attribution framework identifies the physics behind each model and the climate features driving melt anomalies. These findings demonstrate the utility of our attribution method in enhancing the interpretability of anomalies in climate models and advancing our understanding of Arctic melt dynamics.

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