buoy
Marine/Ocean
- Feb 18, 2011
- 34
I am using the helpful package WAFO to estimate a survival load for a structure, but I am having trouble interpreting the results.
Background:I have a measured time series of the load, and I identify peak values using the "peaks over threshold" method. The identified peaks are then fit to an expected distribution for extreme events (General Pareto Distribution) and the fitted distribution is used to generate the expected value at the chosen return period of 3 hours.
Problem: WAFO returns confidence intervals on its return period estimate, and it also plots comparisons between the fitted and measured distributions. Sometimes the fit is poor (highest peaks do not fall on the fitted distribution), yet the confidence bounds are narrow (indicating that estimate of the return period is precise). Sometimes the fit is good, but the confidence bounds are wide. There seems to be no relation between the quality information returned from the two sources (confidence bounds vs. fit evaluation).
Question: Why would I get narrow confidence bounds when the fit is poor? Which is a better indicator of the quality of the return period estimate: the confidence bounds, or the closeness of the fit to the measured distribution?
Background:I have a measured time series of the load, and I identify peak values using the "peaks over threshold" method. The identified peaks are then fit to an expected distribution for extreme events (General Pareto Distribution) and the fitted distribution is used to generate the expected value at the chosen return period of 3 hours.
Problem: WAFO returns confidence intervals on its return period estimate, and it also plots comparisons between the fitted and measured distributions. Sometimes the fit is poor (highest peaks do not fall on the fitted distribution), yet the confidence bounds are narrow (indicating that estimate of the return period is precise). Sometimes the fit is good, but the confidence bounds are wide. There seems to be no relation between the quality information returned from the two sources (confidence bounds vs. fit evaluation).
Question: Why would I get narrow confidence bounds when the fit is poor? Which is a better indicator of the quality of the return period estimate: the confidence bounds, or the closeness of the fit to the measured distribution?