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  1. Article: Atmospheric river orientation determines flood occurrence

    Griffith, Helen V / Wade, Andrew J / Lavers, David A / Watts, Glenn

    Hydrological processes. 2020 Nov. 15, v. 34, no. 23

    2020  

    Abstract: Atmospheric Rivers (ARs) have been linked to many of the largest recorded UK winter floods. These large‐scale features can be 500–800 km in width but produce markedly different flood responses in adjacent catchments. Here we combine meteorological and ... ...

    Abstract Atmospheric Rivers (ARs) have been linked to many of the largest recorded UK winter floods. These large‐scale features can be 500–800 km in width but produce markedly different flood responses in adjacent catchments. Here we combine meteorological and hydrological data to examine why two impermeable catchments on the west coast of Britain respond differently to landfalling ARs. This is important to help better understand flood generation associated with ARs and improve flood forecasting and climate‐change impact assessment. Analysis of 32 years of a newly available ERA5 high‐resolution atmospheric reanalysis and corresponding 15‐min river flow data show that the most impactful ARs arise through a combination of the orientation and magnitude of their water vapour flux. At the Dyfi catchment, AR orientations of between 238–258° result in the strongest hydrological responses, whereas at the Teifi the range is 224–243°. We believe this differential flood response is the result of catchment orientation and topography enhancing or suppressing orographic rainfall totals, even in relatively low‐relief coastal catchments. Further to the AR orientation, ARs must have an average water vapour flux of 400–450 kg m⁻¹ s⁻¹ across their lifetime. Understanding the preferential properties of impactful ARs at catchments allows for the linking of large‐scale synoptic features, such as ARs, directly to winter flood impacts. These results using two test catchments suggest a novel approach to flood forecasts through the inclusion of AR activity.
    Keywords climate change ; coasts ; hydrologic data ; rain ; river flow ; rivers ; topography ; water vapor ; watersheds ; United Kingdom
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2020-1115
    Size p. 4547-4555.
    Publishing place John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
    Document type Article
    Note NAL-AP-2-clean ; JOURNAL ARTICLE
    ZDB-ID 1479953-4
    ISSN 1099-1085 ; 0885-6087
    ISSN (online) 1099-1085
    ISSN 0885-6087
    DOI 10.1002/hyp.13905
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article ; Online: Combining Slow Flow Techniques With Adaptive Demodulation for Improved Perfusion Ultrasound Imaging Without Contrast.

    Tierney, Jaime / Walsh, Kristy / Griffith, Helen / Baker, Jennifer / Brown, Daniel B / Byram, Brett

    IEEE transactions on ultrasonics, ferroelectrics, and frequency control

    2019  Volume 66, Issue 5, Page(s) 834–848

    Abstract: Noncontrast perfusion ultrasound imaging remains challenging due to spectral broadening of the tissue clutter signal caused by patient and sonographer hand motion. To address this problem, we previously introduced an adaptive demodulation scheme to ... ...

    Abstract Noncontrast perfusion ultrasound imaging remains challenging due to spectral broadening of the tissue clutter signal caused by patient and sonographer hand motion. To address this problem, we previously introduced an adaptive demodulation scheme to suppress the bandwidth of tissue prior to high-pass filtering. Our initial implementation used single plane wave power Doppler imaging and a conventional tissue filter. Recent advancements in beamforming and tissue filtering have been proposed for improved slow flow imaging, including coherent flow power Doppler (CFPD) imaging and singular value decomposition (SVD) filtering. Here, we aim to evaluate adaptive demodulation in conjunction with improvements in beamforming and filtering using simulations, single-vessel phantoms, and an in vivo liver tumor embolization study. We show that simulated blood-to-background contrast-to-noise ratios are highest when using adaptive demodulation with CFPD and a 100-ms ensemble, which resulted in a 13.6-dB average increase in contrast-to-noise ratio compared to basic IIR filtering alone. We also show that combining adaptive demodulation with SVD and with CFPD + SVD results in 9.3- and 19-dB increases in contrast-to-noise ratios compared to IIR filtering alone at 700- and 500-ms ensembles for phantom data with 1- and 5-mm/s average flows, respectively. In general, combining techniques resulted in higher signal-to-noise, contrast-to-noise, and generalized contrast-to-noise ratios in both simulations and phantoms. Finally, adaptive demodulation with SVD resulted in the largest qualitative and quantitative changes in tumor-to-background contrast postembolization.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods ; Liver/blood supply ; Liver/diagnostic imaging ; Liver Neoplasms/blood supply ; Liver Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging ; Perfusion Imaging/methods ; Phantoms, Imaging ; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ; Ultrasonography/methods
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-02-07
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
    ISSN 1525-8955
    ISSN (online) 1525-8955
    DOI 10.1109/TUFFC.2019.2898127
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: A high-resolution daily global dataset of statistically downscaled CMIP6 models for climate impact analyses.

    Gebrechorkos, Solomon / Leyland, Julian / Slater, Louise / Wortmann, Michel / Ashworth, Philip J / Bennett, Georgina L / Boothroyd, Richard / Cloke, Hannah / Delorme, Pauline / Griffith, Helen / Hardy, Richard / Hawker, Laurence / McLelland, Stuart / Neal, Jeffrey / Nicholas, Andrew / Tatem, Andrew J / Vahidi, Ellie / Parsons, Daniel R / Darby, Stephen E

    Scientific data

    2023  Volume 10, Issue 1, Page(s) 611

    Abstract: A large number of historical simulations and future climate projections are available from Global Climate Models, but these are typically of coarse resolution, which limits their effectiveness for assessing local scale changes in climate and attendant ... ...

    Abstract A large number of historical simulations and future climate projections are available from Global Climate Models, but these are typically of coarse resolution, which limits their effectiveness for assessing local scale changes in climate and attendant impacts. Here, we use a novel statistical downscaling model capable of replicating extreme events, the Bias Correction Constructed Analogues with Quantile mapping reordering (BCCAQ), to downscale daily precipitation, air-temperature, maximum and minimum temperature, wind speed, air pressure, and relative humidity from 18 GCMs from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6). BCCAQ is calibrated using high-resolution reference datasets and showed a good performance in removing bias from GCMs and reproducing extreme events. The globally downscaled data are available at the Centre for Environmental Data Analysis ( https://doi.org/10.5285/c107618f1db34801bb88a1e927b82317 ) for the historical (1981-2014) and future (2015-2100) periods at 0.25° resolution and at daily time step across three Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSP2-4.5, SSP5-3.4-OS and SSP5-8.5). This new climate dataset will be useful for assessing future changes and variability in climate and for driving high-resolution impact assessment models.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-09-11
    Publishing country England
    Document type Dataset ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2775191-0
    ISSN 2052-4463 ; 2052-4463
    ISSN (online) 2052-4463
    ISSN 2052-4463
    DOI 10.1038/s41597-023-02528-x
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Book: Time patterns in prose

    Griffith, Helen

    a study in prose rhythm based upon voice records

    (Psychological monographs ; 179 ; Psychological review publications ; 39,3)

    1929  

    Author's details by Helen Griffith
    Series title Psychological monographs ; 179
    Psychological review publications ; 39,3
    Keywords Rhythm ; Voice
    Language English
    Size X, 82 S, graph. Darst
    Publisher Am. Psych. Association
    Publishing place Princeton, N.J
    Document type Book
    Database Former special subject collection: coastal and deep sea fishing

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