By comparing the SOMs results to the EOT-based results, we can ascertain agreement on patterns of extreme precipitation variability, as well as on the associated circulation patterns.
Prior to applying SOM analysis, the anomalies of consecutive 5-day data (precipitation & atmospheric circulation) at each grid point are calculated by subtracting the 5-day climatology for 1981–2010. We first apply the SOM technique to the precipitation anomaly data to determine the variability of summer season (JJA) precipitation for 1960–2016 over Eastern China (in the same manner as used in the EOT analysis). We then apply composite analysis techniques to explain the precipitation variability in the context of anomalous atmospheric circulations.
As mentioned in Sect. 2.2.3, we tested various node configurations, including 3 by 2, 4 by 3, 5 by 4, 6 by 5, 7 by 6, 8 by 7 and 9 by 8, with node-to-node dissimilarity, node-to-data similarity, and quantization error not changing significantly beyond the 5 by 4 node configuration. Hence a 5 by 4 node configuration is retained, which has also been shown to be a proper compromise between a reasonable representation of the pattern variability and the ease of visual interpretation, in a previous study on summer precipitation regions in Eastern China (Zhou et al., 2020).
As shown in Fig. 11, some SOM node patterns (e.g., P9, P10, P13 & P14) resemble EOT1, with an anomalous high precipitation centre over north-eastern China. Other SOM node patterns (e.g., P2, P3, and P4) resemble EOT2, with an anomalous high precipitation centre over the south of the lower reaches of the Yangtze valley. Still other SOM node patterns (e.g., P1 and P5) resemble EOT3, with an anomalous high precipitation centre over South China. Finally, several SOM node patterns (e.g., P12, P16 and P20) resemble EOT4, with an anomalous high precipitation centre over the northern lower reaches of the Yangtze valley. Applying the SOM technique also identifies some intermediary patterns in which the anomalous precipitation high and low centres are not as extreme (e.g., P6, P7, P11, P14, P18), as well as patterns not identified in the EOT analysis, (e.g., P17, with an overall low precipitation anomaly over South China) also emerges from applying SOMs.
To further align the two lines of analysis (SOMs and EOTs), we clustered the SOM node patterns into four patterns according to their similarity to the top four EOTs (as discussed in the previous paragraph), ignoring the intermediary patterns (Fig. 12).
Composite analysis is performed on the consecutive 5-day anomalies of summer precipitation associated with the SOM nodes (those most closely resemble different EOT patterns, same as done for Fig. 12). This reveals that by applying the SOM technique, we can detect similar spatial precipitation patterns as for the EOTs, with high anomalous precipitation peaks in north-eastern China, the south of the lower reaches of the Yangtze valley, South China, and the north of lower reaches of the Yangtze valley, as shown in Fig. 12. The summer precipitation patterns are all significantly correlated with the EOTs, with the pattern correlations of 0.33, 0.57, 0.71 and 0.45, respectively.
Composite analysis of the associated circulations shows that, like the EOT results, the circulation anomalies associated with patterns 2 and 4 both show an enhanced WNPSH, but the enhanced WNPSH in pattern 2 is weaker than that in pattern 4. The WNPSH in pattern 3 is also slightly enhanced, but the enhancement is weaker than for patterns 2 and 4, and the centre is further east. As for pattern 1, we also find a northward-displaced jet, indicated by an anomalous upper level (250hPa) zonal wind (results not shown here).
Overall, it is encouraging to see that using two different methods -- SOMs treat the data as a continuum rather than discretized, whereas EOTs rely on eigenfunction analysis and are orthogonal in time -- we can find similar precipitation patterns, as well as similar associated circulation patterns. This indicates that the identified four key regions of extreme precipitation and the related mechanisms are robust, as they are not sensitive to the choice of method.