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Dr Bobby Antonio

Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Climate Physics

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Atmospheric processes
bobby.antonio@physics.ox.ac.uk
Robert Hooke Building, room F50
  • About
  • Publications

Seasonal forecasting using the GenCast probabilistic machine learning model

Climate Dynamics Springer Nature 64:4 (2026) 148

Authors:

Robert Antonio, Kristian Strommen, Hannah Christensen

Abstract:

Machine-learnt weather prediction (MLWP) models are now well established as being competitive with conventional numerical weather prediction (NWP) models in the medium range. However, there is still much uncertainty as to how this performance extends to longer timescales, where interactions with slower components of the earth system become important. We take GenCast, a state-of-the-art probabilistic MLWP model, and apply it to the task of seasonal forecasting with prescribed sea surface temperature (SST), by providing anomalies persisted over climatology (GenCast-Persisted) or forcing with observed SSTs (GenCastForced). The forecasts are compared to the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts seasonal forecasting system, SEAS5. Our results indicate that, despite being trained at short timescales, GenCast-Persisted produces much of the correct precipitation patterns in response to El Ni˜no and La Ni˜na events, with several erroneous patterns in GenCast-Persisted corrected with GenCast-Forced. The uncertainty in precipitation response, as represented by the ensemble, compares favourably to SEAS5. Whilst SEAS5 achieves superior skill in the tropics for 2-metre temperature and mean sea level pressure (MSLP), GenCast-Persisted achieves higher skill in some areas in higher latitudes, including mountainous areas, with notable improvements for MSLP in particular; this is reflected in a slightly higher correlation with the observed NAO index. Reliability diagrams indicate that GenCast-Persisted has little skill relative to climatology, whilst GenCast-Forced produces forecasts with reliability comparable to SEAS5. These results provide an indication of the potential of MLWP models similar to GenCast for the ‘full’ seasonal forecasting problem, where the atmospheric model is coupled to ocean, land and cryosphere models.
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How to Derive Skill from the Fractions Skill Score

Monthly Weather Review American Meteorological Society 153:6 (2025) 1021-1033

Authors:

Bobby Antonio, Laurence Aitchison

Abstract:

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>The fractions skill score (FSS) is a widely used metric for assessing forecast skill, with applications ranging from precipitation to volcanic ash forecasts. By evaluating the fraction of grid squares exceeding a threshold in a neighborhood, the intuition is that it can avoid the pitfalls of pixelwise comparisons and identify length scales at which a forecast has skill. The FSS is typically interpreted relative to a “useful” criterion, where a forecast is considered skillful if its score exceeds a simple reference score. However, the typical reference score used is problematic, since it is not derived in a way that provides obvious meaning, does not scale with neighborhood size, and may not be exceeded by forecasts that have skill. We, therefore, provide a new method to determine forecast skill from the FSS, by deriving an expression for the FSS achieved by a random forecast, which provides a more robust and meaningful reference score to compare with. Through illustrative examples, we show that this new method considerably changes the length scales at which a forecast would be regarded as skillful and reveals subtleties in how the FSS should be interpreted.</jats:p> <jats:sec> <jats:title>Significance Statement</jats:title> <jats:p>Forecast verification metrics are crucial to assess accuracy and identify where forecasts can be improved. In this work, we investigate a popular verification metric, the fractions skill score, and derive a more robust method to decide if a forecast has sufficiently high skill. This new method significantly improves the quality of insights that can be drawn from this score.</jats:p></jats:sec>
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Postprocessing East African rainfall forecasts using a generative machine learning model

Journal of Advances in Modelling Earth Systems Wiley 17:3 (2025) e2024MS004796

Authors:

Robert Antonio, Andrew McRae, David McLeod, Fenwick Cooper, John Marsham, Laurence Aitchison, Timothy Palmer, Peter Watson

Abstract:

Existing weather models are known to have poor skill at forecasting rainfall over East Africa. Improved forecasts could reduce the effects of extreme weather events and provide significant socioeconomic benefits to the region. We present a novel machine learning based method to improve precipitation forecasts in East Africa, using postprocessing based on a conditional generative adversarial network (cGAN). This addresses the challenge of realistically representing tropical rainfall, where convection dominates and is poorly simulated in conventional global forecast models. We postprocess hourly forecasts made by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Integrated Forecast System at 6-18h lead times, at 0.1° resolution. We combine the cGAN predictions with a novel neighbourhood version of quantile mapping, to integrate the strengths of machine learning and conventional postprocessing. Our results indicate that the cGAN substantially improves the diurnal cycle of rainfall, and improves predictions up to the 99.9th percentile (∼ 10mm/hr). This improvement extends to the 2018 March–May season, which had extremely high rainfall, indicating that the approach has some ability to generalise to more extreme conditions. We explore the potential for the cGAN to produce probabilistic forecasts and find that the spread of this ensemble broadly reflects the predictability of the observations, but is also characterised by a mixture of under- and overdispersion. Overall our results demonstrate how the strengths of machine learning and conventional postprocessing methods can be combined, and illuminate what benefits ma38 chine learning approaches can bring to this region.
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Postprocessing East African Rainfall Forecasts Using a Generative Machine Learning Model

Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems American Geophysical Union (AGU) 17:3 (2025)

Authors:

Bobby Antonio, Andrew TT McRae, David MacLeod, Fenwick C Cooper, John Marsham, Laurence Aitchison, Tim N Palmer, Peter AG Watson
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Postprocessing East African rainfall forecasts using a generative machine learning model

Copernicus Publications (2025)

Authors:

Bobby Antonio, Andrew McRae, Dave MacLeod, Fenwick Cooper, John Marsham, Laurence Aitchison, Tim Palmer, Peter Watson
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