Chaos beyond the Butterfly Effect: The Poison Pill of Structural Model Error - a podcast by MCMP Team

from 2014-02-21T03:04:36

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Roman Frigg (LSE) gives a talk at the CAS Research Focus Series „Reduction and Emergence“ (13 November, 2013) titled "Chaos Beyond the Butterfly Effect: The Poison Pill of Structural Model Error" (host: Stephan Hartmann (MCMP/LMU)). Abstract: The sensitive dependence on initial condition associated with chaotic models, the so-called "Butterfly Effect", imposes limitations on the models’ predictive power. These limitations have been widely recognized and extensively discussed. In this lecture, Roman Frigg will draw attention to an additional so far under-appreciated problem, namely structural model error (SME). If a nonlinear model has only the slightest SME, then its ability to generate useful prediction is lost. This puts us in a worse epistemic situation: while we can mitigate against the butterfly effect by making probabilistic predictions, this route is foreclosed in the case of SME. Roman Frigg will discuss in what way the description of problems affects actual modeling projects, in particular in the context of making predictions about the local effects of climate change.

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