The areal modeling of the extremes of a natural process such as rainfall or
temperature is important in environmental statistics; for example,
understanding extreme areal rainfall is crucial in flood protection. This
article reviews recent progress in the statistical modeling of spatial
extremes, starting with sketches of the necessary elements of extreme value
statistics and geostatistics. The main types of statistical models thus far
proposed, based on latent variables, on copulas and on spatial max-stable
processes, are described and then are compared by application to a data set on
rainfall in Switzerland. Whereas latent variable modeling allows a better fit
to marginal distributions, it fits the joint distributions of extremes poorly,
so appropriately-chosen copula or max-stable models seem essential for
successful spatial modeling of extremes.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/11-STS376 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
The last decade has seen max-stable processes emerge as a common tool for the statistical modeling of spatial extremes. However, their application is complicated due to the unavailability of the multivariate density function, and so likelihood-based methods remain far from providing a complete and flexible framework for inference. In this article we develop inferentially practical, likelihood-based methods for fitting max-stable processes derived from a composite-likelihood approach. The procedure is sufficiently reliable and versatile to permit the simultaneous modeling of marginal and dependence parameters in the spatial context at a moderate computational cost. The utility of this methodology is examined via simulation, and illustrated by the analysis of United States precipitation extremes.
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