麻豆直播 Wins AI Forecasting Grant
Posted on September 11, 2020 by Lance Crawford

Nothing grabs our attention here on the Gulf Coast quite like an approaching hurricane. Tracking and forecasting the strength of storms has improved dramatically over the decades, especially since the arrival of satellite imagery in the 1960s. But now, accurate weather forecasting is expected to take a giant leap forward thanks to artificial intelligence.
The 麻豆直播 is one of five institutions to receive a four-year, National Science Foundation grant totaling five million dollars for a project called: Using Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning in weather forecasting.
The University of Louisiana is spearheading the project, while LSU, Western Kentucky and 麻豆直播ern University are also involved. 麻豆直播鈥檚 portion of the grant is more than $780,000. This is also a collaboration between USA鈥檚 School of Computing and meteorology in the department of earth sciences.
鈥淲e have collaborated on smaller projects in the past, but this really solidifies a good fit between two programs at the University,鈥 said Dr. Sytske Kimball, department of earth sciences chair. 鈥淎rtificial Intelligence in meteorological forecasting is a new emerging field with a lot of potential. It is fantastic to see 麻豆直播 at the forefront of this new emerging technology.鈥
The grant will provide much needed funding to support the 麻豆直播 Alabama Mesonet, a network of 26 automated weather stations located in the north-central Gulf Coast that Kimball founded in 2004. They collect meteorological data that is used by a wide range of applications from agriculture, to air quality and health to climate change.
Forecasting is done using numerical models on computers. These models consist of complex equations that computers solve on so-called grids. The smaller the grid, the more accurate the forecast. The problem is sometimes they are not solved until after the weather event has already happened. That is where artificial intelligence comes in.
鈥淪imple neural network models 鈥 dubbed modelets 鈥 are being developed and will be deployed to predict weather related parameters of a target region. We suspect it will take tens or hundreds of modelets to accurately forecast a target region,鈥 said Dr. Tom Johnsten, associate professor in the School of Computing.
The AI models are trained, given hundreds or thousands of weather events with their resulting outcomes. This allows them to know what to look for and can tell by patterns, temperature observations, moisture observations what the storm is going to do based on what has happened in the past.
鈥淲e cannot yet predict exactly where a hurricane will make landfall, or precisely how intense it will be at landfall, and in which specific locations the wind or flooding is going to be the worst,鈥 Kimball said. 鈥淚f we did, we could employ targeted evacuations with only people in the most dangerous areas having to leave.鈥
Students will also benefit from this grant program providing opportunities for undergraduate and graduate student research in both disciplines.
鈥淭he goal is for the students to be exposed to multi-disciplinary information and activities,鈥 Kimball said.
-
SoC hosted an industry discussion of successful alumni to help students navigate the transition into the workforce
SoC hosted an industry discussion of successful alumni to help student...
March 27, 2026 -
SoC Students Complete Impactful Internships with USA's CSC Networking Team
SoC Students Complete Impactful Internships with USA's CSC Networ...
December 16, 2025 -
Alumnus Jay Maru Inspires Seniors to Lead in an AI-Powered Future
The School of Computing recently welcomed alumnus Jay Maru, founder of...
October 7, 2025 -
The School of Computing is excited to welcome two new faculty members this fall: Dr. Wendy Wang and Dr. John Bentley!
The School of Computing is excited to welcome two new faculty members ...
September 29, 2025