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职业迁徙
个人简介
Dr. Martin Hoerling is a research meteorologist in the NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory specializing in weather and climate extremes, their causes, predictability, and the attribution of human-influence. He is currently Editor of the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society's Special Issue on Explaining Extreme Events. He has served as Convening Lead Author for the US Climate Change Science Plan Synthesis and Assessment Report on "Attribution of the Causes of Climate Variations and Trends over North America," Chairman of the US CLIVAR (Climate Variability) research program, Lead of the NOAA Drought Task Force, and Editor for the American Meteorological Society's Journal of Climate. Dr. Hoerling has published over 100 scientific papers dealing with climate variability, extremes, droughts, and predictability.
Dr. Hoerling's research interests include climate variability on seasonal to centennial time scales, focusing on air-sea interactions such as related to El Niño, and the role of oceans in decadal climate variation and climate change, and climate attribution He received his Bachelors, Masters, and PhD degrees from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, graduating in 1987. He is principal investigator on several research projects to understand the causes and origins for Earth's global climate variations during the last century, and advancing capabilities to explain and predict such variations.
Grants
• NOAA's EPOCS Grant Award, 1991-93 (Co-Principal Investigator)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - TOGA Program: 1994-96 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - GOALS Program: 1997-01 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - PACS Program: 1998-00 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - CLIVAR Atlantic: 2000-01 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - CLIVAR-Pacific: 2001-03 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - CLIVAR Atlantic: 2003-05 (PI)
• NASA Grant Award - Ocean, Ice, and Climate: 2002-2004 (PI)
Awards
• NOAA Research Employee of the Year (2001): For his work on the advancement of
understanding our seasonal climate predictability, the advancement progress on
NOAA's seasonal-to-internannual climate prediction effort, and the advancement of
understanding on the dynamics of climate change.
• NOAA Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Outstanding Scientific Paper
Award (2000): For "Understanding and Predicting Extratropical Teleconnections
Related to ENSO."
• NOAA Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Outstanding Scientific Paper
Award (2002): For "The Perfect Ocean for Drought"
• Department of Commerce Group Bronze Medal Award: 2007, For superior federal
service for designing and implementing the consolidation of six research
organizations in Boulder, Colorado into the new NOAA Earth System Research
Laboratory.
• NOAA Administrator's Award: 2008, For outstanding dedication to developing U.S.
Climate Change Science Program synthesis and assessment products integrating
climate research for decision support.
• WMO Norbert Gerbier--Mumm International Award for 2009: Best paper award for the
study "Unraveling the Mystery of Indian Monsoon Failure During El Nino."
2• NOAA Administrator's Award: 2011, For support to the Interagency Working Group
addressing flooding and development of a NOAA Decision Support System for Devils
Lake
Service Activities
• FSU-COAPS Review Panel, 7-9 February 2001 (T. Busalacchi, Chair).
• Los Alamos-IGPP Advisory Board, 7-9 March 2001 (Freeman Gilbert, Chair).
• U.S. CLIVAR Atlantic Science Conference, Scientic Organizing Committee (D. Legler,
Organizer) Conference held 12-14 June 2001 in Boulder, CO, at the NOAA Climate
Diagnostics Center.
• Workshop on "Regional Climate Research: Needs and Opportunities", Invited Session
Chair, (R. Lai-Yung, Organizer; co-sponsored by the U.S. National Science Foundation
and the U.S. Department of Energy), 2-4 April 2001 at NCAR.
• Harvard University Advisory Board for Tenure Appointment in Climate Dynamics, 15
December 2002, Department of Planetary and Atmospheric Sciences.
• Editor, Journal of Climate, American Meteorological Society: 2002-2005
• Invited Attendee to the NOAA Corporate Mid-Level Staff Retreat. 21-22 October 2003,
Washington, D.C.
• FSU-COAPS Review Panel, April 2004 (T. Busalacchi, Chair).
• Lead Author, U.S. Climate Change Science Program, Goal 1.3 "Reanalyses of historical
climate data for key atmospheric features. Implications for attribution of causes of
observed change: 2005
• Panel Member, US CLIVAR Prediction, Predictability, and Applications Interface: 2005-
2007
• IPCC, Fourth Assessment: Contributing Author on Attribution, and Modeling, 2007.
• Chair, US CLIVAR: 2007-
Dr. Hoerling's research interests include climate variability on seasonal to centennial time scales, focusing on air-sea interactions such as related to El Niño, and the role of oceans in decadal climate variation and climate change, and climate attribution He received his Bachelors, Masters, and PhD degrees from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, graduating in 1987. He is principal investigator on several research projects to understand the causes and origins for Earth's global climate variations during the last century, and advancing capabilities to explain and predict such variations.
Grants
• NOAA's EPOCS Grant Award, 1991-93 (Co-Principal Investigator)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - TOGA Program: 1994-96 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - GOALS Program: 1997-01 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - PACS Program: 1998-00 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - CLIVAR Atlantic: 2000-01 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - CLIVAR-Pacific: 2001-03 (PI)
• NOAA's Climate and Global Change Grant Award - CLIVAR Atlantic: 2003-05 (PI)
• NASA Grant Award - Ocean, Ice, and Climate: 2002-2004 (PI)
Awards
• NOAA Research Employee of the Year (2001): For his work on the advancement of
understanding our seasonal climate predictability, the advancement progress on
NOAA's seasonal-to-internannual climate prediction effort, and the advancement of
understanding on the dynamics of climate change.
• NOAA Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Outstanding Scientific Paper
Award (2000): For "Understanding and Predicting Extratropical Teleconnections
Related to ENSO."
• NOAA Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Outstanding Scientific Paper
Award (2002): For "The Perfect Ocean for Drought"
• Department of Commerce Group Bronze Medal Award: 2007, For superior federal
service for designing and implementing the consolidation of six research
organizations in Boulder, Colorado into the new NOAA Earth System Research
Laboratory.
• NOAA Administrator's Award: 2008, For outstanding dedication to developing U.S.
Climate Change Science Program synthesis and assessment products integrating
climate research for decision support.
• WMO Norbert Gerbier--Mumm International Award for 2009: Best paper award for the
study "Unraveling the Mystery of Indian Monsoon Failure During El Nino."
2• NOAA Administrator's Award: 2011, For support to the Interagency Working Group
addressing flooding and development of a NOAA Decision Support System for Devils
Lake
Service Activities
• FSU-COAPS Review Panel, 7-9 February 2001 (T. Busalacchi, Chair).
• Los Alamos-IGPP Advisory Board, 7-9 March 2001 (Freeman Gilbert, Chair).
• U.S. CLIVAR Atlantic Science Conference, Scientic Organizing Committee (D. Legler,
Organizer) Conference held 12-14 June 2001 in Boulder, CO, at the NOAA Climate
Diagnostics Center.
• Workshop on "Regional Climate Research: Needs and Opportunities", Invited Session
Chair, (R. Lai-Yung, Organizer; co-sponsored by the U.S. National Science Foundation
and the U.S. Department of Energy), 2-4 April 2001 at NCAR.
• Harvard University Advisory Board for Tenure Appointment in Climate Dynamics, 15
December 2002, Department of Planetary and Atmospheric Sciences.
• Editor, Journal of Climate, American Meteorological Society: 2002-2005
• Invited Attendee to the NOAA Corporate Mid-Level Staff Retreat. 21-22 October 2003,
Washington, D.C.
• FSU-COAPS Review Panel, April 2004 (T. Busalacchi, Chair).
• Lead Author, U.S. Climate Change Science Program, Goal 1.3 "Reanalyses of historical
climate data for key atmospheric features. Implications for attribution of causes of
observed change: 2005
• Panel Member, US CLIVAR Prediction, Predictability, and Applications Interface: 2005-
2007
• IPCC, Fourth Assessment: Contributing Author on Attribution, and Modeling, 2007.
• Chair, US CLIVAR: 2007-
研究兴趣
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Tao Zhang, Weiyu Yang,Xiao‐Wei Quan,Jieshun Zhu,Bhaskar Jha, Arun Kumar,Martin P. Hoerling, Joseph J. Barsugli,Wanqiu Wang
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheresno. 8 (2024)
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JOURNAL OF APPLIED METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGYno. 6 (2023): 657-675
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Authorea (Authorea) (2023)
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BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETYno. 3 (2022): S14-S20
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