Hi All,

I can think of two different cases:

1) Repeated measurement are made of a physical quantity.  The best estimate of 
the physical quantity is then the mean with the standard error.   In this case 
the standard deviation is really a property of the measurement system rather 
than the physical quantity.

2) A system contains different values of the physical quantity in different 
times/places within the region of interest.  In this case the standard 
deviation is clearly related to the physical quantity (IMHO).   For example, 
the standard deviation of aerosol diameters in an air parcel, or the standard 
deviation of surface altitudes within a gridbox.

For a time series, of say temperature, I can imagine wanting to store various 
quantities, eg:

1) Instantaneous temperature.
2) Mean temperature over an interval.
3) std dev of temperature over that interval.
4) max over an interval.
5) min over an interval.

Since I can imagine wanting to use these on most, if not all, of the physical 
quantities in the standard names, I think it makes sense to put these in a 
separate piece of metadata.   This is what is exactly what cell_methods dies, 
and indeed there are actually 10 such methods.    This makes more sense to me 
than increasing the size of the standard name table by a factor of 10.

The standard error is a little different, because I usually associate it with 
the measurement instrument rather than the physical quantity (I can think of 
one odd exception).

I think this leads to the reason that appear to distinguish 'std_name 
modifiers' from 'cell_methods':

+) std_name modifiers relate to information about the instrumental measurement 
of the given physical quantity.

+) cell_methods relate to calculations performed on the actual data series.

I am not sure why one is included in the std_name string, while the other is in 
a separate attribute, but that is a different discussion.

For reference, the std_name modifiers are listed at 
http://cf-pcmdi.llnl.gov/documents/cf-conventions/1.6/apc.html

The cell_methods are listed at 
http://cf-pcmdi.llnl.gov/documents/cf-conventions/1.6/ape.html

Best wishes,

    Philip


-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr Philip Cameron-Smith, [email protected], Lawrence Livermore National Lab.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------


From: CF-metadata [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Nan 
Galbraith
Sent: Friday, March 29, 2013 6:58 AM
To: Kenneth S. Casey - NOAA Federal
Cc: [email protected]; Jonathan Gregory
Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] Question from NODC about interplay of standard name 
modifiers, cell_methods, etc.

I don't want to belabor this point, but from the practical point of view of 
someone
who uses and generates data, which I think is fairly representative of this 
group, a
mean is a representation of a geophysical property, and a stdev is not.

We collect in situ data, and I know that MANY of our instruments output the mean
of several measurements, few do single spot samples. It would surprise me to 
hear
anyone claim that these data sets do not represent geophysical quantities.

Again, I'm just suggesting that the rules for standard name modifiers might be
tweaked to encourage user-friendly labeling of data. I suspect that most data
publishers are already taking care not to share data that's labeled in a 
CF-compliant
but misleading way.

Regards - Nan


On 3/29/13 9:08 AM, Kenneth S. Casey - NOAA Federal wrote:
Nan - your statement below has me wondering about what a statistician would 
say.  Would they say: A "mean" is still a statistical concept, and can not be 
measured. It can only be computed, statistically, as sum/N.  In that sense, it 
is not really any different that standard deviation... the mean is where the 
distribution is centered, and the standard deviation is the width of that 
distribution.  Neither is  a discrete measurement and only make sense as part 
of a distribution.  But I am not a statistician so I really do wonder what one 
would say....

-Ken

On Mar 27, 2013, at 4:23 PM, Nan Galbraith 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:


I don't think the standard deviation of the  temperature of sea water is really 
a
geophysical property; it's a mathematical concept, while a temperature value
represented as a mean is still a temperature.





--

*******************************************************

* Nan Galbraith        Information Systems Specialist *

* Upper Ocean Processes Group            Mail Stop 29 *

* Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution                *

* Woods Hole, MA 02543                 (508) 289-2444 *

*******************************************************




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