Back to Search Start Over

Collaborative efforts to forecast seasonal influenza in the United States, 2015–2016

Authors :
McGowan, Craig J.
Biggerstaff, Matthew
Johansson, Michael
Apfeldorf, Karyn M.
Ben-Nun, Michal
Brooks, Logan
Convertino, Matteo
Erraguntla, Madhav
Farrow, David C.
Freeze, John
Ghosh, Saurav
Hyun, Sangwon
Kandula, Sasikiran
Lega, Joceline
Liu, Yang
Michaud, Nicholas
Morita, Haruka
Niemi, Jarad
Ramakrishnan, Naren
Ray, Evan L.
Reich, Nicholas G.
Riley, Pete
Shaman, Jeffrey
Tibshirani, Ryan
Vespignani, Alessandro
Zhang, Qian
Reed, Carrie
Rosenfeld, Roni
Ulloa, Nehemias
Will, Katie
Turtle, James
Bacon, David
Riley, Steven
Yang, Wan
The Influenza Forecasting Working Group
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2019.

Abstract

Since 2013, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has hosted an annual influenza season forecasting challenge. The 2015–2016 challenge consisted of weekly probabilistic forecasts of multiple targets, including fourteen models submitted by eleven teams. Forecast skill was evaluated using a modified logarithmic score. We averaged submitted forecasts into a mean ensemble model and compared them against predictions based on historical trends. Forecast skill was highest for seasonal peak intensity and short-term forecasts, while forecast skill for timing of season onset and peak week was generally low. Higher forecast skill was associated with team participation in previous influenza forecasting challenges and utilization of ensemble forecasting techniques. The mean ensemble consistently performed well and outperformed historical trend predictions. CDC and contributing teams will continue to advance influenza forecasting and work to improve the accuracy and reliability of forecasts to facilitate increased incorporation into public health response efforts. © 2019, The Author(s).

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2485..6d8cacd66bf9ade62a3cbaf60c379241