Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4695273 Tectonophysics 2006 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Earthquake prediction was practiced in Japan to examine the hypothesis that “a pair of earthquakes with similar magnitudes may be a signal of an impending larger earthquake”. In the present study, predictions were announced with expected probabilities of 20–30% (rank A) or 10–20% (rank B). In 2001–2002, excepting the Ogasawara region, 26 and 6 cases among 61 and 30 predictions of ranks A and B, respectively, were successful. Based on a statistical test of time-shift, i.e., one-year shift in this paper, and averaged activity in 1990–1999, the success rate of 43% for rank A was shown to be greater than that expected by chance with a confidence level more than 99%. The success rate of 20% for rank B gave a corresponding confidence level of only about 40%, suggesting that the predictions of rank B were not confident in this period. According to the results, a statistical test of time-shift was found to be useful to evaluate the significance of prediction methods of this type.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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