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Selection of Probability Distributions in Characterizing Risk of Extreme Events
Authors:James H Lambert  Nicholas C Matalas  Con Way Ling  Yacov Y Haimes  Duan Li
Institution:Center for Risk Management of Engineering Systems, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia.;U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia.
Abstract:Use of probability distributions by regulatory agencies often focuses on the extreme events and scenarios that correspond to the tail of probability distributions. This paper makes the case that assessment of the tail of the distribution can and often should be performed separately from assessment of the central values. Factors to consider when developing distributions that account for tail behavior include (a) the availability of data, (b) characteristics of the tail of the distribution, and (c) the value of additional information in assessment. The integration of these elements will improve the modeling of extreme events by the tail of distributions, thereby providing policy makers with critical information on the risk of extreme events. Two examples provide insight into the theme of the paper. The first demonstrates the need for a parallel analysis that separates the extreme events from the central values. The second shows a link between the selection of the tail distribution and a decision criterion. In addition, the phenomenon of breaking records in time-series data gives insight to the information that characterizes extreme values. One methodology for treating risk of extreme events explicitly adopts the conditional expected value as a measure of risk. Theoretical results concerning this measure are given to clarify some of the concepts of the risk of extreme events.
Keywords:Extreme events  probability distributions  data availability  distribution tail
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