{"title":"Keith R.Briffa","authors":"M. Hughes, E. Cook, T. Osborn, T. Melvin","doi":"10.3959/1536-1098-74.1.132","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Keith R. Briffa, 64, died on October 29, 2017. Keith was born December 27, 1952, in Liverpool, United Kingdom. He earned a B.Sc. (Honours) degree in Biological Sciences at the University of East Anglia (UEA) in 1974 and joined the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) there in 1977. He received his Ph.D. from the UEA School of Environmental Sciences in 1984, successfully defending his thesis “Tree-Climate Relationships and Dendroclimatological Reconstruction in the British Isles.” He stayed at CRU for the 40 years of his remarkably productive and significant scientific career, having the title of Emeritus Professor at the time of his passing. Keith showed great breadth of scientific understanding, creativity, rigor, willingness and ability to collaborate and unflinching intellectual honesty. These attributes are clearly evident in all his work, from his Ph.D. dissertation to the most recent of his more than 130 publications. He has been a central figure in the elaboration and testing of new and improved approaches to dendrochronology in general and to dendroclimatology in particular. Especially indispensable contributions include methods for evaluating common signal strength in tree-ring collections, including Expressed Population Signal (EPS) and Subsample Signal Strength (SSS). Keith also investigated methods of tree-ring standardization based onGaussian filters, and later the groundbreaking Regional Curve Standardization (RCS) method.His identification of apparent reduced sensitivity of tree-ring records to temperature at high latitudes in recent decades (“divergence”) stimulated much critical examination and improvement in dendroclimatology. Keith’s research contributed greatly to the analysis of tree-ring networks on regional to global scales and their use in the rigorously tested reconstruction of climate fields based on the method of ‘Orthogonal Spatial Regression’ (OSR) developed in his thesis. He was at the very","PeriodicalId":54416,"journal":{"name":"Tree-Ring Research","volume":"74 1","pages":"132 - 133"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2018-02-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.3959/1536-1098-74.1.132","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Keith R. Briffa\",\"authors\":\"M. Hughes, E. Cook, T. Osborn, T. Melvin\",\"doi\":\"10.3959/1536-1098-74.1.132\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Keith R. Briffa, 64, died on October 29, 2017. Keith was born December 27, 1952, in Liverpool, United Kingdom. He earned a B.Sc. (Honours) degree in Biological Sciences at the University of East Anglia (UEA) in 1974 and joined the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) there in 1977. He received his Ph.D. from the UEA School of Environmental Sciences in 1984, successfully defending his thesis “Tree-Climate Relationships and Dendroclimatological Reconstruction in the British Isles.” He stayed at CRU for the 40 years of his remarkably productive and significant scientific career, having the title of Emeritus Professor at the time of his passing. Keith showed great breadth of scientific understanding, creativity, rigor, willingness and ability to collaborate and unflinching intellectual honesty. These attributes are clearly evident in all his work, from his Ph.D. dissertation to the most recent of his more than 130 publications. He has been a central figure in the elaboration and testing of new and improved approaches to dendrochronology in general and to dendroclimatology in particular. Especially indispensable contributions include methods for evaluating common signal strength in tree-ring collections, including Expressed Population Signal (EPS) and Subsample Signal Strength (SSS). Keith also investigated methods of tree-ring standardization based onGaussian filters, and later the groundbreaking Regional Curve Standardization (RCS) method.His identification of apparent reduced sensitivity of tree-ring records to temperature at high latitudes in recent decades (“divergence”) stimulated much critical examination and improvement in dendroclimatology. Keith’s research contributed greatly to the analysis of tree-ring networks on regional to global scales and their use in the rigorously tested reconstruction of climate fields based on the method of ‘Orthogonal Spatial Regression’ (OSR) developed in his thesis. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
Keith R.Briffa,64岁,于2017年10月29日去世。基思1952年12月27日出生于英国利物浦。1974年,他在东安格利亚大学(UEA)获得生物科学学士(荣誉)学位,1977年加入该校气候研究所(CRU)。1984年,他获得了UEA环境科学学院的博士学位,成功地为他的论文“不列颠群岛的树木气候关系和树木气候重建”进行了辩护。在他富有成效和意义的科学生涯中,他在CRU工作了40年,在他去世时获得了名誉教授的头衔。基思表现出了广泛的科学理解、创造力、严谨性、合作意愿和能力,以及坚定的智力诚实。这些特质在他的所有作品中都很明显,从他的博士论文到他130多篇出版物中的最新一篇。他一直是阐述和测试新的和改进的树木年表方法,特别是树木气候学方法的核心人物。特别不可或缺的贡献包括用于评估树环集合中的公共信号强度的方法,包括表达总体信号(EPS)和子样本信号强度(SSS)。Keith还研究了基于高斯滤波器的树环标准化方法,以及后来开创性的区域曲线标准化(RCS)方法。近几十年来,他发现高纬度地区树木年轮记录对温度的敏感性明显降低(“差异”),这激发了树木气候学的许多批判性研究和改进。Keith的研究极大地促进了区域到全球尺度上的树环网络分析,并将其用于基于其论文中开发的“正交空间回归”(OSR)方法的严格测试的气候场重建。他在
Keith R. Briffa, 64, died on October 29, 2017. Keith was born December 27, 1952, in Liverpool, United Kingdom. He earned a B.Sc. (Honours) degree in Biological Sciences at the University of East Anglia (UEA) in 1974 and joined the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) there in 1977. He received his Ph.D. from the UEA School of Environmental Sciences in 1984, successfully defending his thesis “Tree-Climate Relationships and Dendroclimatological Reconstruction in the British Isles.” He stayed at CRU for the 40 years of his remarkably productive and significant scientific career, having the title of Emeritus Professor at the time of his passing. Keith showed great breadth of scientific understanding, creativity, rigor, willingness and ability to collaborate and unflinching intellectual honesty. These attributes are clearly evident in all his work, from his Ph.D. dissertation to the most recent of his more than 130 publications. He has been a central figure in the elaboration and testing of new and improved approaches to dendrochronology in general and to dendroclimatology in particular. Especially indispensable contributions include methods for evaluating common signal strength in tree-ring collections, including Expressed Population Signal (EPS) and Subsample Signal Strength (SSS). Keith also investigated methods of tree-ring standardization based onGaussian filters, and later the groundbreaking Regional Curve Standardization (RCS) method.His identification of apparent reduced sensitivity of tree-ring records to temperature at high latitudes in recent decades (“divergence”) stimulated much critical examination and improvement in dendroclimatology. Keith’s research contributed greatly to the analysis of tree-ring networks on regional to global scales and their use in the rigorously tested reconstruction of climate fields based on the method of ‘Orthogonal Spatial Regression’ (OSR) developed in his thesis. He was at the very
期刊介绍:
Tree-Ring Research (TRR) is devoted to papers dealing with the growth rings of trees and the applications of tree-ring research in a wide variety of fields, including but not limited to archaeology, geology, ecology, hydrology, climatology, forestry, and botany. Papers involving research results, new techniques of data acquisition or analysis, and regional or subject-oriented reviews or syntheses are considered for publication.
Scientific papers usually fall into two main categories. Articles should not exceed 5000 words, or approximately 20 double-spaced typewritten pages, including tables, references, and an abstract of 200 words or fewer. All manuscripts submitted as Articles are reviewed by at least two referees. Research Reports, which are usually reviewed by at least one outside referee, should not exceed 1500 words or include more than two figures. Research Reports address technical developments, describe well-documented but preliminary research results, or present findings for which the Article format is not appropriate. Book or monograph Reviews of 500 words or less are also considered. Other categories of papers are occasionally published. All papers are published only in English. Abstracts of the Articles or Reports may be printed in other languages if supplied by the author(s) with English translations.