Welcome to ISSE
Integrative Research - Service to Society -
Education for the Future
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programs within ISSE
One of ISSE's goals is to act as integrative force across NCAR. While contributing to ISSE's main research themes, these larger multi-year research programs and initiatives, lead by ISSE scientists, cross divisional boundaries at NCAR and present examples of integrative research.
Geographic Information System (GIS) Initiative
The NCAR Geographic Information System (GIS) Initiative recognizes systematic methods for organizing and sharing geospatial information are essential to advancing earth system science and other aspects of the geosciences. This initiative explores crucial issues related to integrating weather and climate data with complementary information from the physical sciences, social sciences, and related areas of the geosciences.
North American Regional Climate Change Assessment Program
NARCCAP is an international program that will serve the high resolution climate scenario needs of both the United States and Canada, using regional climate model, coupled global climate model, and time-slice experiments.
RISA-NCAR Collaboration
ISSE is building collaborative ties with NOAA's Regional Integrated Sciences and Assessment (RISA) Program. After two brainstorming and planning meetings, researchers at NCAR and various RISA Centers around the country will focus their initial collaboration on three topics: (1) downscaled climate change projections through the North American Regional Climate Change Assessment Program (NARCCAP); (2) Water-weather-climate interactions; and (3) Capturing and assessing the RISA science-stakeholder interaction.
Societal Impacts Program
With funding from the U.S. Weather Research Program, NCAR established the Collaborative Program on the Societal Impacts and Economic Benefits of Weather Information (SIP). This program is a focal point for assembling, coordinating, developing, and synthesizing research and information on the societal impacts and economic benefits of weather information.
Weather and Climate Impacts Assessment Science Program
The NCAR Climate and Weather Impact Assessment Science Program focuses on critical scientific gaps in the weather and climate arenas that have proved particularly challenging for decision-makers and scientists alike: 1) characterizing uncertainty; 2) extreme weather and climate events; and 3) the role of climate in human health.
NEWS and Announcements
Leading Ladies of Science
Kathy Miller, Paty Romero, and Linda Mearns are interviewed in the Boulder Women's Magazine on their roles in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fourth Assessment Reports. Read more
Brian O'Neill joins the rank of ISSE Scientists.
Brian began his position in ISSE mid January. He comes to NCAR from research scientist positions at IIASA and Brown University, with expertise in population and greenhouse gas emissions, carbon cycling, and uncertainty and learning.
In late November all Colorado scientists who contributed to the IPCC work over the years, as authors, were honored by Governor Ritter for sharing in the Nobel Peace Prize of 2007. Kathy Miller, Paty Romero Lankao, and Linda Mearns attended the ceremony, chatted with the governor, and consumed reasonably flavored food.
ISSE Scientists share in the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize recognition of IPCC. Paty Romero Lankao as Coordinating Lead Author, Linda Mearns & Kathy Miller as Lead Authors, and Rick Katz, Susi Moser, and Claudia Tebaldi as Contributing Authors, participated in the most recent IPCC Reports, both for Working Group I on Climate Science and Working Group II on Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability.
Dr. Patricia Romero Lankao was awarded the Latina Leader Award in Science, on
Seminars & Coffee Talks
July 29 at 10am Coffee Talk in the ML Directors conference room
Assimilation of Scientific Information into Complex Problem SolvingBy Richard B. Rood, University of Michigan
In Winter of 2005 I started a graduate course about the intersection of science, economics, and policy. Since then, the course has evolved into a project-oriented course on solving problems related to the challenge of climate change. More
July 17 - ISSE Risk & Uncertainty Seminar
What Do People Know About Global Climate Change Now?By Ann Bostrom, Associate Dean for Research and Associate Professor, Daniel J. Evans School of Public Affairs, University of Washington
NCAR Foothills Laboratory Main Auditorium FL2-1022 10:30–11:30am
To read more about this seminar, please view the flyer here.
June 23 - ISSE Risk & Uncertainty Seminar
Decision Making Under Risk and Ambiguity: An Experimental Examination of Competence and Confidence Effects
By Jamie Brown Kruse,Professor of Economics, Director of Center for Natural Hazards Research, and Director of the RENCI Center for Coastal Systems Informatics and Modeling, East Carolina University
NCAR Mesa Laboratory, Damon Room , 10:30-11:30 a.m.
To read more about this seminar, please view the abstract here.
May 23 at 10am Coffee Talk in the Directors conference room
Dale Rothman was one of the CLAs for the scenarios chapter of the fourth Global Environmental Outlook (see http://www.unep.org/geo/geo4/report/09_The_Future_Today.pdf). He will discuss the process by which the scenarios were developed and present some of the basic results. In the process, he will contrast the approached used with that of 'similar' global scenario exercises, such as the IPCC SRES scenarios and the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. More
Past Talk: April 29 - Climate Change in Norway: Social Science Perspectives on Impacts, Vulnerability and Adaptation
Norway is an affluent country that is generally considered to be
resilient to the impacts of climate change. Perspectives from the
social sciences, however, show that vulnerability to the impacts of
climate change depends largely on the scale of analysis. Both exposure
and the distribution of climate sensitive sectors vary greatly across
scale... More
Past Talk: April 22 - Application of Weather Research for Decision Making in New Hampshire
This seminar will review two small research projects conducted in the last few years in which the outcome of the research was specifically designed to result in improved decision making by users of weather information. The first research project which concluded in 2006 was a cooperative project between Plymouth State University and Public Service of New Hampshire an electric utility company. Phase I of this work involved understanding past weather... More