Comment on Systematic survey of high-resolution b-value imaging along Californian faults: inference on asperities by Tormann et al
📝 Original Info
- Title: Comment on Systematic survey of high-resolution b-value imaging along Californian faults: inference on asperities by Tormann et al
- ArXiv ID: 1403.7423
- Date: 2014-10-08
- Authors: Researchers from original ArXiv paper
📝 Abstract
[Tormann et al., 2014] propose a distance exponential weighted (DEW) b-value mapping approach as an improvement to previous methods of constant radius and nearest neighborhood. To test the performance of their proposed method the authors introduce a score function. This score function is applied on a semi-synthetic earthquake catalog to make inference on the parameters of the method. In this comment we argue that the proposed methodology cannot be applied to seismic analysis since it requires a priori knowledge of the spatial b-value distribution, which it aims to reveal.💡 Deep Analysis
Deep Dive into Comment on Systematic survey of high-resolution b-value imaging along Californian faults: inference on asperities by Tormann et al.[Tormann et al., 2014] propose a distance exponential weighted (DEW) b-value mapping approach as an improvement to previous methods of constant radius and nearest neighborhood. To test the performance of their proposed method the authors introduce a score function. This score function is applied on a semi-synthetic earthquake catalog to make inference on the parameters of the method. In this comment we argue that the proposed methodology cannot be applied to seismic analysis since it requires a priori knowledge of the spatial b-value distribution, which it aims to reveal.
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