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Silvia Castellaro and Peter Bormann
Performance of different regression procedures on the magnitude conversion problem
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (August 2007), 97(4):1167-1175
Abstract: Index Terms/Descriptors: GeoRef, Copyright 2007, American Geological Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Seismological Society of America. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Through an extensive set of simulations we investigate the performance of different linear regression procedures commonly used to convert magnitudes from one type into another one, an operation that also has strong influence on the slope of the frequency-magnitude (the b-value of the Gutenberg-Richter) distribution. It has already been demonstrated that a general orthogonal regression provides the most reliable results. However, questions arise when the ratio between the variances of the magnitudes to be related (the knowledge of which is required to apply the general orthogonal regression) cannot be computed. We therefore systematically investigate the biases introduced by the classical standard least-squares regressions and the orthogonal regressions (or similar procedures) as a function of the true slope between magnitudes, of the ratio eta between magnitude variances, and of the absolute variances of magnitudes. We compute such biases through simulations very close to the real cases inferred from the German and Chinese broadband networks. We observe that for 0.7
algorithms; earthquake prediction; earthquakes; geologic hazards; least-squares analysis; magnitude; regression analysis; risk assessment; seismic risk; simulation; statistical analysis