From: Phil Jones To: Kevin Trenberth , Grant Foster Subject: Re: FW: 2009JD012960 (Editor - Steve Ghan):Decision Letter Date: Tue Sep 29 10:00:55 2009 Cc: Mike Mann , "J. Salinger" , James Annan , b.mullan@niwa.co.nz, Gavin Schmidt , j.renwick@niwa.co.nz Grant, Kevin, Agree on the responses. It does just seem a case of removing a number of the adjectives. It is important to keep the moral high ground in this, if just to show how a comment on a paper should be written and submitted to the same journal that had the poor paper in the first instance. Might be worth reiterating this if any of us get called when the comment does come out. There does seem a trend these days to slam a paper on blogs with no attempt to submit a comment to a journal. Agree on the running mean/derivative issue - the spectral diagram is better. Scatter plots aren't that useful unless. They's might help with the (a) parts, but it's obvious from the time series plots and the r-squareds are so different! Finally - there was this comment via Jim S from Neville Nicholls. I vaguely recall Angell and Korshover papers from that time. The attached refers to some of them - also found Newell and Weare. This isn't the first, but it might be worth adding. Attached this one from Science as well. Neville Nicholls wrote: Hi JIm. I hop things are going well with you. Thanks for being part of this robust response to the latest silliness. You have certainly gathered an illustrious group of co-authors. I am disappointed that you didnt cite the very early (1970s) work by Newell and Weare, and by Angell and Korshover. I think you should squeeze these in, to demonstrate that the climate community did not have to wait for McLean et al to understand the influence of ENSO on global temperatures. In fact, our colleagues in the 1970s understood this, and demonstrated it much more scientifically than does the McLean et al paper. Cheers, Neville Cheers Phil At 21:45 28/09/2009, Kevin Trenberth wrote: Hi all About time. Incidentally i gave a copy to Mike McPhaden and discussed it with him last week when we were together at the OceanObs'09 conference. Mike is President of AGU. Basically this is an acceptance with a couple of suggestions for extras, and some suggestions for toning down the rhetoric. I had already tried that a bit. My reaction is that the main thing is to expedite this. That means no extras unless it really makes sense. And removal of a few unnecessary words like "absolutely". In the abstract, we have a number of such adjectives that could be removed: I agree with Rev 3 in this. "greatly overstates" could be just "overstates" as it is reinforced better later. "severely overestimates" could be just "overestimates" "faulty analysis" maybe "flawed analysis"? "extremely high" maybe "very high" or "unduly high" I would leave last sentence alone though as the main comment. A few more comments embedded below. Grant Foster wrote: > From: [1]jgr-atmospheres@agu.org > Date: Mon, 28 Sep 2009 15:54:05 +0000 > To: [2]tamino_9@hotmail.com > Subject: 2009JD012960 (Editor - Steve Ghan):Decision Letter > CC: [3]twistor9@gmail.com > > Manuscript Number: 2009JD012960 > Manuscript Title: Comment on "Influence of the Southern Oscillation on tropospheric temperature" by J. D. McLean, C. R. de Freitas, and R. M. Carter > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > Reviewer Comments > > Reviewer #1 (Comments): > > This paper does an excellent job of showing the errors in the analytical methods used by McLean et al. and why their conclusions > about the influence of ENSO on global air temperature is incorrect. > I have only a couple of suggestions to help clarify their analysis of the methods. First, a little more explanation of the comment about the time derivative reduced to an additive constant would help. Second, in the analysis of the artificial time series I think it would be interesting to show the results of both steps of filtering (running mean and derivative) as separate time series. This would help the reader understand why the filtering creates false correlations. The only other suggestion is to find a better adjective than "faulty" in the abstract to characterize the analysis. > It is not so easy to see the result from the derivative owing to the phase shift. The spectrum actually does a better job. I would address this comment in this way and change "faulty". > > Reviewer #2 (Comments): > > I think this comment on McLean et al can be published more or less as is. > > I have two comments > > First, in the abstract (page 3, line 15), I'm not sure that "inflating" is quite the right verb - the paper itself does not make the point that the filter constructed by McLean et al inflates power in the 2-6 year window. Perhaps "isolating" would be a better verb. Yes it should not be in abstract if not in text. Need to point out that the response function in Fig. 1 is greater than unity and does "inflate". So adjust the text. > > Secondly, I think the points that are being made with Figures 4 and 5 could be strengthened by adding to the right of each plot of a pair of time series, a scatter plot of the pairs of values available at each time. Such a scatter plot would help to clearly illustrate the absence (upper panels) or presence (lower panels) of correlation between red and black values. I don't think this helps. There is nothing to be gained from a scatter plot that a correlation or regression value does not summarize. > > > Reviewer #3 (Comments): > > Accept pending major changes (mainly in style not scientific comment) > > The real mystery here, of course, is how the McLean et al. paper ever made it into JGR. How that happened, I have no idea. I can't see it ever getting published through J Climate. The analyses in McLean et al. are among the worst I have seen in the climate literature. The paper is also a poorly guised attack on the integrity of the climate community, and I guess that is why Foster et al. have taken the energy to contradict its findings. > > So the current paper (Foster et al.) should certainly be accepted. Someone needs to address the science in the McLean et al paper in the peer-reviewed literature. But the current paper could be - and should be - done better. That's why I am suggesting major changes before the paper is accepted. All of my suggestions have to do more with the tone and framing of the current paper, rather than its content. > > 1. As noted above, I agree McLean et al is problematic. But as it is written, the current paper almost stoops to the level of "blog diatribe". The current paper does not read like a peer-reviewed journal article. The tone is sometimes dramatic and sometimes accusatory. It is inconsistent with the language one normally encounters in the objectively-based, peer-reviewed literature. For examples.... > - In the abstract: Do you really need all of these adjectives?...'greatly overstates'; 'severely overestimates'; 'faulty analysis'; 'extremely high'. Agree, see above > - In the introduction... 'Unfortunately, their conclusions are seriously in error..." strikes me as overly subjective. Better to say: 'We will demonstrate that their conclusions are strongly dependent on ....' or something like that... Don't go that far. Could drop "seriously" but they are "in error" > - Page X-6: 'tell us absolutely nothing'. Surely it's enough to state 'tell us nothing'. agree > - Page X-9: 'it is misleading...' That's a strong word. It may be true. But I think we should rise above such accusations. misleading is OK. I did a search (not sure I have latest) and found "grossly misleading" and the "grossly" could be removed. > > Anyway, I'm sure the lead author gets my point. I think the current paper will have a much greater impact (and can claim the high road) if it is rewritten in a more objective manner. > > 2. Similarly, instead of framing the paper as "Taking down McLean et al.", why not focus more on interesting aspects of the science, such as the frequency dependence between ENSO and global-mean temperature (perhaps cross-correlation analysis would be useful); the importance of not extrapolating results from one timescale to another timescale; or the lack of trends in ENSO. That way, the current paper contributes to the peer-reviewed literature while also doing a service by highlighting the problems with McLean et al. I think I tried to emphasize that this should be a teaching moment. Even more important given the time lapse. > > 3. In general, the current paper is sloppy and needs tightening. I don't think the lead author needs 10 pages of text to make the main points. > > So over to you to generate the next draft. Thanks Kevin **************** Kevin E. Trenberth e-mail: [4]trenbert@ucar.edu Climate Analysis Section, [5]www.cgd.ucar.edu/cas/trenbert.html NCAR P. O. Box 3000, (303) 497 1318 Boulder, CO 80307 (303) 497 1333 (fax) Street address: 1850 Table Mesa Drive, Boulder, CO 80305 Prof. Phil Jones Climatic Research Unit Telephone +44 (0) 1603 592090 School of Environmental Sciences Fax +44 (0) 1603 507784 University of East Anglia Norwich Email p.jones@uea.ac.uk NR4 7TJ UK ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- References 1. mailto:jgr-atmospheres@agu.org 2. mailto:tamino_9@hotmail.com 3. mailto:twistor9@gmail.com 4. mailto:trenbert@ucar.edu 5. http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/cas/trenbert.html