A Three-Stage Deep Learning Framework for Short-Term Tropical Cyclone Track Prediction
Haocheng Shi, Dan Song, Guijing Yang, Longyu Jiang, Xuezhu Wang, Shuangyan HeAccurate tropical cyclone (TC) track prediction remains challenging, as numerical models suffer from high computational cost, substantial storage requirements, and physical parameterization uncertainties, while data-driven large AI models depend heavily on training data volume and high-resolution inputs, resulting in prohibitive computational overhead. To address these issues, this paper proposes TCN-GAN-DM, a three-stage deep learning framework based on the China Meteorological Administration (CMA) Tropical Cyclone Best Track Dataset. Specifically, a dual-stream temporal convolutional network (TCN) first extracts temporal features from track and meteorological sequences, respectively. A generative adversarial network (GAN) then takes these features and produces multiple physically plausible candidate tracks via noise injection. Finally, a conditional diffusion model (DM) refines the predicted positions through progressive denoising. Experimental results for TCs in 2024 show that under the fair deterministic comparison using a single fixed candidate, the model achieves a 6 h track error of 49.10 km, which is comparable to CMA-GFS (49.75 km) and HWRF (44.34 km), and substantially lower than the large AI model FuXi (120.44 km). When evaluating the oracle metric (best-of-K, K = 6) as an upper bound of coverage, the model achieves the smallest errors among all models at 6 h (24.04 km) and 12 h (55.81 km). In addition, the proposed model has advantages over CMA-GFS, HWRF, and FuXi in terms of computational resource consumption and hardware deployment cost. However, its mean track error increases more rapidly beyond 12 h, and at lead times of 18 h and 24 h the model is outperformed by HWRF, FuXi, and CMA-GFS, indicating that its current strength lies primarily in short-term prediction. Consequently, the practical utility of TCN-GAN-DM is currently demonstrated for 6–12 h TC track prediction, offering a new solution for disaster prevention and mitigation that balances accuracy and deployment cost at these specific time scales.