scholarly journals Building Consensus, Collaboration, and Capability for Ocean Worlds Field Science

2021 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Stern ◽  
Margaret Weng ◽  
Heather Graham ◽  
Jeffrey Bowman ◽  
Stanford Hooker ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Cristina G. Wilson ◽  
Feifei Qian ◽  
Douglas J. Jerolmack ◽  
Sonia Roberts ◽  
Jonathan Ham ◽  
...  

AbstractHow do scientists generate and weight candidate queries for hypothesis testing, and how does learning from observations or experimental data impact query selection? Field sciences offer a compelling context to ask these questions because query selection and adaptation involves consideration of the spatiotemporal arrangement of data, and therefore closely parallels classic search and foraging behavior. Here we conduct a novel simulated data foraging study—and a complementary real-world case study—to determine how spatiotemporal data collection decisions are made in field sciences, and how search is adapted in response to in-situ data. Expert geoscientists evaluated a hypothesis by collecting environmental data using a mobile robot. At any point, participants were able to stop the robot and change their search strategy or make a conclusion about the hypothesis. We identified spatiotemporal reasoning heuristics, to which scientists strongly anchored, displaying limited adaptation to new data. We analyzed two key decision factors: variable-space coverage, and fitting error to the hypothesis. We found that, despite varied search strategies, the majority of scientists made a conclusion as the fitting error converged. Scientists who made premature conclusions, due to insufficient variable-space coverage or before the fitting error stabilized, were more prone to incorrect conclusions. We found that novice undergraduates used the same heuristics as expert geoscientists in a simplified version of the scenario. We believe the findings from this study could be used to improve field science training in data foraging, and aid in the development of technologies to support data collection decisions.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikhail Polyanskiy ◽  
Igor Pogorelsky ◽  
Marcus Babzien ◽  
Vitaly Yakimenko

Author(s):  
Kirsten A. Greer

The concluding chapter demonstrates how the accumulation of their avian collections and documentation served as an ideological force in imagining control over universal knowledge and, in turn, the British Empire and its territories, as officers studied birds as part of surveying, mapping, and surveillance. It analyzes how military ornithologists encountered different local cultures (with different attitudes toward hunting, birds, and field science) and different local natures (with different climates, avian populations, and environments), and how imperial knowledge was contingent on local networks and of different trajectories across the British Empire.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1412 ◽  
pp. 082009
Author(s):  
D Faccialà ◽  
M Musheghyan ◽  
P Prasannan Geetha ◽  
A Pusala ◽  
G Crippa ◽  
...  

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