Statement of Purpose: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
=== Longer Statement === | === Longer Statement === | ||
The Open World project aims to better understand systemic social-ecological | The Open World project aims to better understand systemic problems in social-ecological systems by developing new multi-scale perspectives. As an application and context, we focus on fisheries management. Fisheries collapse is a global concern, affecting world food supply and economic prospects for fishing communities, and impacting marine environments and endangered species. Policies structures have struggled to manage the perverse economic incentives, multiple scales of uncertainty, and unintended feedbacks in this highly variable and spatially complex system. By improving our understanding of | ||
global to local risk drivers and solutions, and local to global feedbacks through aggregation | |||
By improving our understand of how scales and systems interact, we hope to reveal opportunities for more sustainable management. | |||
To study these interactions, the Open World project explores a powerful intersection between new theoretical and technological grounds. Theoretically, | |||
The intersection of these can be called "amalgamated modeling" | |||
Policies and dynamics at regional scales, including the influence of climate, trade | considers the | ||
Policies and dynamics at regional scales, including the influence of climate, trade, and migration networks, have a complex relationship with local choices and behaviors. The boundaries between social institutions, between ecosystems, and between scales are rarely clear. These abstractions work well for modeling and communicating, but coupling these models can both break their accuracy and obfuscate the drivers behind their results. | |||
This project investigates how we can move beyond coupling | This project investigates how we can move beyond coupling |
Revision as of 12:02, 4 March 2012
Snippet
Amalgamated Fisheries Modeling: A cross-scale approach to environmental dilemmas
This project aims to better understand systemic environmental problems, focused on fisheries management, by developing new cross-scale perspectives. Researchers will investigate how social and ecological systems at diverse scales interact, and how these insights can be integrated into a general modeling framework for coupled multi-scale dynamics.
Longer Statement
The Open World project aims to better understand systemic problems in social-ecological systems by developing new multi-scale perspectives. As an application and context, we focus on fisheries management. Fisheries collapse is a global concern, affecting world food supply and economic prospects for fishing communities, and impacting marine environments and endangered species. Policies structures have struggled to manage the perverse economic incentives, multiple scales of uncertainty, and unintended feedbacks in this highly variable and spatially complex system. By improving our understanding of
global to local risk drivers and solutions, and local to global feedbacks through aggregation
By improving our understand of how scales and systems interact, we hope to reveal opportunities for more sustainable management. To study these interactions, the Open World project explores a powerful intersection between new theoretical and technological grounds. Theoretically,
The intersection of these can be called "amalgamated modeling"
considers the
Policies and dynamics at regional scales, including the influence of climate, trade, and migration networks, have a complex relationship with local choices and behaviors. The boundaries between social institutions, between ecosystems, and between scales are rarely clear. These abstractions work well for modeling and communicating, but coupling these models can both break their accuracy and obfuscate the drivers behind their results.
This project investigates how we can move beyond coupling scale, overlap plug-in
The project focuses on interactions between scales and uncovering the critical principles behind the resulting dynamics. To do so, we investigate new forms of coupling,
To support this, the project will build a general framework for integrating an unlimited collection of models of social-ecological systems. This framework would interface between overlapping models at different scales and contexts and operating according to different techniques and assumptions. The composite system will be transparent in its operation, available as a rich foundation for other researchers, and open to new contributions.
Along with new archetypes that move beyond coupling, the framework will provide computational tools for more insightful communication.
A modeling framework which provides both more comprehensive
plug-inable
multi-scale
cross-scale perspective
new tools in modeling
intersection of
new approaches to ...
- Text from opendoc
- Text from emails
- Text from Upmanu
- Modeling Framework to understand general stuff
- leverage points
- Questions