Research gaps and trends in the Arctic tundra: a topic-modelling approach

Climate change is affecting the biodiversity, ecosystem services and the well-being of people that live in the Arctic tundra. Understanding the societal implications and adapting to these changes depend on knowledge produced by multiple disciplines. We analysed peer-reviewed publications to identify...

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Main Authors: Francisco Ancin-Murguzur, Vera Hausner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2020-09-01
Series:One Ecosystem
Subjects:
so
Online Access:https://oneecosystem.pensoft.net/article/57117/download/pdf/
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spelling doaj-cfd47d7e55e04c7c840d3dd25a1c26ad2020-11-25T02:31:35ZengPensoft PublishersOne Ecosystem2367-81942020-09-01511210.3897/oneeco.5.e5711757117Research gaps and trends in the Arctic tundra: a topic-modelling approachFrancisco Ancin-Murguzur0Vera Hausner1UiT The Arctic university of NorwayUiT The Arctic university of NorwayClimate change is affecting the biodiversity, ecosystem services and the well-being of people that live in the Arctic tundra. Understanding the societal implications and adapting to these changes depend on knowledge produced by multiple disciplines. We analysed peer-reviewed publications to identify the main research themes relating to the Arctic tundra and assessed to what extent current research build on multiple disciplines to confront the upcoming challenges of rapid environmental changes. We used a topic-modelling approach, based on the Latent Dirichlet Allocation algorithm to detect topics based on semantic similarity. We found that plant and soil ecology dominate the tundra research and are highly connected to other ecological disciplines and biophysical sciences. Despite the fivefold increase in the number of publications during the past decades, the proportion of studies that address societal implications of climate change remains low. The strong scientific interest in the tundra reflects the concern of the rapid warming of the Arctic, but few studies include the cross-disciplinary approach necessary to fully assess the implications of these changes for society.https://oneecosystem.pensoft.net/article/57117/download/pdf/Topic modellingresearch gapsclimate changeso
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francisco Ancin-Murguzur
Vera Hausner
spellingShingle Francisco Ancin-Murguzur
Vera Hausner
Research gaps and trends in the Arctic tundra: a topic-modelling approach
One Ecosystem
Topic modelling
research gaps
climate change
so
author_facet Francisco Ancin-Murguzur
Vera Hausner
author_sort Francisco Ancin-Murguzur
title Research gaps and trends in the Arctic tundra: a topic-modelling approach
title_short Research gaps and trends in the Arctic tundra: a topic-modelling approach
title_full Research gaps and trends in the Arctic tundra: a topic-modelling approach
title_fullStr Research gaps and trends in the Arctic tundra: a topic-modelling approach
title_full_unstemmed Research gaps and trends in the Arctic tundra: a topic-modelling approach
title_sort research gaps and trends in the arctic tundra: a topic-modelling approach
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series One Ecosystem
issn 2367-8194
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Climate change is affecting the biodiversity, ecosystem services and the well-being of people that live in the Arctic tundra. Understanding the societal implications and adapting to these changes depend on knowledge produced by multiple disciplines. We analysed peer-reviewed publications to identify the main research themes relating to the Arctic tundra and assessed to what extent current research build on multiple disciplines to confront the upcoming challenges of rapid environmental changes. We used a topic-modelling approach, based on the Latent Dirichlet Allocation algorithm to detect topics based on semantic similarity. We found that plant and soil ecology dominate the tundra research and are highly connected to other ecological disciplines and biophysical sciences. Despite the fivefold increase in the number of publications during the past decades, the proportion of studies that address societal implications of climate change remains low. The strong scientific interest in the tundra reflects the concern of the rapid warming of the Arctic, but few studies include the cross-disciplinary approach necessary to fully assess the implications of these changes for society.
topic Topic modelling
research gaps
climate change
so
url https://oneecosystem.pensoft.net/article/57117/download/pdf/
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