reviewConservation BiologyJan 26, 2012GREEN OA

Eliciting Expert Knowledge in Conservation Science

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation · The University of Queensland · +5 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdatacitepubmed

Abstract

Expert knowledge is used widely in the science and practice of conservation because of the complexity of problems, relative lack of data, and the imminent nature of many conservation decisions. Expert knowledge is substantive information on a particular topic that is not widely known by others. An expert is someone who holds this knowledge and who is often deferred to in its interpretation. We refer to predictions by experts of what may happen in a particular context as expert judgments. In general, an expert-elicitation approach consists of five steps: deciding how information will be used, determining what to elicit, designing the elicitation process, performing the elicitation, and translating the elicited…

No related works found for this paper.