Big data and the future of ecology
University of California, Santa Barbara · National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis · +8 more institutions
Abstract
The need for sound ecological science has escalated alongside the rise of the information age and “big data” across all sectors of society. Big data generally refer to massive volumes of data not readily handled by the usual data tools and practices and present unprecedented opportunities for advancing science and informing resource management through data‐intensive approaches. The era of big data need not be propelled only by “big science” – the term used to describe large‐scale efforts that have had mixed success in the individual‐driven culture of ecology. Collectively, ecologists already have big data to bolster the scientific effort – a large volume of distributed, high‐value information – but many simply…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 153.00
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
8- SEStephanie E. HamptonCorresponding
University of California, Santa Barbara, National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
- CSCarly Strasser
California Digital Library, University of California Office of the President
- JJJoshua J. Tewksbury
University of Washington
- WKWendy K. Gram
National Ecological Observatory Network
- AEAmber E Budden
University of New Mexico
Topics & keywords
- Big data
- Data science
- Scale (ratio)
- Resource (disambiguation)
- Value (mathematics)
- Ecology
- Computer science
- Geography