New opportunities and challenges for conservation evidence synthesis from advances in natural language processing.

Journal: Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology
PMID:

Abstract

Addressing global environmental conservation problems requires rapidly translating natural and conservation social science evidence to policy-relevant information. Yet, exponential increases in scientific production combined with disciplinary differences in reporting research make interdisciplinary evidence syntheses especially challenging. Ongoing developments in natural language processing (NLP), such as large language models, machine learning (ML), and data mining, hold the promise of accelerating cross-disciplinary evidence syntheses and primary research. The evolution of ML, NLP, and artificial intelligence (AI) systems in computational science research provides new approaches to accelerate all stages of evidence synthesis in conservation social science. To show how ML, language processing, and AI can help automate and scale evidence syntheses in conservation social science, we describe methods that can automate querying the literature, process large and unstructured bodies of textual evidence, and extract parameters of interest from scientific studies. Automation can translate to other research agendas in conservation social science by categorizing and labeling data at scale, yet there are major unanswered questions about how to use hybrid AI-expert systems ethically and effectively in conservation.

Authors

  • Charlotte H Chang
    Department of Biology and Environmental Analysis Program, Pomona College, Claremont, California, USA.
  • Susan C Cook-Patton
    The Nature Conservancy, Arlington, Virginia, USA.
  • James T Erbaugh
    Department of Environmental Studies, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
  • Luci Lu
    Jornada Experimental Range, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico, USA.
  • Yuta J Masuda
    Paul G. Allen Family Foundation, Seattle, Washington, USA.
  • István Molnár
    Lexunit Zrt, Budapest, Hungary.
  • Dávid Papp
    Lexunit Zrt, Budapest, Hungary.
  • Brian E Robinson
    Department of Geography, McGill University, Montreal, Québec, Canada.