Bayesian-network models for human-machine collaboration to protect pollinator-plant interactions in agriculture and natural ecosystems
Ecological systems are dynamic and complex. Many ecosystems support human food production and in turn are impacted by human food production activity. This creates feedback loops between ecosystems, human society and our agriculture, that are typical of complex systems. Ecosystem and social system modelling therefore, including simulation, can play a key role to understand food production and ecosystem interactions. If used wisely for decision-support, these technologies can help select and implement effective policies. This PhD project, jointly offered by Monash University (Australia) and University of Warwick (UK), explores the design and development of computational Decision Support tools to help us better manage the interactions between beneficial insects, such as bees, and the flowering plants they visit and pollinate.
Bayesian networks (BNs), and other probabilistic graphical models, can provide a visual representation of the underlying structure of a complex system by representing domain experts’ beliefs about the relationships among variables that can be used to describe them. The BN structure, the probability distributions and parameters it is built from, can be derived from data, when it is available in sufficient quantity and of sufficient quality. However, in many cases gaps in knowledge need to be filled using expert knowledge and judgement.
Models such as BNs are typically encoded in computer software and can be used as decision support systems (DSS). These may be used by decision-makers with different domains of expertise than the analysts who built the DSS system. Therefore, considerations of human-user interaction and user interface design are key to the adoption and successful use of DSS. The need for tools that can incorporate diverse sources of data and knowledge, and adapt modelling to the various limitations of representing complex systems while informing decision making, generates many interesting theoretical and practical questions.
This PhD research focuses on decision support systems in the ecosystem and food security domains. It explores the use of BNs and DSSs as a data source, and (semi-)structured expert judgement (SEJ) and knowledge elicitation to assess the reliability of data to inform data collection strategies and monitoring techniques. The focus of this PhD study is the management of interactions between pollinator insects, such as bees, and the wild native flowering plants, weeds, and human food crop flowers that they visit.
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