Structuring expert input for a knowledge-based approach to watershed condition assessment for the Northwest Forest Plan, USA.
TL;DR: This work describes and reflects on the process of developing a computer-based decision support application from expert judgments for assessing aquatic and riparian conditions over the 100,000 km2 managed by the US federal government under the Northwest Forest Plan.
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Abstract: Assessments of watershed condition for aquatic and riparian species often have to rely on expert opinion because of the complexity of establishing statistical relationships among the many factors involved. Such expert-based assessments can be difficult to document and apply consistently over time and space. We describe and reflect on the process of developing a computer-based decision support application from expert judgments for assessing aquatic and riparian conditions over the 100,000 km2 managed by the US federal government under the Northwest Forest Plan. The decision support system helped structure and document the assessment process and provided consistency and transparency to the evaluation methodology. However, many decisions and trade-offs were required in the expert engagement and model-building processes. Knowledge elicitation in an interactive group had a number of benefits over nominal group or Delphi processes, but efficient knowledge capture required considerable planning and expertise in the subject matter and modeling process. Communicating model results for validation was problematic and only effectively accomplished via in-person workshops. The choice to use different expert groups for each biophysical province provided more opportunities for participation and promoted greater ownership in the assessment, but it also led to increased variation among the resulting model structures. We propose three possible approaches for better managing the consistency of assessment models when multiple expert groups are involved.
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Figures

Fig. 3 Fuzzy evaluation function for water temperature 
Table 2 Indicators available for assessing watershed condition 
Fig. 1 Northwest forest plan aquatic province map 
Fig. 2 Pilot model structures at the watershed and reach scales 
Fig. 5 Watershed condition scores produced for the 250 randomly selected watersheds in the plan area
Citations
Systematic review of expert elicitation methods as a tool for source attribution of enteric illness.
TL;DR: Expert elicitation is a useful tool to explore sources of uncertainty and to answer questions where data are expensive or difficult to collect as mentioned in this paper, and represents an important method for estimating source attribution for enteric illness.
41
An interdisciplinary framework to evaluate bioshield plantations: Insights from peninsular India
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted a socio-ecological questionnaire-based survey on gov- ernment and non-government organizations directly involved in coastal plantation efforts in three 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami affected states in mainland India.
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Protected area management under climate change: A framework for decision making
Sherri Tanner-McAllister
- 10 Feb 2017
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate approaches to managing climate change impacts on protected areas through understanding and addressing management and planning at the park level, and develop a decision making framework based on a set of strategies aimed at adapting on-park management to climate change.
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Use of EMDS in Conservation and Management Planning for Watersheds
Sean N. Gordon
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: This chapter reviews nine cases in which EMDS has been applied to watershed management and three additional cases of the application of similar multi-criteria evaluation approaches that were at least partially inspired by EMDS.
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Risk and Resiliency Assessment of Urban Groundwater Supply Sources (Ponds) by Structured Elicitation of Experts Knowledge
Zorica Srdjevic,Bojan Srdjevic,M. Rajic +2 more
- 01 Jan 2017
TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate how the method for structured elicitation, developed by Smith et al., can be used to evaluate important risk and resilience factors within the group decision-making process.
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