Contextualizing the global relevance of local land change observations
N. R. Magliocca (1), E. C. Ellis (1), T. Oates (2), M. Schmill (2), ((1) Department of Geography, Environmental Systems, University of, Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland, USA,(2) Department of, Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, University of Maryland,

TL;DR
This paper introduces GLOBE, a system designed to integrate local land change observations into global analyses using statistical and geovisualization tools, enhancing the understanding of global land change patterns.
Contribution
GLOBE provides a novel online platform that enables statistically robust, globally relevant synthesis of local land change data, addressing biases and data fragmentation in land change science.
Findings
Demonstrated a representativeness analysis for tropical land change studies
Enabled assessment of local findings within global datasets
Highlighted areas needing further sampling and study
Abstract
To understand global changes in the Earth system, scientists must generalize globally from observations made locally and regionally. In land change science (LCS), local field-based observations are costly and time consuming, and generally obtained by researchers working at disparate local and regional case-study sites chosen for different reasons. As a result, global synthesis efforts in LCS tend to be based on non-statistical inferences subject to geographic biases stemming from data limitations and fragmentation. Thus, a fundamental challenge is the production of generalized knowledge that links evidence of the causes and consequences of local land change to global patterns and vice versa. The GLOBE system was designed to meet this challenge. GLOBE aims to transform global change science by enabling new scientific workflows based on statistically robust, globally relevant integration…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLand Use and Ecosystem Services · Remote Sensing in Agriculture
