Recording and communicating uncertainty in science: how geologists manage variability in spatial data
Cristina G. Wilson, Madelyn Sadler, Jacob Lader, Courtney Sheckler, Thomas F. Shipley

TL;DR
This study explores how geologists handle variability in spatial data and how it affects their decisions to record and publish observations.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel experimental approach to assess how geologists manage variability in spatial data and its impact on data recording and publishing.
Findings
Geologists show individual differences in how they tolerate variability in data.
High-criterion geologists avoid publishing data with high variability despite being able to infer meaningful conclusions.
Geologists can accurately estimate orientations from variable data even at high variability levels.
Abstract
All scientists must cope with variability in data to make inferences about the world. However, in observation-based geology, how scientists cope with variability is particularly consequential because it determines what become data in the first place, with observations that are deemed “too variable” potentially being ignored or minimized. Here, across three experiments with 97 geologists, we assess (i) how variability impacts their willingness to turn an observation into data by recording it and their willingness to share data by publishing it, and (ii) whether scientists can make inferences from variable observations and how the accuracy of their inferences is impacted by level of variability. Geologists were presented with arrays of disciplinary data representing the orientation of planar features within a rock formation, where orientation variability was systematically manipulated.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeochemistry and Geologic Mapping · Data Visualization and Analytics · Philosophy and History of Science
