TY - JOUR
T1 - A research agenda for GIScience in a time of disruptions
AU - Nelson, Trisalyn
AU - Frazier, Amy E.
AU - Kedron, Peter
AU - Dodge, Somayeh
AU - Zhao, Bo
AU - Goodchild, Michael
AU - Murray, Alan
AU - Battersby, Sarah
AU - Bennett, Lauren
AU - Blanford, Justine I.
AU - Cabrera-Arnau, Carmen
AU - Claramunt, Christophe
AU - Franklin, Rachel
AU - Holler, Joseph
AU - Koylu, Caglar
AU - Lee, Angela
AU - Manson, Steven
AU - McKenzie, Grant
AU - Miller, Harvey
AU - Oshan, Taylor
AU - Rey, Sergio
AU - Rowe, Francisco
AU - Şalap-Ayça, Seda
AU - Shook, Eric
AU - Spielman, Seth
AU - Xu, Wenfei
AU - Wilson, John
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Social issues, AI, and climate change are just a few of the disruptive focuses impacting science. The field of GIScience is well positioned to respond to accelerating disruptions due to the interdisciplinary nature of the field and the ability of GIScience approaches to be used in support of decision-making. This manuscript aims to start a conversation that will establish a research agenda for GIScience in an age of disruptions. We outline three guiding principles: (1) focusing on the relevance and real-world impact of research, (2) adopting systems-based thinking and contextual approaches and (3) emphasizing inclusive practices. We then outline prioritized research areas organized by what topics are important focal areas (Data and Infrastructure, Artificial Intelligence, and Causality and Generalizability), and what approaches to science we should be attentive to (Impactful Open Science, Collaborative and Convergent Science, and through Diverse Participation and Partnerships). We conclude with a call to increase impact by balancing slow science with practical and policy-oriented research. We also recognize that while broad adoption of spatial approaches is a signal of GIScience’s success, we should continue to work together to advance core knowledge centered on spatial thinking and approaches.
AB - Social issues, AI, and climate change are just a few of the disruptive focuses impacting science. The field of GIScience is well positioned to respond to accelerating disruptions due to the interdisciplinary nature of the field and the ability of GIScience approaches to be used in support of decision-making. This manuscript aims to start a conversation that will establish a research agenda for GIScience in an age of disruptions. We outline three guiding principles: (1) focusing on the relevance and real-world impact of research, (2) adopting systems-based thinking and contextual approaches and (3) emphasizing inclusive practices. We then outline prioritized research areas organized by what topics are important focal areas (Data and Infrastructure, Artificial Intelligence, and Causality and Generalizability), and what approaches to science we should be attentive to (Impactful Open Science, Collaborative and Convergent Science, and through Diverse Participation and Partnerships). We conclude with a call to increase impact by balancing slow science with practical and policy-oriented research. We also recognize that while broad adoption of spatial approaches is a signal of GIScience’s success, we should continue to work together to advance core knowledge centered on spatial thinking and approaches.
KW - DEI
KW - GeoAI
KW - Modern GIScience
KW - open science
KW - research agenda
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U2 - 10.1080/13658816.2024.2405191
DO - 10.1080/13658816.2024.2405191
M3 - Comment/debate
AN - SCOPUS:85205489444
SN - 1365-8816
VL - 39
SP - 1
EP - 24
JO - International Journal of Geographical Information Science
JF - International Journal of Geographical Information Science
IS - 1
ER -