Ming Wang , Hsiao-Hsuan Wang , Tomasz E. Koralewski , William E. Grant , Neil White , Jim Hanan , Volker Grimm
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The metaphor of the Medawar zone describes the relationship between the difficulty of a scientific problem and the potential payoff of solving it. This zone represents the realm where questions offer high benefits relative to the effort required to address them. By harnessing the power of mechanistic modelling, scientists can navigate towards this zone, moving beyond known unknowns to discover unknown unknowns. This requires models to be realistic and reliable. Model usefulness, impact, and predictive power can be enhanced by achieving intermediate model complexity, where the trade-off between the realism and tractability of a model is optimised. To achieve these goals, we use the pattern-oriented modelling strategy (POM) to direct research into the Medawar zone by steering model structure towards intermediate complexity. We illustrate this strategy with a detailed conceptual process. Using example models from agri-ecological systems, we demonstrate how intermediate complexity can be attained through POM, and how pattern-oriented models of intermediate complexity that reproduce multiple patterns can uncover both known unknowns and unknown unknowns, which ultimately advances our understanding of complex systems and facilitates groundbreaking discoveries. In addition, we discuss the multidimensionality of the Medawar zone in the context of modelling philosophy and highlight the challenges and imperatives for achieving coherence in the modelling discipline. We emphasize the need for collaboration between end-users and modellers and the adoption of systematic modelling strategies such as POM.
期刊介绍:
The journal is concerned with the use of mathematical models and systems analysis for the description of ecological processes and for the sustainable management of resources. Human activity and well-being are dependent on and integrated with the functioning of ecosystems and the services they provide. We aim to understand these basic ecosystem functions using mathematical and conceptual modelling, systems analysis, thermodynamics, computer simulations, and ecological theory. This leads to a preference for process-based models embedded in theory with explicit causative agents as opposed to strictly statistical or correlative descriptions. These modelling methods can be applied to a wide spectrum of issues ranging from basic ecology to human ecology to socio-ecological systems. The journal welcomes research articles, short communications, review articles, letters to the editor, book reviews, and other communications. The journal also supports the activities of the [International Society of Ecological Modelling (ISEM)](http://www.isemna.org/).