Increasing the Usability of Climate Models through the Use of Consumer-Report-Style Resources for Decision-Making

Consumers of climate model information face difficulty in assessing which models and projections are best for their particular needs. This difficulty stems from the abundance of climate information, as well as the relative inaccessibility or unavailability of information concerning a given model’s q...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 2020-10, Vol.101 (10), p.E1709-E1717
Hauptverfasser: Briley, Laura, Kelly, Rachel, Blackmer, Emily D., Troncoso, Andrea Vega, Rood, Richard B., Andresen, Jeffrey, Lemos, Maria Carmen
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container_end_page E1717
container_issue 10
container_start_page E1709
container_title Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
container_volume 101
creator Briley, Laura
Kelly, Rachel
Blackmer, Emily D.
Troncoso, Andrea Vega
Rood, Richard B.
Andresen, Jeffrey
Lemos, Maria Carmen
description Consumers of climate model information face difficulty in assessing which models and projections are best for their particular needs. This difficulty stems from the abundance of climate information, as well as the relative inaccessibility or unavailability of information concerning a given model’s quality, trade-offs, and suitability for a particular geographic region or decision-making application. Consumer reports have traditionally provided potential consumers with background knowledge and a review of available products and services to help to make decisions. As a knowledge broker for climate information in the Great Lakes region, the Great Lakes Integrated Sciences and Assessments (GLISA) team has developed a suite of climate model consumer-report-style documents to help climate information consumers make decisions when selecting models and projections for their work. To develop the reports, GLISA reviewed examples of consumer reports from other sectors, relied on the feedback and advice of our ongoing Practitioner Working Group composed of real-world consumers, and incorporated otherwise-unavailable information from model developers. Due to close, continuing partnership with our Practitioner Working Group, the content and the formatting of our climate model consumer reports respond directly to the needs of consumers. Our reports therefore evolve based on needs of the practitioners as well as with the knowledge generated by our research in usability of climate knowledge. We pose that climate model consumer reports, especially when developed in the context of trusted user–knowledge broker relationships, contribute to making climate information more relevant to and usable by practitioners.
doi_str_mv 10.1175/BAMS-D-19-0099.1
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; American Meteorological Society; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Brokers
Climate
Climate models
Climate science
Communication
Consumers
Decision making
Design
In Box
Information sources
Knowledge
Lakes
Precipitation
Simulation
Usability
Working groups
title Increasing the Usability of Climate Models through the Use of Consumer-Report-Style Resources for Decision-Making
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