Authors
Jessica O'Reilly, Keynyn Brysse, Michael Oppenheimer, Naomi Oreskes
Publication date
2011/9
Source
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change
Volume
2
Issue
5
Pages
728-743
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Description
Large‐scale assessments have become an important vehicle for organizing, interpreting, and presenting scientific information relevant to environmental policy. At the same time, identifying and evaluating scientific uncertainty with respect to the very questions these assessments were designed to address has become more difficult, as ever more complex problems involving greater portions of the Earth system and longer timescales have emerged at the science–policy interface. In this article, we explore expert judgments about uncertainty in two recent cases: the assessment of stratospheric ozone depletion, and the assessment of the response of the West Antarctic ice sheet (WAIS) to global warming. These assessments were fairly adept at characterizing one type of uncertainty in models (parameter uncertainty), but faced much greater difficulty in dealing with structural model uncertainty, sometimes entirely …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J O'Reilly, K Brysse, M Oppenheimer, N Oreskes - Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 2011