Details of Award
NERC Reference : NE/N000552/1
Systematic review and meta-analysis for environmental sciences
Training Grant Award
- Lead Supervisor:
- Professor E Kulinskaya, University of East Anglia, Computing Sciences
- Grant held at:
- University of East Anglia, Computing Sciences
- Science Area:
- Atmospheric
- Earth
- Freshwater
- Marine
- Terrestrial
- Overall Classification:
- Atmospheric
- ENRIs:
- Biodiversity
- Environmental Risks and Hazards
- Global Change
- Natural Resource Management
- Pollution and Waste
- Science Topics:
- Climate & Climate Change
- Community Ecology
- Conservation Ecology
- Population Ecology
- Applied Statistics
- Environmental Statistics
- Statistical Ecology
- Statistics & Appl. Probability
- Abstract:
- We are proposing to renew a successful 5-day training course on systematic reviews and meta-analysis for environmental sciences funded by NERC in 2014/15 ATSC funding call and delivered to 24 PhD students and postdocs (13 of them NERC-funded) from 14 UK universities at Royal Holloway, January 5-9, 2014. Overall course evaluation mean score was 4.6 out of 5. This time we intend to run an updated course at UEA, to facilitate the access for the young researchers from the Eastern part of the UK. Environmental scientists are under the growing pressure to provide accurate quantitative assessments, predictions and practical solutions for pressing environmental issues (e.g. biodiversity losses, global climate change). In order to address these questions, they need to be able to summarize the available evidence from research already conducted on the topic. The proposed course will provide training in methods of systematic review and meta-analysis which allow powerful, informative and objective way for summarizing the results of studies on the same topic. Training in the above methods is seldom included into the syllabuses of standard statistical courses and therefore is currently not readily available to environmental scientists. This course aims at filling this gap and seeks to promote and facilitate the thoughtful and critical use of systematic reviews and meta-analysis for research synthesis in environmental sciences. The proposed course will take five days and will involve combination of lectures and practical sessions where students will practice conducting meta-analysis using worked examples in R. In addition, students will conduct their own mini-metaanalyses by working in pairs on an assigned environmental topic with 8-10 primary research papers provided per topic. Students would need to decide on effect size metric to use and inclusion criteria, extract the data from the primary studies, design the extraction spreadsheet, conduct meta-analysis and prepare presentation of their results. Therefore, the course will provide students with first-hand experience in question formulation, data extraction, database design, use of statistical software for meta-analysis and report preparation. The course will combine expertise in systematic reviews at the Centre for Evidence-Based Conservation (Andrew Pullin, Bangor University) with expertise in statistical approaches to metaanalysis (Elena Kulinskaya, UEA) and applications of meta-analysis to ecological and environmental data (Julia Koricheva, RHUL). All three applicants have extensive experience in teaching short courses on systematic reviews and meta-analysis in the UK and abroad. The proposed course is highly relevant for two of the NERC Training Priority Areas: statistics (statistical methods for handling, analysing and interpreting large data sets for the environmental sciences) and data & information management (environmental sciences data assimilation, visualisation and analysis). There are currently no similar courses available to PhD students in the UK. Training in systematic review and meta-analysis is not covered by any of the 2014/15 advanced training courses funded by NERC. While the Centre for Evidence-Based Conservation (CEBC) runs regular training workshops in systematic reviews, these do not cover statistical methods of meta-analysis. The uniqueness of the course is in what it offers training in both systematic reviews and in meta-analysis. The proposed course will provide 25 young UK environmental scientists with training which will enable them to quantitatively assess evidence base for a number of urgent and important research questions within the remit of NERC, e.g. quantifying impact of environmental change and biodiversity loss on ecosystems, assessing the risks of natural hazards, evaluating the relative effectiveness of different management and coservation strategies, as well as using omic and big data for addressing environmental questions.
- NERC Reference:
- NE/N000552/1
- Grant Stage:
- Completed
- Scheme:
- Doctoral Training
- Grant Status:
- Closed
- Programme:
- Advanced Training
This training grant award has a total value of £30,278
FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)
Total - Other Costs |
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£30,278 |
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