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Showing 1–9 of 9 results
Advanced filters: Author: Garry Peterson Clear advanced filters
  • Coastal risk assessment under future climate change is important for effective adaptation, but multidimensional analyses are still rare. Here the researchers find that inappropriate development policies could have a greater effect on exposure to flooding than sea-level rise up to 2100 in China.

    • Yafei Wang
    • Yuxuan Ye
    • Murray Scown
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 15, P: 1071-1077
  • Future exposure to coastal flooding in China is driven more by growing populations and economic activity rather than by rising seas and intensifying storm surges. Policymakers must anticipate these multiple risk drivers to better inform spatial planning and development strategies and to ensure effective, sustainable coastal adaptation.

    • Yafei Wang
    • Yuxuan Ye
    • Murray Scown
    News & Views
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 15, P: 1033-1034
  • Recent advances have increased the dimensionality and complexity of immunological data. The authors developed a machine learning approach to incorporate prior immunological knowledge and applied it on clinical examples and a simulation study. The approach may be useful for high-dimensional datasets in clinical settings where the cohort size is limited.

    • Anthony Culos
    • Amy S. Tsai
    • Nima Aghaeepour
    Research
    Nature Machine Intelligence
    Volume: 2, P: 619-628
  • In Sweden, dietary changes simulated under four food futures pathways reduced environmental impacts by 30 percent, but waste and fossil fuel emissions reductions are necessary to meet the climate target, according to an analysis that combines food items, nutrients, health, and environmental data.

    • Rachel Mazac
    • Hanna Karlsson Potter
    • Elin Röös
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Earth & Environment
    Volume: 6, P: 1-15
  • Targets for human development are increasingly connected with targets for nature, however, existing scenarios do not explicitly address this relationship. Here, we outline a strategy to generate scenarios centred on our relationship with nature to inform decision-making at multiple scales.

    • Isabel M. D. Rosa
    • Henrique M. Pereira
    • Detlef van Vuuren
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    Volume: 1, P: 1416-1419
  • Scholars develop scenarios to identify the operational margins of system Earth, but focus less on how decisions are made that affect the system one way or another. Strategy games can help increase the representation of human agency in scenario development, allowing for deliberation among diverse worldviews.

    • Claude A. Garcia
    • Sini Savilaakso
    • Patrick O. Waeber
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 5, P: 464-471
  • Research addressing sustainability issues is more effective if ‘co-produced’ by academics and non-academics, but definitions of co-production vary. This Perspective presents four knowledge co-production principles for sustainability research and guides on how to engage in co-productive practices.

    • Albert V. Norström
    • Christopher Cvitanovic
    • Henrik Österblom
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 3, P: 182-190