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Are We at Risk of Losing the Current Generation of Climate Researchers to Data Science?

Shipra Jain, Julia Mindlin, Gerbrand Koren, Carla Gulizia, Claudia Steadman, Gaby S. Langendijk, Marisol Osman, Muhammad Adnan Abid, Yuhan Rao, Valentina Rabanal

2022AGU Advances18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Climate model output has progressively increased in size over the past decades and is expected to continue to rise in the future. Consequently, the research time expended by Early Career Researchers (ECRs) on data‐intensive activities is displacing the time spent in fostering novel scientific ideas and expanding the frontiers of climate sciences. Here, we highlight an urgent need for a better balance between data‐intensive and foundational climate science activities, more open‐ended research opportunities that reinforce the scientific freedom of the ECRs, and strong coordinated action to provide infrastructure and resources to the ECRs working in under‐resourced environments.

Topics & Concepts

Climate scienceBalance (ability)Action (physics)Climate changeAdaptation (eye)Data sciencePolitical scienceEngineering ethicsPsychologyComputer scienceEngineeringEcologyPhysicsBiologyNeuroscienceQuantum mechanicsClimate variability and modelsClimate Change Communication and PerceptionMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations
Are We at Risk of Losing the Current Generation of Climate Researchers to Data Science? | Litcius