Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

System Cognition and Analytic Technology of Cultivated Land Quality from a Data Perspective

View through CrossRef
As cultivated land quality has been paid more and more scientific attention, its connotation generalization and cognitive bias are widespread, bringing many challenges to the investigation and evaluation of regional cultivated land quality and its data analysis and mining. Establishing a systematic and interdisciplinary cognitive approach to cultivated land quality is urgent and necessary. Therefore, we explored and developed a conceptual framework of the model for the cultivated land quality analysis from the data perspective, including cultivated land quality ontology, mapping, correlation, and decision models. We identified the primary content of cultivated land quality perceptions and four cognitive mechanisms. We built vital technologies, such as the collaborative perception of the quality of cultivated land, intelligent treatment, diagnostic evaluation, and simulation prediction. Applying this analysis framework, we sorted out the frequency of indicators that characterize the function of cultivated land according to the literature in recent years and have built the cognitive system of cultivated land quality in the black soil region of Northeast China. The system’s central component was production capacity and it had three components: a foundation, a guarantee, and an effect. The black soil region cultivated land quality evaluation system has seven purposes involving 20–31 key indicators: production supply, threat control, farmland infrastructure regulation, cultivated land ecological maintenance, economics, social culture, and environmental protection. In various application contexts, the system had many critical supporting technologies. The results demonstrate that the framework has strong adaptability, efficiency, and scalability, which might offer a theoretical direction for further studies on the evaluation of the quality of cultivated land in the area. The analysis framework established in this study is helpful to deepen the understanding of cultivated land quality systems from the perspective of big data. Taking the big data of cultivated land quality as the driving force, combined with the technical methods of cultivated land quality analysis, the evaluation results of cultivated land quality under different scenarios and different objectives are optimized. In addition, the framework can serve the practice of farmland management and engineering improvement, adapt to the management needs of different objects and different scales, and achieve the combination of theory and practice.
Title: System Cognition and Analytic Technology of Cultivated Land Quality from a Data Perspective
Description:
As cultivated land quality has been paid more and more scientific attention, its connotation generalization and cognitive bias are widespread, bringing many challenges to the investigation and evaluation of regional cultivated land quality and its data analysis and mining.
Establishing a systematic and interdisciplinary cognitive approach to cultivated land quality is urgent and necessary.
Therefore, we explored and developed a conceptual framework of the model for the cultivated land quality analysis from the data perspective, including cultivated land quality ontology, mapping, correlation, and decision models.
We identified the primary content of cultivated land quality perceptions and four cognitive mechanisms.
We built vital technologies, such as the collaborative perception of the quality of cultivated land, intelligent treatment, diagnostic evaluation, and simulation prediction.
Applying this analysis framework, we sorted out the frequency of indicators that characterize the function of cultivated land according to the literature in recent years and have built the cognitive system of cultivated land quality in the black soil region of Northeast China.
The system’s central component was production capacity and it had three components: a foundation, a guarantee, and an effect.
The black soil region cultivated land quality evaluation system has seven purposes involving 20–31 key indicators: production supply, threat control, farmland infrastructure regulation, cultivated land ecological maintenance, economics, social culture, and environmental protection.
In various application contexts, the system had many critical supporting technologies.
The results demonstrate that the framework has strong adaptability, efficiency, and scalability, which might offer a theoretical direction for further studies on the evaluation of the quality of cultivated land in the area.
The analysis framework established in this study is helpful to deepen the understanding of cultivated land quality systems from the perspective of big data.
Taking the big data of cultivated land quality as the driving force, combined with the technical methods of cultivated land quality analysis, the evaluation results of cultivated land quality under different scenarios and different objectives are optimized.
In addition, the framework can serve the practice of farmland management and engineering improvement, adapt to the management needs of different objects and different scales, and achieve the combination of theory and practice.

Related Results

What is Analytic Philosophy
What is Analytic Philosophy
Special Issue: What is Analytic PhilosophyReferencesHaaparantaG. P. Baker and P. M. S. Hacker. Frege: Logical Excavations. Oxford, Blackwell, 1984.M. Dummett. The Interpretation of...
Quantifying and Mapping the Impact of Construction Land Expansion on Cultivated Land Fragmentation—A Case Study of Fuqing City, China
Quantifying and Mapping the Impact of Construction Land Expansion on Cultivated Land Fragmentation—A Case Study of Fuqing City, China
To ensure the sustainable utilization of cultivated land resources, it is essential to quantify and map the characteristics of construction land and cultivated land and analyze the...
Effect of Land Use Change on Soil Carbon Stock and Selected Soil Properties in Gobu Sayyo, Western Ethiopia
Effect of Land Use Change on Soil Carbon Stock and Selected Soil Properties in Gobu Sayyo, Western Ethiopia
Abstract Background: Land-use change is one of the major factors affecting soil degradation. The pressures of the human population on land resources have increased land-use...
Comparison of Single-channel and Split-window Methods for Estimating Land Surface Temperature from Landsat 8 Data
Comparison of Single-channel and Split-window Methods for Estimating Land Surface Temperature from Landsat 8 Data
Abstract: Landsat 8 is the eighth satellite in the Landsat program, which provides images at 11 spectral channels, including 2 thermal infrared bands at a spatial resolution of 100...
Cultivated Robusta coffee meets wildCoffea canephora: Evidence of cultivated-wild hybridisation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Cultivated Robusta coffee meets wildCoffea canephora: Evidence of cultivated-wild hybridisation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
AbstractBackground and aimsPlant breeders are increasingly turning to crop wild relatives (CWRs) to ensure global food security amidst a rapidly changing environment. However, CWR ...
Effects of land use changes on the dynamics of selected soil properties in the Northeast Wollega, Ethiopia
Effects of land use changes on the dynamics of selected soil properties in the Northeast Wollega, Ethiopia
Abstract. Land use change can have negative or positive effects on soil quality. Our objective was to assess the effects of land uses changes on the dynamics of selected soil physi...
Ecosystem Carbon Storage in Southwest China’s Ecological Security Barrier Zone: Spatiotemporal Dynamics and Multi-Scenario Analysis
Ecosystem Carbon Storage in Southwest China’s Ecological Security Barrier Zone: Spatiotemporal Dynamics and Multi-Scenario Analysis
Land use/cover change (LUCC) strongly regulates ecosystem carbon storage and provides a critical entry point for carbon-oriented territorial spatial governance. However, balancing ...

Back to Top