4.7 Review

Context for Reproducibility and Replicability in Geospatial Unmanned Aircraft Systems

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 14, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs14174304

Keywords

reproducibility; replicability; UAS; remote sensing workflows; photogrammetry

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This article discusses the issues of reproducibility and replicability (R&R) in geospatial unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) workflows. Key barriers include awareness of time and resource requirements, accessibility of provenance, metadata, and version control, conceptualization of geographic problems, and geographic variability between study areas. Facilitating R&R in geospatial UAS applications can be achieved through providing provenance information and establishing R&R as an important aspect of UAS and related research design.
Multiple scientific disciplines face a so-called crisis of reproducibility and replicability (R&R) in which the validity of methodologies is questioned due to an inability to confirm experimental results. Trust in information technology (IT)-intensive workflows within geographic information science (GIScience), remote sensing, and photogrammetry depends on solutions to R&R challenges affecting multiple computationally driven disciplines. To date, there have only been very limited efforts to overcome R&R-related issues in remote sensing workflows in general, let alone those tied to unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) as a disruptive technology. This review identifies key barriers to, and suggests best practices for, R&R in geospatial UAS workflows as well as broader remote sensing applications. We examine both the relevance of R&R as well as existing support for R&R in remote sensing and photogrammetry assisted UAS workflows. Key barriers include: (1) awareness of time and resource requirements, (2) accessibility of provenance, metadata, and version control, (3) conceptualization of geographic problems, and (4) geographic variability between study areas. R&R in geospatial UAS applications can be facilitated through augmented access to provenance information for authorized stakeholders, and the establishment of R&R as an important aspect of UAS and related research design. Where ethically possible, future work should exemplify best practices for R&R research by publishing access to open data sets and workflows. Future work should also explore new avenues for access to source data, metadata, provenance, and methods to adapt principles of R&R according to geographic variability and stakeholder requirements.

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