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State spaces for agriculture: A meta-systematic design automation framework.

Bryan RunckAdam StreedDiane R WangPatrick M EwingMichael B KantarBarath Raghavan
Published in: PNAS nexus (2023)
Agriculture is a designed system with the largest areal footprint of any human activity. In some cases, the designs within agriculture emerged over thousands of years, such as the use of rows for the spatial organization of crops. In other cases, designs were deliberately chosen and implemented over decades, as during the Green Revolution. Currently, much work in the agricultural sciences focuses on evaluating designs that could improve agriculture's sustainability. However, approaches to agricultural system design are diverse and fragmented, relying on individual intuition and discipline-specific methods to meet stakeholders' often semi-incompatible goals. This ad-hoc approach presents the risk that agricultural science will overlook nonobvious designs with large societal benefits. Here, we introduce a state space framework, a common approach from computer science, to address the problem of proposing and evaluating agricultural designs computationally. This approach overcomes limitations of current agricultural system design methods by enabling a general set of computational abstractions to explore and select from a very large agricultural design space, which can then be empirically tested.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • heavy metals
  • risk assessment
  • human health
  • public health
  • endothelial cells
  • finite element analysis
  • machine learning