Cooley Savannah, Jenkins Amber, Schaeffer Blake, Bormann Kat J, Abdallah Adel, Melton Forrest, Granger Stephanie, Graczyk Indrani
NASA Western Water Applications Office, Applied Sciences Program, United States.
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, United States.
Technol Soc. 2022 Aug;70:1-11. doi: 10.1016/j.techsoc.2022.101994.
Now more than ever it is critical for researchers and decision makers to work together to improve how we manage and preserve the planet's natural resources. Water managers in the western U.S., as in many regions of the world, are facing unprecedented challenges including increasing water demands and diminishing or unpredictable supplies. The transfer of knowledge (KT) and technology (TT) between researchers and entities that manage natural resources can help address these issues. However, numerous barriers impede the advancement of such transfer, particularly between organizations that do not operate in a profit-oriented context and for which best practices for university-industry collaborative engagement may not be sufficient. Frameworks designed around environmental KT - such as the recently-developed Research-Integration-Utilization (RIU) model - can be leveraged to address these barriers. Here, we examine two examples in which NASA Earth science satellite data and remote-sensing technology are used to improve the management of water availability and quality. Despite differences in scope and outcomes, both of these case studies adopt KT and TT best practices and can be further understood through the lens of the RIU model. We show how these insights could be adopted by NASA through a conceptual framework that charts individual- and organizational-level integration milestones alongside technical milestones. Environmental organizations can learn from this approach and adapt it to fit their own institutional needs, integrating KT/TT models and best practices while recognizing and leveraging existing institutional logics that suit their organization's unique history, technical capability and priorities.
现在,研究人员和决策者比以往任何时候都更需要共同努力,以改善我们管理和保护地球自然资源的方式。与世界上许多地区一样,美国西部的水资源管理者正面临前所未有的挑战,包括不断增长的用水需求以及日益减少或不可预测的供水。研究人员与自然资源管理实体之间的知识转移(KT)和技术转移(TT)有助于解决这些问题。然而,众多障碍阻碍了这种转移的推进,特别是在不以盈利为导向的组织之间,而且大学与产业合作参与的最佳实践可能并不充分。围绕环境知识转移设计的框架,如最近开发的研究-整合-利用(RIU)模型,可以用来克服这些障碍。在这里,我们研究两个例子,其中美国国家航空航天局(NASA)的地球科学卫星数据和遥感技术被用于改善水资源可用性和水质的管理。尽管范围和结果存在差异,但这两个案例研究都采用了知识转移和技术转移的最佳实践,并且可以通过RIU模型进一步理解。我们展示了NASA如何通过一个概念框架采用这些见解,该框架除了列出技术里程碑外,还绘制了个人和组织层面的整合里程碑。环境组织可以借鉴这种方法并进行调整,以适应自身的机构需求,在整合知识转移/技术转移模型和最佳实践的同时,认识并利用适合其组织独特历史、技术能力和优先事项的现有机构逻辑。