TY - JOUR
T1 - An ocean practices maturity model
T2 - from good to best practices
AU - Mantovani, Carlo
AU - Pearlman, Jay
AU - Rubio, Anna
AU - Przeslawski, Rachel
AU - Bushnell, Mark
AU - Simpson, Pauline
AU - Corgnati, Lorenzo
AU - Alvarez, Enrique
AU - Cosoli, Simone
AU - Roarty, Hugh
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 Mantovani, Pearlman, Rubio, Przeslawski, Bushnell, Simpson, Corgnati, Alvarez, Cosoli and Roarty.
PY - 2024/8/20
Y1 - 2024/8/20
N2 - Ocean practices, intended as a wide spectrum of methodologies supporting ocean-related research, operations, and applications, are constantly developed and improved to enable informed decision-making. Practices start from the idea of an individual or a group and often evolve towards what can be called good or best practices. This bottom-up approach may in principle result in different paths for the evolution of each practice, and ultimately generate situations where it is not clear to a new user how to compare two practices aiming at the same objective, and determine which one is best. Also, although a best practice is supposed to be the result of a multi-institutional collaborative effort based on the principles of evidence, repeatability and comparability, a set of individual requirements is not yet defined in literature for a practice to be considered a good, better, and ultimately a best practice. This paper proposes a method for addressing those questions and presents a new maturity model for ocean practices, built upon existing maturity models for systems and software, developed and adopted in the last decades. The model provides attributes for assessing both the maturity of the practice description and its implementation. It also provides a framework for analyzing gaps and suggesting actions for practice evolution. The model has been tested against a series of widely adopted practices and the results are reported and discussed. This work facilitates a common approach for developing and assessing practices, from which greater interoperability and trust can be achieved.
AB - Ocean practices, intended as a wide spectrum of methodologies supporting ocean-related research, operations, and applications, are constantly developed and improved to enable informed decision-making. Practices start from the idea of an individual or a group and often evolve towards what can be called good or best practices. This bottom-up approach may in principle result in different paths for the evolution of each practice, and ultimately generate situations where it is not clear to a new user how to compare two practices aiming at the same objective, and determine which one is best. Also, although a best practice is supposed to be the result of a multi-institutional collaborative effort based on the principles of evidence, repeatability and comparability, a set of individual requirements is not yet defined in literature for a practice to be considered a good, better, and ultimately a best practice. This paper proposes a method for addressing those questions and presents a new maturity model for ocean practices, built upon existing maturity models for systems and software, developed and adopted in the last decades. The model provides attributes for assessing both the maturity of the practice description and its implementation. It also provides a framework for analyzing gaps and suggesting actions for practice evolution. The model has been tested against a series of widely adopted practices and the results are reported and discussed. This work facilitates a common approach for developing and assessing practices, from which greater interoperability and trust can be achieved.
KW - best practices
KW - high frequency radar
KW - maturity model
KW - methodology
KW - multibeam
KW - ocean practices
KW - sea level
KW - value chain
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85203185298&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3389/fmars.2024.1415374
DO - 10.3389/fmars.2024.1415374
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85203185298
SN - 2296-7745
VL - 11
JO - Frontiers in Marine Science
JF - Frontiers in Marine Science
M1 - 1415374
ER -