Evidence advisory board

Photo: Trevor Butterworth

Evidence advisory board

We are working with Nature Research to publish a focused collection on SDG 2 in 2020, subject to the highest standards of peer review. These materials include evidence synthesis articles and some editorial content. To help guide us on the selection of these materials we are pleased to collaborate with the following global expert advisory board.

Mario Herrero

Mario Herrero

Chief Research Scientist of Agriculture and Food at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)

Catherine Bertini

Catherine Bertini

Fellow, Rockefeller Foundation, Chicago Council, and Chairperson of GAIN

Boaz Blackie Keizire

Boaz Blackie Keizire

Head of Policy and Advocacy, Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA)

Joachim von Braun

Joachim von Braun

Professor and Director, Center for Development Research, Bonn University

W. Ronnie Coffman

W. Ronnie Coffman

Andrew H. & James S. Tisch Distinguished University Professor, Cornell University

Uma Lele

Uma Lele

Independent scholar and development economist

Segenet Kelemu

Segenet Kelemu

Director General, International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (icipe)

Njuguna Ndung’u

Njuguna Ndung’u

Executive Director, African Economic Research Council (AERC)

Will Martin

Will Martin

Senior Research Fellow, International Food Policy Research Institute

Jamie Morrison

Jamie Morrison

Director and Strategic Programme Leader, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

Martin Piñeiro

Martin Piñeiro

Director CEO Group, Chair, Committee on Agriculture, Argentine Council of International Relations

Prabhu Pingali

Prabhu Pingali

Professor and Founding Director of the Tata-Cornell Institute for Agriculture and Nutrition (TCI)

Nicola Randall

Nicola Randall

Director, Centre for Evidence Based Agriculture, Harper Adams University

Ruerd Ruben

Ruerd Ruben

Professor and Coordinator, Research programs on food security, value chains and impact assessment Wageningen Economic Research

Lindiwe Majela Sibanda

Lindiwe Majela Sibanda

Food Systems Champion and Farmer

Maximo Torero

Maximo Torero

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Assistant Director General of the Economic and Social Development Department

Richard Florizone

Richard Florizone

IISD’s President and CEO

Paul Winters

Paul Winters

Associate Vice-President, Strategy and Knowledge Department, International Fund for Agricultural Development

Li Xiaoyun

Li Xiaoyun

Distinguished Professor, China Agricultural University

How we assess the quality of evidence

Evidence syntheses, like scoping and systematic reviews, bring all the studies on a particular issue or intervention together to evaluate what they mean. It’s a process with specific steps designed to minimize bias and to ensure rigor and transparency, so that someone else could replicate the process and reach the same conclusion.

Each of the eight intervention research teams is supported by research synthesis experts. The first critical step is for the authors to create a protocol for each review. This is the roadmap setting out how the review is going to be done, how the reviewers will decide what studies or data to include or exclude in the review, and how those studies and data will be reviewed.

One particular issue facing agricultural research is that it has fewer randomized control trials than, say, medicine, and needs to be inclusive of many different kinds of evidence and data. This makes scientific appraisal more difficult. For this reason, we are taking a mixed-methods approach, which combines quantitative and qualitative evidence on complex and pressing questions, and which has been successful in previous agricultural systematic reviews. Groups with deep experience in mixed-methods reviews, such as the Campbell Collaboration and the Center for Evidence-Based Agriculture have worked closely with us to explore appropriate methods and offer expert advice.

Once each research team reached a consensus on the protocol, it was published—and it cannot be changed. Publishing ahead of doing the review protects its replicability and transparency. It also gives us a chance to share our work, what we are doing, and allow for scientific dissent as part of the process.

All the protocols have been uploaded to the OSF open-science platform. You can find links to these on each question pag

 

Evidence synthesis

1. Formulate a research question

2. Search for similar systematic reviews

3. Identify all relevant evidence bases

4. Develop and test search strategies

5. Write inclusion and exclusion criteria

6. Publish protocol

7. Execute searching and screen results

8. Conduct quality of evidence assessment

9. Review and synthesize results

Using machine learning to find
policy interventions to end hunger

Given the amount of information available, relying only on keyword searching doesn’t work. If we want to understand the fullness of human knowledge, we need to incorporate new methods of discovery that account for the way we describe similar things in different ways.

Over the past decade, there have been enormous advances in artificial intelligence that enable computers to analyze the way we use language. This involves training a computer program to recognize relationships between words, so that it can capture the different ways people describe similar things.

We used machine learning and natural language processing (NLP) to create and analyze a preliminary dataset of ~50,000 articles and reports (2008-2018) about smallholder farmers from science journals and research and development organizations. We used a variety of search terms, such as small-scale food producers, rural farmers, and subsistence and contract farmers.

In order to increase coverage of materials published in low and middle income countries, we included the full table of contents from the African Journal of Biotechnology, African Journal of Agricultural Research, African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development, African Crop Science Journal, Indian Journal of Agronomy, and the Indian Journal of Agricultural Economics.

In order to increase coverage of materials published in low and middle income countries, we included the full table of contents from the African Journal of Biotechnology, African Journal of Agricultural Research, African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development, African Crop Science Journal, Indian Journal of Agronomy, and the Indian Journal of Agricultural Economics.