TY - JOUR
T1 - The smartphone fallacy – when spatial data are reported at spatial scales finer than the organisms themselves
AU - Meiri, Shai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© the authors, CC-BY 4.0 license
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Thankfully, the days when specimen localities could be described in extremely vague terms such as “Peru” or “Indochina” are long gone. But the pendulum has swung too far the other way.Latitude and longitude data of specimens and study areas (such as small nature reserves) are nowadays commonly reported to the 0.000001 of a degree (or 0.01 of a second) or even more “precisely”.This is done either because of converting across measurement systems or because hand-held devices and internet sources provide this kind of precision. We probably report this degree of precision because we are reluctant to round – feeling it would make the data better and more “scientific”. I point out the scale referred to by different degrees of geographic precision (e.g., ~10cm for 6 decimal places) and argue that such degree of precision is false for two reasons:first, it is finer than actually achievable by hand held devices such as smartphones and GPS receivers (and much finer than we can tell from a map). Second, for large animals, such precision can refer to one part of the organism, and not another.
AB - Thankfully, the days when specimen localities could be described in extremely vague terms such as “Peru” or “Indochina” are long gone. But the pendulum has swung too far the other way.Latitude and longitude data of specimens and study areas (such as small nature reserves) are nowadays commonly reported to the 0.000001 of a degree (or 0.01 of a second) or even more “precisely”.This is done either because of converting across measurement systems or because hand-held devices and internet sources provide this kind of precision. We probably report this degree of precision because we are reluctant to round – feeling it would make the data better and more “scientific”. I point out the scale referred to by different degrees of geographic precision (e.g., ~10cm for 6 decimal places) and argue that such degree of precision is false for two reasons:first, it is finer than actually achievable by hand held devices such as smartphones and GPS receivers (and much finer than we can tell from a map). Second, for large animals, such precision can refer to one part of the organism, and not another.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124830316&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.21425/F5FBG38642
DO - 10.21425/F5FBG38642
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AN - SCOPUS:85124830316
SN - 1948-6596
VL - 10
JO - Frontiers of Biogeography
JF - Frontiers of Biogeography
IS - 1-2
M1 - e38642
ER -