About this Research Topic
It is important to note that the intertwining uncertainties including the degradation of marine ecosystems, frequent marine disasters, and maritime trade conflicts create a nonlinear and complex network within marine economy and management. Current research on comprehensive assessment, scientific prediction, and decision-making of cross-cutting issues in this field is insufficient, hindering the development of effective tools to handle volatility, periodicity, and nonlinearity in quantitative analysis of the marine economy, as well as sensitivity, vulnerability, and complexity in integrated marine management. Therefore, it is imperative to leverage interdisciplinary knowledge and technologies from management science, quantitative economics, systems engineering, and others to drive innovative research on prediction and decision-making methods aimed at addressing practical challenges in marine economy and management. This underscores the pressing need for and importance of developing into this research topic.
The scope of this research topic focuses on innovating and applying adaptive forecasting and decision-making theories, models, and methods to effectively tackle diverse challenges in marine economy and management, promoting sustainable marine development. It calls for original and novel papers in any of the following topics:
• Modeling of complex systems in marine economy and management
• Quantitative analysis and forecasting marine economy and management
• Intelligent decision-making and intelligent ocean construction
• Climate change governance and marine security
• Early warning and control of marine environmental system
• Marine ecological protection and sustainable development
Keywords: marine economy and management, marine complex system, forecasting and decision-making, marine sustainable development, quantitative analysis and modeling
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.