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An expert systems approach to decision-making in coastal-zone management

Expert systems are computer programs designed to mimic human experts in solving problems. This report investigates the feasibility of using expert systems to aid decision-makers in coastal zone management and development planning who are undertaking environmental assessments of coastal resort develo...

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Main Author: Murphy, Kerry O'Hagan
Other Authors: Fuggle, Richard
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2026
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Murphy, Kerry O'Hagan
author2 Fuggle, Richard
author_browse Fuggle, Richard
Murphy, Kerry O'Hagan
author_facet Fuggle, Richard
Murphy, Kerry O'Hagan
author_sort Murphy, Kerry O'Hagan
collection Thesis
description Expert systems are computer programs designed to mimic human experts in solving problems. This report investigates the feasibility of using expert systems to aid decision-makers in coastal zone management and development planning who are undertaking environmental assessments of coastal resort development proposals. The approach adopted in the study is as follows: First, determine what characteristics an expert system should have in order to make it suitable to address problems often encountered in coastal zone management and development planning. Second, determine what problem-solving methods may be suitably applied using an expert systems approach, in order to derive acceptable solutions to these problems. Third, select a narrow domain from each of three important problem areas for modelling purposes. Identify sources of expertise for each domain and extract the required knowledge from them. Encode this knowledge with the aid of a suitable expert system development tool, so as to form three prototype expert systems. Each expert system is to determine one of the following: (a) The likelihood of occurrence of significant negative effects of septic tank effluent disposal (b) The likelihood of exceeding the recreational carrying capacity for craft on a limited surface area of water (c) The need for different recreational management options for craft using a surface water feature also used by birds. Fourth, construct a fourth prototype expert system whose task is to co-ordinate the others and to use their results to help the user (decision-maker) to determine suitable approaches to finding acceptable development constraints and management options for coastal resort development proposals. One major finding is that suitable for addressing rule- based the Kinds expert systems are of problem often encountered in coastal zone management and development planning provided they incorporate certain features. These features are, inter alia: (1) The ability to address multiple goals at a time. (2) The ability to combine forward and backward reasoning in different ways. (3) The ability to call up and communicate with other programs, including other expert systems. (4) The ability to work with mathematical variables and formulae (within the rules). (5) The ability to work with facts and beliefs. Another major finding is that it is feasible to use a rule-based expert system to co-ordinate others and to use their results to help the user (a multi-disciplinary expert) to determine acceptable solutions to multi-disciplinary problems in coastal-zone management and development planning.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:30.019Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
publisherStr Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/43003 An expert systems approach to decision-making in coastal-zone management Murphy, Kerry O'Hagan Fuggle, Richard Environmental and Geographical Science Expert systems are computer programs designed to mimic human experts in solving problems. This report investigates the feasibility of using expert systems to aid decision-makers in coastal zone management and development planning who are undertaking environmental assessments of coastal resort development proposals. The approach adopted in the study is as follows: First, determine what characteristics an expert system should have in order to make it suitable to address problems often encountered in coastal zone management and development planning. Second, determine what problem-solving methods may be suitably applied using an expert systems approach, in order to derive acceptable solutions to these problems. Third, select a narrow domain from each of three important problem areas for modelling purposes. Identify sources of expertise for each domain and extract the required knowledge from them. Encode this knowledge with the aid of a suitable expert system development tool, so as to form three prototype expert systems. Each expert system is to determine one of the following: (a) The likelihood of occurrence of significant negative effects of septic tank effluent disposal (b) The likelihood of exceeding the recreational carrying capacity for craft on a limited surface area of water (c) The need for different recreational management options for craft using a surface water feature also used by birds. Fourth, construct a fourth prototype expert system whose task is to co-ordinate the others and to use their results to help the user (decision-maker) to determine suitable approaches to finding acceptable development constraints and management options for coastal resort development proposals. One major finding is that suitable for addressing rule- based the Kinds expert systems are of problem often encountered in coastal zone management and development planning provided they incorporate certain features. These features are, inter alia: (1) The ability to address multiple goals at a time. (2) The ability to combine forward and backward reasoning in different ways. (3) The ability to call up and communicate with other programs, including other expert systems. (4) The ability to work with mathematical variables and formulae (within the rules). (5) The ability to work with facts and beliefs. Another major finding is that it is feasible to use a rule-based expert system to co-ordinate others and to use their results to help the user (a multi-disciplinary expert) to determine acceptable solutions to multi-disciplinary problems in coastal-zone management and development planning. 2026-03-18T10:18:31Z 2026-03-18T10:18:31Z 1988 2024-07-19T13:31:41Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43003 en eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Environmental and Geographical Science
Murphy, Kerry O'Hagan
An expert systems approach to decision-making in coastal-zone management
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An expert systems approach to decision-making in coastal-zone management
title_full An expert systems approach to decision-making in coastal-zone management
title_fullStr An expert systems approach to decision-making in coastal-zone management
title_full_unstemmed An expert systems approach to decision-making in coastal-zone management
title_short An expert systems approach to decision-making in coastal-zone management
title_sort expert systems approach to decision making in coastal zone management
topic Environmental and Geographical Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43003
work_keys_str_mv AT murphykerryohagan anexpertsystemsapproachtodecisionmakingincoastalzonemanagement
AT murphykerryohagan expertsystemsapproachtodecisionmakingincoastalzonemanagement