Archive/Environmental Priorities and Methodological Shifts in Agricultural Sustainability Assessment: A Text-Mining Analysis of Scientific Literature
Environmental Priorities and Methodological Shifts in Agricultural Sustainability Assessment: A Text-Mining Analysis of Scientific Literature
Angie Riascos-España, Heiber Andres Trujillo, Fernando H. Silva García et al.
9 juillet 2026
en

Abstract

Agricultural sustainability assessment is increasingly required to characterize how food production systems interact with land, soil, water, carbon dynamics, and broader environmental change. However, the extent to which scientific assessment methods capture these environmental-system interactions remains unclear. This study mapped methodological and thematic trends in agricultural sustainability research through text mining of 3302 bibliographic records retrieved from the Web of Science Core Collection, which was selected because of its standardized metadata structure and suitability for reproducible text-mining analysis, covering publications from 2003 to 1 March 2025. After corpus preprocessing and tokenization, term-frequency analysis, dimension-specific lexical classification, co-occurrence networks, and temporal bibliometric trends were used to identify dominant environmental themes and assessment approaches. The results revealed a clear predominance of the environmental dimension in the analyzed literature, particularly through terms associated with land, carbon, soil, and water resources, whereas social and economic dimensions displayed lower lexical representation. Food, production, and systems formed a central semantic cluster linking environmental assessment with food security. Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) was the most frequently identified methodology, reflecting the prominence of impact-oriented environmental evaluation. In contrast, integrative and farm-scale frameworks, including Driver–Pressure–State–Impact–Response (DPSIR), Sustainability Assessment of Food and Agriculture Systems (SAFA), and the Tool for Agroecology Performance Evaluation (TAPE), among others, indicated increasing attention to governance, resilience, and agroecological transitions. These findings show that text mining can support environmental research by identifying methodological biases and emerging priorities in agriculture–environment interactions. Strengthening integrated assessment approaches will be essential for managing natural resources and supporting resilient and environmentally sustainable food systems.

IPC Classification

G06H04A01

Keywords

environmentalprioritiesmethodologicalshiftsagriculturalsustainabilityassessmenttext-mininganalysisscientificliteratureearthincreasinglyrequiredcharacterizefoodproductionsystemsinteractlandsoilwatercarbondynamics
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