1. Introduction
The UN adopted new Sustainable Development Goals aiming to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure prosperity for all. In order to reach these goals, there is a need for long-term impact and large-scale influence [
1]. Local partners know the problems they face and seek potential solutions. Adoption of a new approach (innovation) should have an observable advantage over previous techniques, allow for trialability, and fit into the local culture and resources availability. How can empirical research in journals be communicated effectively to stakeholders? There is a need for social and behavioral scientists to serve in translation science roles to help reach these goals.
Precision agriculture technology adoption is attracting more attention as a solution in food production to feed a growing population [
2]. The history of agricultural development shows that the adoption of innovative technologies has been one of the essential factors in the growth of agricultural production systems [
3,
4,
5]. Wolde et al. [
6] recommended the 2050 Food Challenge necessitates global science-based innovations that concentrate on sustainable agricultural practices that support healthful dietary solutions.
From the perspective of information flow, the diffusion process of agricultural technology innovation involves government units, agricultural research and extension units, agricultural marketing units, media units, and consumers. Agricultural extension plays an important role in the development [
7] and knowledge transfer [
8] of innovations that sustain agricultural productivity. There are increased efforts from agricultural extension to promote precision agriculture (PA) in production contexts, such as viticulture to improve sustainability in Italy [
9]. In Nigerian drylands, agricultural extension has been promoting precision approaches to teach fertilizer application [
10]. Pluralized agricultural extension is perpetually faced with sustainability issues such as precision farming due to the cautious nature of farmers toward change [
11].
PA technology is a management tool for monitoring the efficiency of resource inputs while reducing chemical use to avoid environmental damage and produce high quality products to satisfy growing demand on food [
12,
13]. Precision farming is a holistic, innovative systems approach that assists farmers in managing crop and soil variability to decrease costs, improve yield quality and quantity, and enhance farm income [
14]. PA applies traditional farming practices with new technology, practices, and economic drivers to enhance sustainability in a dynamic balance [
15]. Studies have reported positive outcomes from PA adoption, including economic savings in productivity factors [
16], increasing yield and environmental sustainability [
17], and improving food security and community economic vitality in developing regions [
18]. The International Society for Precision Agriculture (ISPA) provides clarity and guidance on this important concept, to achieve the agricultural production quality, create production profits, and improve the efficiency of resource use and environmental sustainability [
19]. Developing an understanding of PA adoption attributes is necessary in order to assist extension practitioners in the promotion and adoption of PA. Empirical evidence is needed for stakeholders to adopt this innovation [
20].
The history of agricultural development suggests the adoption of innovative technologies has been a critical factor to improve sustainable livelihoods. However, several studies specified that the adoption rates of PA were low [
21,
22,
23]. Decisions by farmers to adopt new technologies are multifaceted. PA adoption processes are complicated, and the intricacies exist in diverse elements and interactions [
24]. Farmers are intrigued by PA innovations but are less convinced of its value even though they believe that PA technologies are useful to farming [
25,
26]. Barriers to PA adoption included technical issues with equipment, access to service software, the lack of compatibility of equipment to current farm operations [
27], concerns regarding service providers misuse of agricultural data, challenges of managing the amount of PA data [
28], user-friendly designs [
10] and the cost [
29,
30].
Rogers’ [
31] diffusion of innovation was applied as the theoretical framework to determine whether research on PA included adoption features that impact the rate of adoption. Adoption refers to the decision to make full use of the innovation as the best available course of action, while rejection refers to the decision not to adopt an innovation. In adopting PA, knowledge and competences are required to acquire and manage data on farms [
28]. Extension participants’ knowledge increased when taught PA innovations through hands-on experiences with software, coupled with instructor guided and self-directed instruction [
32].
Rogers’ [
31] five perceived attributes include relative advantage, compatibility, complexity, trialability, and observability. These attributes show research on farmers’ adoption of PA factors can be impacted by extension specialists’ workshops and training programs. Relative advantage, the first persuasion attribute, refers to the degree to which innovation is perceived as being better that to an existing idea or technology it replaced. The second attribute, compatibility, represents the degree to which innovation aligns with existing technology, past experience, and the needs of potential adopters. The third persuasion attribute, complexity, is the degree to an individual perceived as the relative difficulty of understanding and using an innovation. The fourth attribute is trialability, which is the degree to which an innovation may be tested. Observability, the last attribute, is the degree to which the results of an innovation can be seen by others.
A study on PA adoption by Lowerberg-DoBoer and Erickson [
26] indicated that most research was aimed at understanding the factors of PA adoption at the farm level. Previous studies found that the use of PA was associated with higher production and profits [
33,
34]; however, whether the adoption factors related to yield and profit depended on the development of agricultural extension systems. There are few studies on the relationship between agricultural extension systems and PA technology adoption. Therefore, it is necessary to review the literature to examine the development of PA technology for evidenced-based decisions and translational science to promote adoption through extension systems to stakeholders.
This study implemented a systematic literature review over the last 20 years to determine PA adoption attributes for extension agents to improve sustainability among farmers. There were three research questions that guided this study: (a) What were the common adoption attributes promoting PA? (b) What were the main crop varieties in promoting PA adoption? and (c) What countries were represented? This systematic literature review describes current trends and future directions in promoting PA adoption.
2. Materials and Methods
A systematic review is a method using an exhaustive and comprehensive search based on explicit and strict protocols to review the existing literature with a synthesis of data focusing on a topic or on related key questions [
35]. There were five steps utilized to collect, analyze, and interpret literature in this study. The first step was to identify the critical question of the research. Then, the researchers formulated the search parameters of the data selection procedure. The third step was to implement the systematic search procedure in the database. Data analysis was the fourth step, and the interpretation and summary of the materials were undertaken in the fifth step [
36].
There were a variety of words employed to describe PA, including precision agriculture, precision farming, smart farming, smart agriculture, climate-smart farming, etc. Data collected from databases such as ScienceDirect with these terms were not specific enough. The intent was to investigate the trends of PA diffusion, not the characteristics or application of PA. Therefore, to obtain the targeted literature, the researchers chose Precision Agriculture, the premiere journal publishing PA scholarship, to conduct their electronic search. Precision Agriculture provides an effective forum for the dissemination of original research on topics in the rapidly evolving context of PA.
To understand the characteristics and role of the agricultural extension system in promoting PA, the researchers selected 12 journals focusing on the field of agricultural extension with the keyword, “precision agriculture.” Six extension journals were identified by SCOPUS through a title search with extension as a keyword; Journal of Agricultural Education and Extension, Journal of Extension, Journal of Agricultural Extension, Agricultural Administration and Extension, International Journal of Agricultural Extension, and Journal of International Agricultural and Extension Education. However, none of these SCOPUS identified extension journals had literature respective to PA adoption in the last 20 years. The researchers expanded their systematic review to six additional extension focused journals that had published agricultural technology adoption studies all over the world; Journal of Extension and Human Sciences, Journal of Extension Systems, Journal of Extension Education, Journal of Agricultural Extension Management, Journal of Extension and Research, and Journal of Agricultural Extension and Rural Development. The additional six extension focused journals produced zero publications respective to PA adoption. Results were filtered by key terms and publication dates from 1999 to 2020 to ensure unbiased samples were collected. Precision Agriculture was the only journal in the systematic review’s thirteen journal assessment of 20 years that produced PA adoption inquiries within this study’s parameters and keywords.
The terms (T) and combinations (C) authors utilized for literature search were displayed in
Table 1.
Literature was collected whose titles met the following themes on the publication title: (1) Production quality; (2) Improved profitability; (3) Improved the efficiency of resource use; and (4) Environmental sustainability. The themes were taken under the definition of PA by the ISPA (ISPA, 2019). These themes were selected based on the purpose of this study. Since our aim was to find the research that focused on PA adoption based on the attributes of PA. The research team established a set of code definitions and data collecting criteria (see
Table 2).
2.1. Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
Each article that met the coded themes was examined and were either included or excluded from further investigation based upon the following criteria: (a) publication type was peer-reviewed article that written in English; (b) search terms appearing in the title of articles; and (c) articles must be published between 1999 and 2020.
Table 3 displays the implemented criteria for the systematic review.
2.2. Data Extraction
There were 38 articles from the combination of keyword searches needed for further eligibility screening. Six duplicate studies, and one book review article were excluded from the data analysis after the second review. As a result, 31 publications were investigated.
Five elements of the articles were documented, including the title, the crop varieties examined in the respective article, the region in which the study was conducted, the number of research keywords used, and the unveiled innovation attributes respective to PA. Data were extracted manually following a review of each full-text of publication and recorded into an Excel spreadsheet to analyze.
2.3. Data Analysis
After data collection, all the publications were analyzed with the crop varieties, regions, and keyword co-occurrence to provide descriptive statistics with narrative explanations. Three researchers provided interrater reliability in the analysis process. A VOSviewer tool was used to calculate the number of publications in which two keywords appeared together in the title, abstract, or keyword list. VOSviewer creates a cluster analysis. Clustering is a method that has the advantage of setting objects into a group by similarity or dissimilarity [
37]. In general, keywords with high relevance tend to be grouped into the same cluster. Node size is related to the frequency of occurrence. The smaller the node, the lower the frequency of occurrence. The line describes the linkage between two keywords, which presented the connection between two keywords appearing in the same article. The thicker line means the stronger connection between the two keywords [
38]. In this study, authors conducted a network analysis to display the trend and current status of researchers in promoting PA.
4. Discussion
The data presented here inform international agricultural extension agents with evidence to promote the adoption of PA. Characteristics of PA as an innovation include profitability and efficiency of resource use, production quality, and environmental sustainability as attributes. Agricultural commodities produced from PA technology ranged from wheat to peas. The majority of PA inquiries were conducted in the United States over the last twenty years, which was consistent with the rate of adoption in the United States. PA application allows farmers to better select crop varieties and allocate needed resources to reduce costs and increase profit margins. This study indicated that PA was relatively adopted in grain crops, such as wheat and corn, and legume crops, such as soybean, those often grown to increase the food crop production to address food security.
Rogers’ [
31] five perceived attributes of innovation explained the factors most PA technologies commonly aligned to increase the adoption of PA. We concluded that relative advantage and compatibility were two major factors that researchers considered to promote their innovation. If something is perceived as better than the innovation proceeding and compatible with farmers current situation, the rate of adoption will increase.
In this study, there were more publications targeted on improving profitability to promote PA adoption. The results of the keyword frequency revealed that profitability and economics were highly cited by researchers in the publication. Profitability motivates producers to adopt PA because the innovation meets farmers economic needs also contributing a relative advantage.
Compatibility was another important reason that encouraged producers who adopt PA. The number of articles published with the “Improved the efficiency of resource use” theme was the second highest, which equates to Rogers’ [
31] compatibility that innovations align with the farmers’ norm of belief and perspectives. Farmers’ norms focus on producing crops in an efficient way, such as reducing the fertilizer usage amount, implementing more environmentally friendly production systems, or helping manual harvesting work, farmers are more likely to adopt for these reasons.
Co-occurrence analysis was implemented to obtain dominant keywords from PA adoption inquiries. Utilizing the VOSviewer tool, the researchers found clear themes on the diffusion trends. Our team identified three topic clusters of PA researchers, including profitability, crop, and agricultural economics, which demonstrate a research direction globally. The keyword frequency results denoted experimental and crop yield were highly cited in the publications that referred to Rogers’ [
31] trialability and observability attributes of the innovation. There were 30 of 31 articles analyzed in this study that described crop items in the experimental field which demonstrates the innovation to farmers. Improved profitability was the dominant theme that impacted sustainability of PA to improve farmers’ income [
70]. Producers could estimate and predict the yield and increase profit with PA applications.
The second dominant theme was improved efficiency of resource use related to farmers’ concern about whether the PA technology was beneficial for producers to efficiently manage their manual labor and production materials [
71,
72]. Farmers who adopted PA were more efficient.
Theme three production quality indicated that farmers could use PA to improve the crop quality more precisely, such as by using the recommended amount of fertilizer based on the data, to have better market value on the production.
Technology’s perceived complexity can be a factor slowing the rate of farmer adoption [
31], and therefore, decreasing the odds of sustainability. None of the reviewed literature, except one inquiry, addressed the complexity of PA. This study revealed low PA complexity was the most poorly communicated adoption attribute, supporting Pathak et al.’s [
24] finding that complexity is composed of multifarious exchanges. Through trialability and observability, it is imperative to demonstrate the ease of operation and cost of PA in comparison to increased efficiencies (cost–benefit analysis). However, if PA is perceived excessively complex or if complexity is unknown, farmers are likely to reject PA adoption [
31]. So in essence, the attribute of complexity is about the adoption of technologies that are perceived as simple, or less complex. It is interesting that “ease of use” was not a prevalent theme.
5. Conclusions
With the continued increase in world population, limited capacity to expand the availability of natural resources (e.g., water and land), and a changing climate, there is a need to expand the adoption of precision agriculture approaches and tools. PA seeks to increase agricultural production without degrading natural resource quality and building resiliency of production systems to changing climate. Achieving these goals requires agricultural extensionists to promote innovative tools that quickly and reliably measure and monitor plant, soil, and atmospheric parameters in agricultural systems. As these tools and approaches are developed, it is important to train the current and future agricultural workforce, including educators, extension personnel, farmers, and ranchers with the advanced and necessary knowledge and skills in precision agriculture technologies. Using Rogers’ attributes of an innovation as a theoretical lens to analyze research manuscripts, extension services can incorporate translation science to promote new practices.
This systematic literature review is exploratory and thus future research is needed to provide greater generalizability. As shown in
Figure 2, our study found that wheat was the main crop variety of choice in promoting PA adoption, and PA adoption studies mainly were conducted in the United States. However, rice is one of the top production crops globally, yet none of the PA adoption literature focused on rice. China, India, and Indonesia are the three main rice-producing countries in the world and China is also one of the largest producers of wheat. However, PA adoption in China, India, and Indonesia were not present in the literature from the systematic review.
This study was conducted to understand PA adoption and the innovation’s sustainability by farmers to support food production and increase food security. The agricultural extension system plays an important role in the diffusion process of agricultural innovation. The agricultural extension transfer process promotes education and training for farmers to assist in the adoption of PA innovations to advance agricultural development and provide sustainable solutions to agricultural issues [
73]. However, zero literature matched the data extraction criteria from 12 agricultural extension journals, revealing that there was a chasm in the literature regarding agricultural extension agents, officers, or specialists’ promotion of PA adoption. This finding is important due to the unknown of
who is professionally developing agricultural extension field staff to promote PA adoption to target audiences. In addition to the who is the how. The data from this study’s extension journal searches were void of
how extension agents are trained to improve farmer PA adoption and assessing the adoption’s impact. This speaks volumes if global agricultural extension field staff are expected to serve as change agents who promote and assess farmer PA adoption to improve local food security. Beyond the
who and the
how, is the first, and more appropriate question: are extension agents being professionally developed in the paradigm of farmer PA adoption? If not, sustainable PA adoption may never occur. The vast majority of PA adoption studies occurred in the U.S., but none of the studies indicated an extension agent knowledge transfer process. In addition to farmers, agricultural extension agents need education and training in PA adoption too.
The results of this study indicated previous inquiries did not fully examine the five attributes to predict PA adoption. It is likely these researchers are content experts and not familiar with change strategies, adoption and diffusion theory, or even translation science. In particular, our inquiry found researchers exercised relative advantage [
24] and compatibility [
27] as two dominant attributes to strengthen the adoption of PA. Improved profitability and efficiency were the driving factors of adoption uncovered in the systematic review juxtaposed to Pathak et al.’s findings [
24]. This study provides a benchmark for partnerships with global extension services to promote adoption (when and if these systems are cultural appropriate). PA efficiencies can only impact stakeholders if the evidence from research is translated to the end users. International extension agents can act as translational scientists to increase communication channels for PA adoption primarily in trialability and observability. As a part of farmer field schools or extension workshops, the issue of “complexity” can be addressed by demonstrating and teaching farmers the ease of use of these technologies.