Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs/drones) have emerged as transformative tools for coastal environmental monitoring, yet the field’s intellectual evolution and operational maturity remain incompletely characterized. This study employs citation network analysis via Litmaps to map the structure, consolidation, and knowledge diffusion patterns of coastal drone research from 2013 to 2024. A corpus of 47 influential articles was identified through systematic citation connectivity criteria, revealing three distinct phases: Seminal (≤2016), Consolidation (2017–2022), and Innovation (≥2023). Results demonstrate that foundational RGB photogrammetry protocols established in 2013–2016 remain standard references in 2024, indicating methodological maturity rather than obsolescence. However, substantial geographic concentration exists (Mediterranean institutions dominate early development), with application imbalances: temporal monitoring (46.8%) dominates while policy-relevant erosion/risk assessment comprises only 8.5%. Despite documented technical adequacy (sub-centimeter accuracy, 70–80% cost reduction vs. alternatives), the transition to operational coastal programs faces institutional rather than technological barriers. The analysis concludes that realizing UAV operational potential requires coordinated institutional development across management agencies, research institutions, capacity-building programs, and equitable data governance frameworks.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Eduardo Augusto Werneck Ribeiro
Raul Borges Guimarães
Natália Lampert Bastista
Drones
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Universidade Federal de Pelotas
Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Ribeiro et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e3209340886becb653fa9e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/drones10040291