Our new research assessing the urban transformation in Western China has been published in this month's issue of Landscape & Urban Planning. The work, funded by a NASA Land Cover-Land Use Change grant, focuses on the post-reform period (1988–2009) in four major metropolitan areas: Chengdu, Xi’an, Kunming, and Urumqi (shown below). The analysis exploits recent land change maps, satellite images, socioeconomic data, and master planning documents, and draws on a variety of spatial and statistical measures to estimate urban patterns through space and time. Check out the full article here for more information.
Wednesday, January 7, 2015
Graduate student Caitlin Kontgis wins travel award!
Caitlin Kontgis was
selected to receive the prestigious Twin Cities Women's Philanthropy
Council student travel grant. Caitlin is the very first recipient of
this grant, and was selected based on the high ratings from peer
reviewers she received on her Vilas Travel Award application. This
spring, Caitlin will use the grant to spend 10 weeks in Vietnam working
with collaborators at the Can Tho University Research Institute for
Climate Change. This grant will enable her to collect data necessary to
parameterize and validate an agricultural model that will help her
understand how future climate fluctuations could impact rice paddy
yields in the Mekong River Delta.
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Research assistantship available in remote sensing analysis
Graduate Research Assistant or Project Assistant, Remote Sensing of Urban and Peri-Urban Expansion
The Land Cover Change Lab at the Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment (SAGE) has funding for one RA or PA position starting this fall, and continuing through spring and summer, 2015, to conduct research to monitor urban expansion and agricultural land loss across East-Southeast Asia using multiple remote sensing data sets.
The overall goal of the project is to monitor land cover change, and work will be completed using a combination of ENVI, ArcGIS, and command line programming tools. The student will focus on analysis of time series MODIS satellite data to understand global trends in urban expansion. For more information, please click here.
Application deadline: October 27, 2014
The Land Cover Change Lab at the Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment (SAGE) has funding for one RA or PA position starting this fall, and continuing through spring and summer, 2015, to conduct research to monitor urban expansion and agricultural land loss across East-Southeast Asia using multiple remote sensing data sets.
The overall goal of the project is to monitor land cover change, and work will be completed using a combination of ENVI, ArcGIS, and command line programming tools. The student will focus on analysis of time series MODIS satellite data to understand global trends in urban expansion. For more information, please click here.
Application deadline: October 27, 2014
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
New article now in press at Remote Sensing of Environment
Check out our recent research Detecting change in urban areas at continental scales with MODIS data in this upcoming issue of Remote Sensing of Environment. This work, completed as part of Carly Mertes' Master's thesis, demonstrates a methodology for monitoring urban land expansion at continental to global scales using Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) data. The new method focuses on resolving the spectral and temporal ambiguities between urban/non-urban land and stable/changed areas by: (1) spatially constraining the study extent to known locations of urban land; (2) integrating multi-temporal data from multiple satellite data sources to classify c. 2010 urban extent; and (3) mapping newly built areas (2000-2010) within the 2010 urban land extent using a multi-temporal composite change detection approach based on MODIS 250 m annual maximum enhanced vegetation index (EVI). The method is tested in 15 countries in East-Southeast Asia experiencing different rates and manifestations of urban expansion.
Monday, August 25, 2014
Introduction to Environmental Remote Sensing course starts September 2nd
Interested in learning how to map the world with satellite imagery? Or detect change in dynamic landscapes using advanced machine learning methods? If yes, then please join us for Introduction to Environmental Remote Sensing this fall, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 2:30-4:00 pm in room 104 Russell Labs. For more information, please visit the class website.
Friday, August 22, 2014
Now hiring...
GIS-Remote Sensing Research Assistant, Project Assistant and Hourly positions available. We are hiring students for geospatial analyst jobs starting in September. Click here for more details.
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
New results on peri-urbanization in Vietnam
Our research, Monitoring peri-urbanization in the greater Ho Chi Minh City metropolitan area, was recently published in Applied Geography. This research combines commune-level Vietnamese census information, dense time stacks of Landsat satellite data (1990–2012), and several spatial measures to quantify urbanization and peri-urbanization in the greater Ho Chi Minh City metropolitan area from 1990 to 2012. The results indicate that 660.2 km2 of cropland was converted to urban uses (a near quintupling of urban land), while 3.5 million persons moved into the region, bringing the total population to nearly 12 million by 2012. The analysis also highlights the rapid, unplanned nature of peri-urban development: approximately one-third of new urban expansion occurs in areas >40 km from the core, with nearly 50% of population expansion occurring in communes classified as peri-urban. Check out the full article at this site: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0143622814001477.
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