Descripteur
Documents disponibles dans cette catégorie (2822)
Ajouter le résultat dans votre panier
Visionner les documents numériques
Affiner la recherche Interroger des sources externes
Etendre la recherche sur niveau(x) vers le bas
Identifying locations for new bike-sharing stations in Glasgow: an analysis of spatial equity and demand factors / Jeneva Beairsto in Annals of GIS, vol 28 n° 2 (April 2022)
[article]
Titre : Identifying locations for new bike-sharing stations in Glasgow: an analysis of spatial equity and demand factors Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Jeneva Beairsto, Auteur ; Yufan Tian, Auteur ; Linyu Zheng, Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : pp 111 - 126 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Analyse spatiale
[Termes IGN] accessibilité
[Termes IGN] analyse des besoins
[Termes IGN] bicyclette
[Termes IGN] données spatiotemporelles
[Termes IGN] Glasgow
[Termes IGN] modèle de régression
[Termes IGN] optimisation spatiale
[Termes IGN] système d'information géographiqueRésumé : (auteur) Worldwide bike-sharing systems are growing in popularity as an alternative, environmentally friendly mode of transportation. As cities seek to further develop bike-sharing programmes, it is important to consider how systems should expand to simultaneously address existing inequalities in accessibility, and best serve demand. In this paper, we determine ideal locations for future bike-sharing stations in Glasgow, Scotland, by integrating demand modelling with accessibility considerations. We began by analysing the spatio-temporal trends of bike-sharing usage, and assessed the spatial equity of access to stations in Glasgow. To identify important determinants of bike-sharing demand, we ran an ordinary least squares regression model using bike sharing trip data from Nextbike Glasgow. We then quantifiably measured the level of spatial accessibility to stations by applying the two-step floating catchment area (2SFCA) methodology and ran a GIS weighted overlay analysis using the significant determinants of station demand. Lastly, we combined the demand and accessibility results to determine where new stations should be located using a maximum covering location problem (MCLP) that maximized the population served. Our results show that distance from transit stations, distance from downtown, employment rates, and nearby cycling lanes are significant factors affecting station-level demand. Furthermore, levels of spatial access were found to be highest primarily in the centre and eastern neighbourhood of Glasgow. These findings aided in determining areas to prioritize for future station locations, and our methodology can easily be applied to other bike-share programmes with adjustments according to varying aims for system expansion. Numéro de notice : A2022-500 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : GEOMATIQUE Nature : Article nature-HAL : ArtAvecCL-RevueIntern DOI : 10.1080/19475683.2021.1936172 Date de publication en ligne : 30/06/2021 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1080/19475683.2021.1936172 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=100997
in Annals of GIS > vol 28 n° 2 (April 2022) . - pp 111 - 126[article]A knowledge representation model based on the geographic spatiotemporal process / Kun Zheng in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS, vol 36 n° 4 (April 2022)
[article]
Titre : A knowledge representation model based on the geographic spatiotemporal process Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Kun Zheng, Auteur ; Ming Hui Xie, Auteur ; Jin Biao Zhang, Auteur ; et al., Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : pp 674 - 691 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Géomatique
[Termes IGN] analyse comparative
[Termes IGN] analyse diachronique
[Termes IGN] approche hiérarchique
[Termes IGN] ontologie
[Termes IGN] raisonnement spatiotemporel
[Termes IGN] représentation des connaissances
[Termes IGN] représentation du changement
[Termes IGN] représentation géographique
[Termes IGN] réseau sémantiqueRésumé : (auteur) Knowledge graphs (KGs) represent entities and relations as computable networks, which is of great value for discovering hidden knowledge and patterns. Geographic KGs mainly describe static facts and have difficulty representing changes, greatly limiting their application in geographic spatiotemporal processes. By analyzing the spatiotemporal features and evolution of geographic elements, this study presents the geographic evolutionary knowledge graph (GEKG). Its representation model has five core elements: time, geographic event (geo-event), geographic entity (geo-entity), activity and property, and defines six relations: logical, semantic, evolutionary and temporal relation, participation and inclusion. It establishes a hierarchical cubical model structure and each temporal layer extends vertically and horizontally starting with the earliest geo-event. Vertical expansion refers to the connection between different kinds of element, such as the participation relation between geo-entities and geo-events. Horizontal expansion indicates the association between the same kinds of element, such as the semantic relation between geo-entities. For different layers, the spatiotemporal differences of elements produce the evolutionary relation. Finally, the comparison of GEKG with Yet Another Great Ontology (YAGO) and Geographic Knowledge Graph (GeoKG) shows that GEKG has more advantages in representing geographic evolutionary knowledge, revealing the evolution mechanism of geographic elements and the evolutionary reasons. Numéro de notice : A2022-255 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : GEOMATIQUE Nature : Article nature-HAL : ArtAvecCL-RevueIntern DOI : 10.1080/13658816.2021.1962527 Date de publication en ligne : 05/08/2021 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1080/13658816.2021.1962527 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=100228
in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS > vol 36 n° 4 (April 2022) . - pp 674 - 691[article]MTLM: a multi-task learning model for travel time estimation / Saijun Xu in Geoinformatica, vol 26 n° 2 (April 2022)
[article]
Titre : MTLM: a multi-task learning model for travel time estimation Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Saijun Xu, Auteur ; Ruoqian Zhang, Auteur ; Wanjun Cheng, Auteur ; Jiajie Xu, Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : pp 379 - 395 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Géomatique
[Termes IGN] analyse coût-avantage
[Termes IGN] apprentissage automatique
[Termes IGN] données d'entrainement (apprentissage automatique)
[Termes IGN] durée de trajet
[Termes IGN] modèle de simulation
[Termes IGN] transport collectif
[Termes IGN] transport intermodalRésumé : (auteur) Travel time estimation (TTE) is an important research topic in many geographic applications for smart city research. However, existing approaches either ignore the impact of transportation modes, or assume the mode information is known for each training trajectory and the query input. In this paper, we propose a multi-task learning model for travel time estimation called MTLM, which recommends the appropriate transportation mode for users, and then estimates the related travel time of the path. It integrates transportation-mode recommendation task and travel time estimation task to capture the mutual influence between them for more accurate TTE results. Furthermore, it captures spatio-temporal dependencies and transportation mode effect by learning effective representations for TTE. It combines the transportation-mode recommendation loss and TTE loss for training. Extensive experiments on real datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed methods. Numéro de notice : A2022-325 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : GEOMATIQUE Nature : Article DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/s10707-020-00422-x Date de publication en ligne : 15/08/2020 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1007/s10707-020-00422-x Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=100488
in Geoinformatica > vol 26 n° 2 (April 2022) . - pp 379 - 395[article]Spatial modeling of migration using GIS-based multi-criteria decision analysis: A case study of Iran / Naeim Mijani in Transactions in GIS, vol 26 n° 2 (April 2022)
[article]
Titre : Spatial modeling of migration using GIS-based multi-criteria decision analysis: A case study of Iran Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Naeim Mijani, Auteur ; Davoud Shahpari Sani, Auteur ; Mohsen Dastaran, Auteur ; et al., Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : pp 645 - 668 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Analyse spatiale
[Termes IGN] analyse multicritère
[Termes IGN] approche hiérarchique
[Termes IGN] changement climatique
[Termes IGN] coefficient de corrélation
[Termes IGN] combinaison linéaire ponderée
[Termes IGN] données démographiques
[Termes IGN] données socio-économiques
[Termes IGN] Iran
[Termes IGN] migration humaine
[Termes IGN] modélisation spatiale
[Termes IGN] planification urbaine
[Termes IGN] système d'information géographiqueRésumé : (auteur) Spatial modeling of migration and the identification of the effective parameters are imperative for planning and managing demographic, economic, social, and environmental changes on various geographical scales. The recent climate change stressors as well as inequality in terms of education and life quality have triggered internal mass migrations in Iran, causing pressure on housing, the job market, and potential slums around large cities. This study proposes a new approach to modeling migration patterns in Iran based on multi-criteria decision analysis. For this purpose, a total of 23 individual criteria embedded within four criteria groups (economic, socio-cultural, welfare, and environmental) affecting national migration were used. The analytic hierarchy process was employed to determine weights for the input factors and the weighted linear combination (WLC) model was used for the integration of criteria, based on which maps of migration potential were produced. The model applied was evaluated based on the correlation coefficient between migration potential values obtained from the WLC model and the actual net migration rate. Among the input individual criteria, unemployment, higher education centers, number of physicians, and dust storms were found to influence national migration. Furthermore, our findings reveal that the potential for migration across Iranian provinces is heterogeneous, with the spatial potential for emigration being the highest and lowest in the border and central provinces, respectively. The correlation coefficient calculated between outputs from the WLC model and the net migration rate from 2011 to 2016, was .81, indicating the relatively high performance of the proposed model in producing a migration spatial potential map. Our proposed approach, along with the results achieved, can be useful to decision-makers and planners in designing data-driven policies against inequality- and climate-induced stressors. Numéro de notice : A2022-363 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : GEOMATIQUE Nature : Article DOI : 10.1111/tgis.12873 Date de publication en ligne : 23/11/2021 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1111/tgis.12873 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=100582
in Transactions in GIS > vol 26 n° 2 (April 2022) . - pp 645 - 668[article]Two-phase forest inventory using very-high-resolution laser scanning / Henrik J. Persson in Remote sensing of environment, vol 271 (March- 2 2022)
[article]
Titre : Two-phase forest inventory using very-high-resolution laser scanning Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Henrik J. Persson, Auteur ; Kenneth Olofsson, Auteur ; Johan Holmgren, Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : n° 112909 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Termes IGN] analyse comparative
[Termes IGN] diamètre à hauteur de poitrine
[Termes IGN] échantillonnage
[Termes IGN] forêt boréale
[Termes IGN] hauteur des arbres
[Termes IGN] inférence statistique
[Termes IGN] inventaire forestier (techniques et méthodes)
[Termes IGN] lasergrammétrie
[Termes IGN] modélisation de la forêt
[Termes IGN] peuplement forestier
[Termes IGN] Suède
[Termes IGN] télémétrie laser terrestre
[Vedettes matières IGN] Inventaire forestierRésumé : (auteur) In this study, we compared a two-phase laser-scanning-based forest inventory of stands versus a traditional field inventory using sample plots. The two approaches were used to estimate stem volume (VOL), Lorey's mean height (HL), Lorey's stem diameter (DL), and VOL per tree species in a study area in Sweden. The estimates were compared at the stand level with the harvested reference values obtained using a forest harvester. In the first phase, a helicopter acquired airborne laser scanning (ALS) data with >500 points/m2 along 50-m wide strips across the stands. These strips intersected systematic plots in phase two, where terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) was used to model DL for individual trees. In total, phase two included 99 plots across 10 boreal forest stands in Sweden (lat 62.9° N, long 16.9° E). The single trees were segmented in both the ALS and TLS data and linked to each other. The very-high-resolution ALS data enabled us to directly measure tree heights and also classify tree species using a convolutional neural network. Stem volume was predicted from the predicted DBH and the estimated height, using national models, and aggregated at the stand level. The study demonstrates a workflow to derive forest variables and stand-level statistics that has potential to replace many manual field inventories thanks to its time efficiency and improved accuracy. To evaluate the inventories, we estimated bias, RMSE, and precision, expressed as standard error. The laser-scanning-based inventory provided estimates with an accuracy considerably higher than the field inventory. The RMSE was 17 m3/ha (7.24%), 0.9 m (5.63%), and 16 mm (5.99%) for VOL, HL, and DL respectively. The tree species classification was generally successful and improved the three species-specific VOL estimates by 9% to 74%, compared to field estimates. In conclusion, the demonstrated laser-scanning-based inventory shows potential to replace some future forest inventories, thanks to the increased accuracy demonstrated empirically in the Swedish forest study area. Numéro de notice : A2022-249 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : FORET/IMAGERIE Nature : Article DOI : 10.1016/j.rse.2022.112909 Date de publication en ligne : 22/01/2022 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2022.112909 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=100201
in Remote sensing of environment > vol 271 (March- 2 2022) . - n° 112909[article]Cartographie et caractérisation des lieux d'intérêt de cervidés en milieu forestier / Laurence Jolivet in Cartes & Géomatique, n° 247-248 (mars-juin 2022)PermalinkChanges of tree stem biomass in European forests since 1950 / Aleksandr Lebedev in Journal of forest science, vol 68 n° 3 (March 2022)PermalinkComparaison des images satellite et aériennes dans le domaine de la détection d’obstacles à la navigation aérienne et de leur mise à jour / Olivier de Joinville in XYZ, n° 170 (mars 2022)PermalinkComparison of UAV-based LiDAR and digital aerial photogrammetry for measuring crown-level canopy height in the urban environment / Longfei Zhou in Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, vol 69 (March 2022)PermalinkDeformation analysis: the modified GREDOD method / Mehmed Batilović in Geodetski vestnik, vol 66 n° 1 (March 2022)PermalinkEvolution de la ressource et de la production des chênes pubescent, pédonculé et sessile / Ingrid Bonhême in Forêt entreprise, n° 261 (novembre-décembre 2021)PermalinkExtraction from high-resolution remote sensing images based on multi-scale segmentation and case-based reasoning / Jun Xu in Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing, PERS, vol 88 n° 3 (March 2022)PermalinkFlood monitoring by integration of remote sensing technique and multi-criteria decision making method / Hadi Farhadi in Computers & geosciences, vol 160 (March 2022)PermalinkMeasuring and mapping long-term changes in migration flows using population-scale family tree data / Caglar Koylu in Cartography and Geographic Information Science, vol 49 n° 2 (March 2022)PermalinkA novel regression method for harmonic analysis of time series / Qiang Zhou in ISPRS Journal of photogrammetry and remote sensing, vol 185 (March 2022)PermalinkObservational constraint on the climate sensitivity to atmospheric CO2 concentrations changes derived from the 1971-2017 global energy budget / Jonathan Chenal in Journal of climate, vol 2022 ([01/03/2022])PermalinkUnexpected negative effect of available water capacity detected on recent conifer forest growth trends across wide environmental gradients / Clémentine Ols in Ecosystems, vol 25 n° 2 (March 2022)PermalinkA national fuel type mapping method improvement using sentinel-2 satellite data / Alexandra Stefanidou in Geocarto international, vol 37 n° 4 ([15/02/2022])PermalinkSimulation of future forest and land use/cover changes (2019–2039) using the cellular automata-Markov model / Hasan Aksoy in Geocarto international, vol 37 n° 4 ([15/02/2022])PermalinkSuspended sediment prediction using integrative soft computing models: on the analogy between the butterfly optimization and genetic algorithms / Marzieh Fadaee in Geocarto international, vol 37 n° 4 ([15/02/2022])PermalinkAn open science and open data approach for the statistically robust estimation of forest disturbance areas / Saverio Francini in International journal of applied Earth observation and geoinformation, vol 106 (February 2022)PermalinkApplication of catastrophe theory to spatial analysis of groundwater potential in a sub-humid tropical region: a hybrid approach / Laishram Kanta Singh in Geocarto international, vol 37 n° 3 ([01/02/2022])PermalinkApplications and challenges of GRACE and GRACE follow-on satellite gravimetry / Jianli Chen in Surveys in Geophysics, vol 43 n° 1 (February 2022)PermalinkComparison of atmospheric mass density models using a new data source: COSMIC satellite ephemerides / Yang Yang in IEEE Aerospace and Electronic Systems Magazine, vol 37 n° 2 (February 2022)PermalinkExploring the advantages of the maximum entropy model in calibrating cellular automata for urban growth simulation: a comparative study of four methods / Bin Zhang in GIScience and remote sensing, vol 59 n° 1 (2022)PermalinkFive decades of ground flora changes in a temperate forest: The good, the bad and the ambiguous in biodiversity terms / K.J. Kirby in Forest ecology and management, vol 505 (February-1 2022)PermalinkA geographically weighted artificial neural network / Julian Haguenauer in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS, vol 36 n° 2 (February 2022)PermalinkA robust nonrigid point set registration framework based on global and intrinsic topological constraints / Guiqiang Yang in The Visual Computer, vol 38 n° 2 (February 2022)PermalinkSpatiotemporal temperature fusion based on a deep convolutional network / Xuehan Wang in Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing, PERS, vol 88 n° 2 (February 2022)PermalinkThree-Dimensional point cloud analysis for building seismic damage information / Fan Yang in Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing, PERS, vol 88 n° 2 (February 2022)PermalinkUsing vertices of a triangular irregular network to calculate slope and aspect / Guanghui Hu in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS, vol 36 n° 2 (February 2022)Permalink3D stem modelling in tropical forest: towards improved biomass and biomass change estimates / Sébastien Bauwens (2022)PermalinkAn assessment of forest loss and its drivers in protected areas on the Copperbelt province of Zambia: 1972–2016 / Darius Phiri in Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, vol 13 (2022)PermalinkPermalinkApport des nouveaux systèmes GNSS de cartographie du niveau marin à l’exploitation des données altimétriques en zone côtière / Clémence Chupin (2022)PermalinkAssessment of the performance of GIS-based analytical hierarchical process (AHP) approach for flood modelling in Uttar Dinajpur district of West Bengal, India / Rajib Mitra in Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, vol 13 (2022)PermalinkBest integer equivariant position estimation for multi-GNSS RTK: a multivariate normal and t-distributed performance comparison / Robert Odolinski in Journal of geodesy, vol 96 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkLa cartographie au service de la diffusion des connaissances de l’Inventaire du Patrimoine culturel de la Région Bretagne / Elise Frank (2022)PermalinkA comparison of linear-mode and single-photon airborne LiDAR in species-specific forest inventories / Janne Raty in IEEE Transactions on geoscience and remote sensing, vol 60 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkA comprehensive assessment of four-satellite QZSS constellation: navigation signals, broadcast ephemeris, availability, SPP, interoperability with GPS, and ISB against GPS / Xuanping Li in Survey review, vol 54 n° 382 (January 2022)PermalinkDeep image translation with an affinity-based change prior for unsupervised multimodal change detection / Luigi Tommaso Luppino in IEEE Transactions on geoscience and remote sensing, vol 60 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkPermalinkDeveloping the potential of airborne lidar systems for the sustainable management of forests / Karun Dayal (2022)PermalinkEmpirical comparison between stochastic and deterministic modifiers over the French Auvergne geoid computation test-bed / Ropesh Goyal in Survey review, vol 54 n° 382 (January 2022)PermalinkÉvolution rétrospective et prospective d’un massif dunaire par imagerie multispectrale et LiDAR / Iris Jeuffrard (2022)PermalinkA GIS-based landslide susceptibility mapping and variable importance analysis using artificial intelligent training-based methods / Pengxiang Zhao in Remote sensing, vol 14 n° 1 (January-1 2022)PermalinkHistorical shoreline analysis and field monitoring at Ennore coastal stretch along the Southeast coast of India / M. Dhananjayan in Marine geodesy, vol 45 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkImproving urban land cover mapping with the fusion of optical and SAR data based on feature selection strategy / Qing Ding in Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing, PERS, vol 88 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkLandslide evolution pattern revealed by multi-temporal DSMs obtained from historical aerial images / Michele Santangelo (2022)PermalinkPermalinkModélisation du lien entre éruptions et glissements de flancs au Piton de la Fournaise / Quentin Dumont (2022)PermalinkMonitoring grassland dynamics by exploiting multi-modal satellite image time series / Anatol Garioud (2022)PermalinkMulti-criteria geographic analysis for automated cartographic generalization / Guillaume Touya in Cartographic journal (the), vol 59 n° 1 (February 2022)PermalinkNew Fuzzy-AHP Matlab based graphical user interface (GUI) for a broad range of users: Sample applications in the environmental field / Meryem Tahri in Computers & geosciences, vol 158 (January 2022)PermalinkNumérique versus symbolique : dialogue ontologique entre deux approches / Hélène Mathian in Revue internationale de géomatique, vol 31 n° 1-2 (janvier - juin 2022)PermalinkPermalinkRemise en forme des données géographiques des biotopes en milieu ouvert du Luxembourg / Alexandre Nghien (2022)PermalinkRobust approach for urban road surface extraction using mobile laser scanning 3D point clouds / Abdul Nurunnabi (2022)PermalinkPermalinkPermalinkPermalinkTowards synthetic sensing for smart cities : a machine/deep learning-based approach / Faraz Malik Awan (2022)PermalinkPermalinkPermalinkVegetation changes in the understory of nitrogen-sensitive temperate forests over the past 70 years / Marina Roth in Forest ecology and management, vol 503 (January-1 2022)PermalinkPermalinkAdaptive feature weighted fusion nested U-Net with discrete wavelet transform for change detection of high-resolution remote sensing images / Congcong Wang in Remote sensing, vol 13 n° 24 (December-2 2021)PermalinkBuilding fuzzy areal geographical objects from point sets / Jifa Guo in Transactions in GIS, vol 25 n° 6 (December 2021)PermalinkComparative analysis for methods of building digital elevation models from topographic maps using geoinformation technologies / Vadim Belenok in Geodesy and cartography, vol 47 n° 4 (December 2021)PermalinkEvaluating narrative in geoportals for territorial public policies / Luis Manuel Batista in Cartographica, vol 56 n° 4 (Winter 2021)PermalinkÉvaluer un récepteur GNSS RTK pour la topographie / Florian Birot in XYZ, n° 169 (décembre 2021)PermalinkFast estimation for robust supervised classification with mixture models / Erwan Giry Fouquet in Pattern recognition letters, vol 152 (December 2021)PermalinkA GIS-remote sensing approach for forest fire risk assessment: case of Bizerte region, Tunisia / Salwa Saidi in Applied geomatics, vol 13 n° 4 (December 2021)PermalinkHow geographic and climatic factors affect the adaptation of Douglas-fir provenances to the temperate continental climate zone in Europe / Marzena Niemczyk in European Journal of Forest Research, vol 140 n° 6 (December 2021)PermalinkIncorporating multi-criteria decision-making and fuzzy-value functions for flood susceptibility assessment / Ali Azareh in Geocarto international, vol 36 n° 20 ([01/12/2021])PermalinkA semantics-based trajectory segmentation simplification method / Minshi Liu in Journal of Geovisualization and Spatial Analysis, vol 5 n° 2 (December 2021)PermalinkSnow cover change assessment in the upper Bhagirathi basin using an enhanced cloud removal algorithm / Mritunjay Kumar Singh in Geocarto international, vol 36 n° 20 ([01/12/2021])PermalinkVisual analysis of geospatial multivariate data for investigating radioactive deposition processes / Shigeo Takahashi in The Visual Computer, vol 37 n° 12 (December 2021)PermalinkAbove-ground biomass change estimation using national forest inventory data with Sentinel-2 and Landsat / Stefano Puliti in Remote sensing of environment, vol 265 (November 2021)PermalinkAutomatic tuning of segmentation parameters for tree crown delineation with VHR imagery / Camile Sothe in Geocarto international, vol 36 n° 19 ([01/11/2021])PermalinkBagging and boosting ensemble classifiers for classification of multispectral, hyperspectral and PolSAR data: A comparative evaluation / Hamid Jafarzadeh in Remote sensing, vol 13 n° 21 (November-1 2021)PermalinkCalibration of cellular automata urban growth models from urban genesis onwards - a novel application of Markov chain Monte Carlo approximate Bayesian computation / Jingyan Yu in Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, vol 90 (November 2021)PermalinkA comparison of a gradient boosting decision tree, random forests, and artificial neural networks to model urban land use changes: the case of the Seoul metropolitan area / Myung-Jin Jun in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS, vol 35 n° 11 (November 2021)PermalinkEvaluation of watershed soil erosion hazard using combination weight and GIS: a case study from eroded soil in Southern China / Shifa Chen in Natural Hazards, vol 109 n° 2 (November 2021)PermalinkFeature matching for multi-epoch historical aerial images / Lulin Zhang in ISPRS Journal of photogrammetry and remote sensing, Vol 182 (December 2021)PermalinkPotential flood hazard zone mapping based on geomorphologic considerations and fuzzy analytical hierarchy model in a data scarce West African basin / Olabanji Aladejana in Geocarto international, vol 36 n° 19 ([01/11/2021])PermalinkSeven decades of coastal change at Barter Island, Alaska: Exploring the importance of waves and temperature on erosion of coastal permafrost bluffs / Ann E. Gibbs in Remote sensing, vol 13 n° 21 (November-1 2021)PermalinkComparison of digital elevation models through the analysis of geomorphic surface remnants in the Desatoya Mountains, Nevada / Bernadett Dobre in Transactions in GIS, vol 25 n° 5 (October 2021)PermalinkInvestigation of the landslides in Beylikdüzü-Esenyurt districts of Istanbul from InSAR and GNSS observations / Caglar Bayik in Natural Hazards, vol 109 n° 1 (October 2021)PermalinkPrioritization of forest fire hazard risk simulation using Hybrid Grey Relativity Analysis (HGRA) and Fuzzy Analytical Hierarchy Process (FAHP) coupled with multicriteria decision analysis (MCDA) techniques – a comparative study analysis / Michael Stanley Peprah in Geodesy and cartography, vol 47 n° 3 (October 2021)PermalinkQuantifying historical landscape change with repeat photography: an accuracy assessment of geospatial data obtained through monoplotting / Ulrike Bayr in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS, vol 35 n° 10 (October 2021)PermalinkRecognition of crevasses with high-resolution digital elevation models: Application of geomorphometric modeling and texture analysis / Olga T. Ishalina in Transactions in GIS, vol 25 n° 5 (October 2021)PermalinkSpatial biodiversity modeling using high-performance computing cluster: A case study to access biological richness in Indian landscape / Hariom Singh in Geocarto international, vol 36 n° 18 ([01/10/2021])PermalinkSpatial interpolation of mobile positioning data for population statistics / Anto Aasa in Journal of location-based services, vol 15 n° 4 ([01/10/2021])PermalinkUrban geomorphology of a historical city straddling the Tanaro River (Alessandria, NW Italy) / Andrea Mandarino in Journal of maps, vol 17 n° 4 (October 2021)PermalinkAerial and UAV images for photogrammetric analysis of Belvedere Glacier evolution in the period 1977–2019 / Carlo Lapige De Gaetani in Remote sensing, vol 13 n° 18 (September-2 2021)PermalinkA deep translation (GAN) based change detection network for optical and SAR remote sensing images / Xinghua Li in ISPRS Journal of photogrammetry and remote sensing, vol 179 (September 2021)PermalinkDevelopment of a GIS-based alert system to mitigate flash flood impacts in Asyut governorate, Egypt / Soha A. Mohamed in Natural Hazards, vol 108 n° 3 (September 2021)PermalinkDouble adaptive intensity-threshold method for uneven Lidar data to extract road markings / Chengming Ye in Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing, PERS, vol 87 n° 9 (September 2021)PermalinkGIS-based logic scoring of preference method for urban densification suitability analysis / Shuoge Shen in Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, vol 89 (September 2021)Permalink