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Midterm

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Title: Midterm


1
Midterm
2
Midterm
  • Multiple choice on scantron/bring 2 pencil
  • Major concepts moreso than details
  • Reviewing LECTURES is key ?PPT files
  • background extra in Chapters 1, 3-4, 9, 20 in
    Longley et al.
  • Will not include
  • Web Sites of the Week (WSWs)
  • Labs
  • Learning Assessment/Practice Questions on class
    web site

3
GIS Data CaptureGetting the Map into the
ComputerChapter 9, Longley et al.
4
Overview
  • Introduction
  • Primary data capture
  • Secondary data capture
  • Data transfer
  • Capturing attribute data
  • Managing a data capture project
  • Error and accuracy

5
Data Collection
  • Can be most expensive GIS activity
  • Many diverse sources
  • Two broad types of collection
  • Data capture (direct collection)
  • Data transfer
  • Two broad capture methods
  • Primary (direct measurement)
  • Secondary (indirect derivation)

6
Data Collection Techniques
Field/Raster Object/Vector
Primary Digital remote sensing images GPS measurements including VGI
Primary Digital aerial photographs Survey measurements
Secondary Scanned maps Topographic surveys
Secondary DEMs from maps Toponymy data sets from atlases
7
Stages in Data Collection Projects
8
Primary Data Capture
  • Capture specifically for GIS use
  • Raster remote sensing
  • e.g., SPOT and IKONOS satellites and aerial
    photography, echosounding at sea
  • Passive and active sensors
  • Resolution is key consideration
  • Spatial
  • Spectral, Acoustic
  • Temporal

9
(No Transcript)
10
Vector Primary Data Capture
  • Surveying
  • Locations of objects determines by angle and
    distance measurements from known locations
  • Uses expensive field equipment and crews
  • Most accurate method for large scale, small areas
  • GPS
  • Collection of satellites used to fix actual
    locations on Earths surface
  • Differential GPS used to improve accuracy

11
Total Station
12
GPS Handhelds
text
geographic coordinates
photos
video
audio
Bluetooth, WiFi
13
cell towers /- 500 m Google db of tower locations
Wi-Fi /- 30 m Skyhook servers and db
GPS /- 10 m iPhone uses reference network
Graphic courtesy of Wired, Feb. 2009
14
Power to the PeopleVGI PPGIS
  • Volunteered Geographic Information
  • Wikimapia.org
  • Openstreetmap.org
  • Aka crowdsourcing
  • Public Participation GIS
  • GEO 599, Fall 2007
  • Papers still online at dusk.geo.orst.edu/virtual/

15
Example A Boon for International Development
Agencies
Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo
Robert Soden, www.developmentseed.org
16
International Development, Humanitarian Relief
Mogadishu, Somalia
Robert Soden, www.developmentseed.org
17
Haiti Disaster, MapAction.org
18
Citizen Sensors
UCLA Center for Embedded Networked Sensing,
http//peir.cens.ucla.edu
19
Societal Issues(privacy, surveillance,
ethics)e.g., Google StreetView
Early and late May 2008
20
More surveillance (electronic, video, biological,
chemical) integrated into national system
From Chris Peterson, Foresight Institute As
presented at OSCON 2008, Portland
21
From Chris Peterson, Foresight Institute As
presented at OSCON 2008, Portland
Graphic Gina Miller
22
Sewer monitoring has begun
The test doesnt screen people directly but
instead seeks out evidence of illicit drug abuse
in drug residues and metabolites excreted in
urine and flushed toward municipal sewage
treatment plants.
From Chris Peterson, Foresight Institute As
presented at OSCON 2008, Portland
23
Secondary Geographic Data Capture
  • Data collected for other purposes, then converted
    for use in GIS
  • Raster conversion
  • Scanning of maps, aerial photographs, documents,
    etc.
  • Important scanning parameters are spatial and
    spectral (bit depth) resolution

24
Scanner
25
Vector Secondary Data Capture
  • Collection of vector objects from maps,
    photographs, plans, etc.
  • Photogrammetry the science and technology of
    making measurements from photographs, etc.
  • Digitizing
  • Manual (table)
  • Heads-up and vectorization

26
Digitizer
27
GEOCODING
  • spatial information ---gt digital form
  • capturing the map (digitizing, scanning)
  • sometimes also capturing the attributes
  • mapematical calculation, e.g.,
  • address matching

WSW
28
The Role of Error
  • Map and attribute data errors are the data
    producer's responsibility,
  • GIS user must understand error.
  • Accuracy and precision of map and attribute data
    in a GIS affect all other operations, especially
    when maps are compared across scales.

29
Accuracy
  • closeness to TRUE values
  • results, computations, or estimates
  • compromise on infinite complexity
  • generalization of the real world
  • difficult to identify a TRUE value
  • e.g., accuracy of a contour
  • Does not exist in real world
  • Compare to other sources

30
Accuracy (cont.)
  • accuracy of the database accuracy of the
    products computed from database
  • e.g., accuracy of a slope, aspect, or watershed
    computed from a DEM

31
Positional Accuracy
  • typical UTM coordinate pair might be
  • Easting 579124.349 m
  • Northing 5194732.247 m
  • If the database was digitized from a 124,000 map
    sheet, the last four digits in each coordinate
    (units, tenths, hundredths, thousandths) would be
    questionable

32
Positional Accuracy
A useful rule of thumb is that positions measured
from maps are accurate to about 0.5 mm on the
map. Multiplying this by the scale of the map
gives the corresponding distance on the ground.
 
33
Testing Positional Accuracy
  • Use an independent source of higher accuracy
  • find a larger scale map (cartographically
    speaking)
  • use GPS
  • Use internal evidence
  • digitized polygons that are unclosed, lines that
    overshoot or undershoot nodes, etc. are
    indications of inaccuracy
  • sizes of gaps, overshoots, etc. may be a measure
    of positional accuracy

34
Precision
  • not the same as accuracy!
  • repeatability vs. truth
  • not closeness of results, but number of decimal
    places or significant digits in a measurement
  • A GIS works at high precision, usually much
    higher than the accuracy of the data themselves

35
Accuracy vs. Precision
36
Accuracy vs. Precision
37
Components of Data Quality
  • positional accuracy
  • attribute accuracy
  • logical consistency
  • completeness
  • lineage
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