URISA Journal Editors & Article Review Board
URISA Journal Editors
and Article Review Board
URISA Journal Editors
Editor-in-Chief
Jochen Albrecht, Associate Professor, Computational and Theoretical Geography, Hunter College CUNY
Past Editor-in-Chief:
Stephen J. Ventura, Department of Environmental Studies and Soil Science, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Journal Coordinator:
Thematic Editors:
- Editor - Urban and Regional Information Science
Vacant - Editor - Applications Research
Lyna Wiggins, Department of Planning, Rutgers University - Editor - Social, Organizational, Legal and Economic Sciences
Ian Masser, Department of Urban Planning and Management, ITC (Netherlands) - Editor - Geographic Information Science
Mark Harrower, Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin - Madison - Editor - Information and Media Sciences
Michael Shiffer, Department of Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Editor - Spatial Data Acquisition and Integration
Gary Hunter, Department of Geomatics, University of Melbourne (Australia) - Editor - Geography, Cartography and Cognitive Science
Vacant - Editor - Education
Karen Kemp, MS GIS Program, University of Redlands
Section Editors:
- Software Review Editor
Jay Lee, Department of Geography, Kent State University - Book Review Editor
David Tulloch, Department of Landscape Architecture, Rutgers University - Literature Review Editor
Vacant
Article Review Board
- Peggy Agouris, Department of Spatial Information Science and Engineering, University of Maine
- Grenville Barnes, Geomatics Program, University of Florida
- Michael Batty, Centre For Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London (United Kingdom)
- Kate Beard, Department of Spatial Information Science and Engineering, University of Maine
- Yvan Bédard, Centre for Research in Geomatics, Laval University (Canada)
- Barbara P. Buttenfield, Department of Geography, University of Colorado
- Keith C. Clarke, Department of Geography, University of California - Santa Barbara
- David Coleman, Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering, University of New Brunswick (Canada)
- David J. Cowen, Department of Geography, University of South Carolina
- Massimo Craglia, Department of Town & Regional Planning, University of Sheffield (United Kingdom)
- William J. Craig, Center for Urban and Regional Affairs, University of Minnesota
- Robert G. Cromley, Department of Geography, University of Connecticut
- Kenneth J. Dueker, Urban Studies and Planning, Portland State University
- Geoffrey Dutton, Spatial Effects, Belmont MA
- Max J. Egenhofer, Department of Spatial Information Science and Engineering, University of Maine
- Manfred Ehlers, Geoinformatics and Institute for Environmental Sciences, University of Vechta (Germany)
- Manfred M. Fischer, Department of Economic Geography & Geoinformatics, Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration (Austria)
- Myke Gluck, Department of Math and Computer Science, Virginia Military Institute
- Michael Goodchild, Department of Geography, University of California - Santa Barbara
- Michael Gould, Department of Information Systems, Universitat Jaume I (Spain)
- Daniel A. Griffith, Department of Geography, Syracuse University
- Francis J. Harvey, Department of Geography, University of Minnesota
- Kingsley E. Haynes, Public Policy and Geography, George Mason University
- Eric J. Heikkila, School of Policy, Planning, and Development, University of Southern California
- Stephen C. Hirtle, Department of Information Science and Telecommunications, University of Pittsburgh
- Lewis Hopkins, Department of Planning, University of Illinois - Champaign/Urbana
- Gary Jeffress, Department of Geographical Information Science, Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi
- Richard E. Klosterman, Department of Geography and Planning, University of Akron
- Robert Laurini, Claude Bernard University of Lyon (France)
- Thomas M. Lillesand, Environmental Remote Sensing Center, University of Wisconsin - Madison
- Paul A. Longley, Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College, London (United Kingdom)
- Xavier R. Lopez, Oracle Corporation
- David Maguire, Environmental Systems Research Institute
- David Mark, Department of Geography, SUNY-Buffalo
- Harvey J. Miller, Department of Geography, University of Utah
- Zorica Nedovic-Budic, Department of Urban and Regional Planning, University of Illinois - Champaign/Urbana
- Atsuyuki Okabe, Center for Spatial Information Science, University of Tokyo (Japan)
- Harlan Onsrud, Spatial Information Science and Engineering, University of Maine
- Jeffrey K. Pinto, School of Business, Penn State Erie
- Gerard Rushton, Department of Geography, University of Iowa
- Jie Shan, School of Civil Engineering, Purdue University
- Bruce D. Spear, Federal Highway Administration
- Jonathan Sperling, Office of Policy Development and Research, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
- David J. Unwin, School of Geography, Birkbeck College, London (United Kingdom)
- Nancy von Meyer, Fairview Industries
- Barry Wellar, Department of Geography, University of Ottawa (Canada)
- Michael F Worboys, Department of Computer Science, Keele University (United Kingdom)
- F. Benjamin Zhan, Department of Geography, Texas State University
Appointment to the Article Review Board of the URISA Journal involves submittal of an application. The current slate of editors reviews applications on a regular basis and adds members to the Article Review Board as appropriate. The primary prerequisite for serving on the Board is a recent and substantial refereed publication record in one or more areas germane to the mission of the URISA Journal.
URISA Journal 2006
Vitae of Article Review Board Members
and
Vitae of Editorial Review Board
Department of Spatial Information Science and Engineering and National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis
5711 Boardman Hall, Room 342
University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469-5711
(207) 581-2180, fax (207) 581-2206, peggy@spatial.maine.edu
http://www.spatial.maine.edu/peggy.htm
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Peggy Agouris is an assistant professor in Spatial Information Science and Engineering, and research faculty with the National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis. She holds a Ph.D. from The Ohio State University (1992) in digital photogrammetry and image analysis, a M.S. in geodetic science from The Ohio State University (1988), and a Dipl. Ing. in surveying engineering from the National Technical University of Athens (1986). Prior to her current position, Dr. Agouris was a post-doctoral researcher at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich.
Dr. Agouris's research interests are in the automation of processes for spatial information extraction from digital imagery and the integration of digital photogrammetry and image analysis within spatial and spatio-temporal information systems. She is the recipient of an NSF CAREER award (1997) from the Information and Data Management Program, and she is also the co-director of a NASA grant for a Center of Excellence in Remote Sensing Applications (1997). She is co-investigator of an on-going project on the use of digital imagery for spatio-temporal information management, funded by the National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA). Her funded research activities include further grants and contracts from the Office of Research and Development (ORD) and USGS. She has served as proposal reviewer for NSF and international science organizations, as organizing/program committee member in various international conferences, and as working group leader at a recent NSF IDM PI workshop (1998). She has also consulted for DeLorme, ORD, and Intergraph. At the University of Maine, she teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in remote sensing, digital image processing and analysis, and analytical and digital photogrammetry.
Dr. Agouris has authored or co-authored approximately 40 articles in journals, books, and conference proceedings in the digital photogrammetric and computer science literature. For her scholastic and research achievements Dr. Agouris has received the 1996 VI Talbert Abrams Award, the 1993 Duane C. Brown Jr. Award, and the 1990 Wild-Leitz Photogrammetric Fellowship Award. She also received the College of Engineering Outstanding Faculty in Research Award by the University of Maine in 1999.
Dr. Agouris just finished serving a 3-year term as the Associate Editor for Softcopy Photogrammetry of the journal Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing (PE&RS), but remains a member of the journal's editorial board. Dr. Agouris has served as guest editor of a special issue of PE&RS (August 1997) on digital image analysis. She is the chairperson of the Working Group III/1 ("Integrated Sensor Orientation") of Commission III ("Theory and Algorithms") of the International Society for Photogrammetry & Remote Sensing.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
P. Doucette, P. Agouris, M. Musavi & A. Stefanidis, Automated Extraction of Linear Features from Aerial Imagery using Kohonen Learning and GIS Data, Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol. 1737, pp. 20-33, Springer-Verlag, December 1999.
P. Agouris, J. Carswell & A. Stefanidis, An Environment for Content-Based Image Retrieval from Large Spatial Databases, ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Elsevier, Vol. 54, No. 4, pp. 263-272, August 1999.
P. Agouris, A. Stefanidis & J. Carswell, Sketch-Based Image Queries in Topographic Databases, Journal of Visual Communication and Image Representation, Academic Press, Vol. 10, No. 2, pp.113-129, June 1999.
Peggy Agouris, Anthony Stefanidis: Integrated Spatial Databases: Digital Images and GIS, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 1737, Springer Verlag (1999).
P. Agouris, A. Stefanidis & J. Carswell, Intelligent Image Retrieval from Large Databases using Shape and Topology, IEEE-ICIP98 (International Conference on Image Processing), Vol. 2, pp. II-779-783, October 1998, Chicago, IL.
P. Agouris, A. Stefanidis & J. Carswell, Digital Image Retrieval Using Shape Based Queries, Spatial Data Handling '98, pp. 613-625, July 1998, Vancouver, Canada.
P. Agouris, A. Stefanidis & K. Beard, Digital Photogrammetric Techniques for Transportation Data Acquisition and Management, Transportation Research Record No. 1599, pp. 111-117, Nov. 1997.
P. Agouris & T. Schenk, Automated Aerotriangulation Using Multiple Image Multipoint Matching, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing, Vol. LXII, No. 6, pp. 703-710, June 1996. (paper awarded the 1996 VI Talbert Abrams Award by ASPRS)
A. Gruen, O. Kuebler, P. Agouris: Automatic Extraction of Man-Made Objects from Aerial and Satellite Imagery, Birkhaeuser Verlag (1995)
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Associate Professor
Computational and Theoretical Geography
Hunter College CUNY
695 Park Ave, New York, NY 10021
(212) 772-5265, fax (212) 772-5268, jochen@hunter.cuny.edu
Curriculum Vita
Jochen Albrecht’s main interest is to represent and reason about dynamic processes in geographic space. This endeavor let him to become involved in the standardization of geographic information, fuzzy and qualitative reasoning, and now that these systems have matured enough agent-based modeling systems. After a short career in the German geospatial industry, Jochen has been a faculty member at geography departments in New Zealand, Wisconsin, Maryland, and now New York. At Hunter, Jochen is also responsible for the graduate GIS certificate program.
Jochen has been serving as chair of the New Zealand chapter of AURISA, as well as of the Environmental Perception and Behavioral Geography Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters, and Books within the Past Five Years
Albrecht J (forthcoming). Key Concepts and Techniques in GIS. London: Sage.
Albrecht, J (forthcoming). Dynamic GIS. A Wilson, J. and S Fotheringham (Eds) Handbook of GIS.
Albrecht J 2005. A new age for geosimulation. Editorial for Transactions in GIS, 9 (4): 451-54.
Reitsma F and J Albrecht 2005. Modeling with the Semantic Web in the Geosciences. IEEE Intelligent Systems, 20(2):22-24.
Reitsma F and J Albrecht 2005. Implementing a New Data Model for Simulating Processes. International Journal of Geographical Information Science 19 (10):1073-1090.
Albrecht J and J Pingel 2004. GIS as a Communication Process. In Wang F (Ed.) Geographic Information Systems and Crime Analysis, pp 2-23. Singapore: Idea Group.
Albrecht J and L Ramasubramanian 2004. The Moving Target: a geographic index of relative wellbeing. Journal of Medical Systems, 28(4):369-82
Ming, P and J Albrecht 2004. Integrated framework for the Simulation of Biological Invasions in a Heterogeneous Landscape. Transaction in GIS, 8(3):309-334.
Albrecht J 2003. Deconstructing Hate Crime. Forensic Science International, 136 (Supplement 1):15.
Albrecht J. 2001. Autocorrelation-proof Empirical Bayes Mapping for Urban Indicator Analysis. Proceedings of the Computers in Urban Planning and Management (CUPUM) 2001, Honolulu, Hawaii, 18-21 July 2001.
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Geomatics Program
University of Florida, Gainseville, 345 Weil Hall
Gainesville, FL 32611
gbarnes@ufl.edu
Curriculum Vita
Grenville (Barney) Barnes is an Associate Professor in the Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, where he directs the Geomatics Program. He received his Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1988 and B.S. and M.S degrees in Surveying and Mapping from the University of Natal, Durban, South Africa
His current interests include: Decadal-scale dynamics of land ownership, land-use/land-cover change and carbon storage patterns; Resilience of Social-Ecological Systems; Application of GPS for capturing land information; Institutional reform of land institutions; Community land tenure systems
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of 10)
Barnes, G. 2002. “Lessons Learned: An Evaluation of Cadastral Initiatives in Latin America over the past two Decades.” Proceedings of FIG Conference, Washington, D.C., April. (accepted for publication in Land Use Policy Journal)
Ankersen, T. and G. Barnes. “Inside the Polygon: Emerging Community Tenure Systems and Forest Resource Extraction.” Working Forests in the Latin American Tropics, (D. Zarin et al, eds.) Columbia University Press, N.Y. (in press)
Barnes, G., D. Stanfield and K. Barthel 2000. Land Registration Modernization in Developing Economies: A Discussion of the Main Problems in Latin America, Central/Eastern Europe and the Caribbean. URISA Journal, 12 (4):33-42
Barnes, G. (1998). “Cross-fertilization of Ideas on Land Tenure and Administration: Conference Report.” Land Use Policy Journal. 15(1), pp.95-96
Barnes, G., M. Eckl and B. Chaplin (1996). "A Medium-Accuracy GPS Methodology for Cadastral Surveying and Mapping." Surveying and Land Information Systems Journal. 56(1), pp. 3 -12.
Larson, B., G. Rogers, J. Green Larson and G. Barnes (1996). "Access to Forests and Child Health in Zaire: Theory and Basic Empirical Evidence." Journal of Forest Science. 42(1), pp.3-9
Barnes, G. (1995). "Land and Geographic Information Systems." The Surveying Handbook (eds. R. Brinker and R. Minnick) published by Chapman and Hall, New York, pp. 880-922
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Centre For Advanced Spatial Analysis (Casa)
University College London 1-19 Torrington Place
London WC1E 6BT UK
m.batty@ucl.ac.uk
http://www.casa.ucl.ac.uk
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Michael Batty is Professor of Spatial Analysis and Planning and Director of the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis (CASA) at University College London (UCL). He holds a joint appointment between the Bartlett School of Architecture and Planning and the Department of Geography.
From 1990 to 1995, he was Director of the National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis (NCGIA) in the State University of New York at Buffalo, where he was also Professor of Geography. From 1979 until 1990, he was Professor of City and Regional Planning in the University of Wales at Cardiff where he acted as the Dean of the School of Environmental Design (1983-1986) and Head of the Department (1985-1989). From 1969 to 1979, he was Research Assistant, Lecturer, then Reader in Geography in the University of Reading, England. He has acted as a member of the Computer Board for British Universities and Research Councils (1988-1990), as Chairman (1980-1982) and Vice-Chairman (1982-1984) of the ESRC (Economic and Social Research Council) Environment and Planning Committee, and as a member of the SERC (Science and Engineering Research Council) Transport Committee (1982-1985). From 1986 to 1990, he was a Co-Director of the Wales and South West Regional Research Laboratory (WSWRRL). He is currently a member of the Association of Universities of the Netherlands (VSNU) Quality Assessment of Research Committee on Architecture, Building and Planning (1997). In 1999, he was awarded the Back Award for ‘contributions to national policy and practice in planning and city design’ by the Royal Geographical Society. He is editor of the journal Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design and sits on eight editorial boards of journals concerned with urban studies and planning. He has published Urban Modelling: Algorithms, Calibrations, Predictions (Cambridge University Press, 1976), Microcomputer Graphics: Art, Design and Creative Modelling (Chapman and Hall, 1987), and (with Paul Longley) Fractal Cities: A Geometry of Form and Function (Academic Press, 1994). He has co-edited six books on the use of computer models in urban studies and planning.
In the United States (1990-1995), Professor Batty directed the Buffalo site of the National Centre for Geographic Information and Analysis. CASA, the Centre that Professor Batty setup and directs at UCL, is new research focus within the University of London devoted to the development of computer based models for spatial problems with a focus on urban environments. CASA has attracted funding in the order of £1.8 million since its inception, and it won the Association of Geographic Information’s (AGI) Award for Technological Progress in 1998.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
M. Batty (1999) New Technology and GIS, in Geographical Information Systems: Principles and Technical Issues: Volume 1 (Eds. P. A. Longley, M. F. Goodchild, D. J. Maguire, and D. W. Rhind, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1999), 309-316
Jiang, C. Claramunt, and M. Batty (1999) Geometric Accessibility and Geographic Information: Extending Desktop GIS to Space Syntax, Computers, Environments and Urban Systems, 23, 127-146
M. Batty, Y. Xie, and Z. Sun (1999) Modeling Urban Dynamics Through GIS-Based Cellular Automata, Computers, Environments and Urban Systems, 23, 205-233, 1999.
M. Batty, M. Dodge, B. Jiang and A. Smith (1999) Geographical Information Systems and Urban Design, in Geographical Information and Planning (Eds. J. Stillwell, S. Geertman, and S. Openshaw , Springer, Heidelberg, Germany), 43-65.
M. Batty (1998) Evaluation in the Digital Age, in Evaluation in Planning: Facing the Challenge of Complexity (Eds. N. Lichfield, A. Barbanente, D. Borri, A. Khakee, and A. Prat, Kluwer, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 251-272)
M. Batty, M. Dodge, S. Doyle, and A. Smith (1998) Modelling Virtual Environments, in Geocomputation: A Primer (Eds. P. Longley, S. Brooks, R. McDonnell, and B. Macmillan, John Wiley and Sons, Chichester, UK, 139-161)
M. Batty (1998) Urban Evolution on the Desktop: Simulation Using Extended Cellular Automata, Environment and Planning A, 30, 1943-1967
H. A. Makse, J. S. Andrade Jr., M. Batty, S. Havlin, and H. E. Stanley (1998) Modeling Urban Growth Patterns with Correlated Percolation, Physical Review E, 58, 6, 7054-7062
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Department of Spatial Information Science and Engineering
344 Boardman Hall
University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469
(207) 581-2147, fax (207) 581-2206, beard@spatial.maine.edu
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Kate Beard is an associate professor and chair of the Department of Spatial Information Science Engineering at the University of Maine. She has been a research faculty member with the National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis (NCGIA) since its beginning in 1989. She holds a M.S. (1984) and Ph.D. (1988) from the Institute for Environmental Studies, Land Resources Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison where she specialized in geographic information systems.
Her current research focuses on digital libraries, metadata and spatial data quality, uncertainty of spatial data and visualization of spatial data quality. Dr Beard has been a cooperator on the Alexandria Digital Library project centered at the University of California Santa Barbara, she was PI on a project to develop a digital spatial library for the Gulf of Maine, and is currently a PI on a project to develop a digital library for Maine Lakes. Her work on data quality covers metadata representation, management and tracking of errors in spatial databases, and various methods for visualizing and communicating data quality. Dr. Beard is one of four PIs on a three year grant from the National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA) to investigate uncertainty in spatial databases. She is a PI on another NIMA grant that is investigating the integration of geospatial data and imagery. Dr. Beard is also a PI on a two-year grant from NSF to investigate the application of spatial concepts to genome mapping. Other research interests include investigations of spatial resolution and scale issues in the distribution of environmental variables. Dr. Beard has authored or co-authored over 50 articles in journals, books and conference proceedings in the area of geographic information science.
Dr. Beard is serving a two year term as board member for the Cartography and Geographic Information Science Society. She serves on the Article Review Board of URISA Journal and is a member of the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping, the Urban and Regional Information Systems Association, the Geospatial Information Technology Association, and the Association for American Geographers. She teaches Introduction to GIS, GIS Applications, Spatial Analysis, Community Information Systems and seminars on Uncertainty in Spatial Databases, Automated Generalization and Visualization of Data Quality.
Recent research grants include Assessing Object-Oriented Concepts in Smallworld GIS. Bangor Hydro Electric Co. PIs Kate Beard and Max Egenhofer (1998), Spatio-temporal model for integrated information management. NIMA PIs Kate Beard and Peggy Agouris, 3 years (1998), Applications of Spatial Concepts to Genome Data. NSF PIs, Kate Beard, Carol Bult and Max Egenhofer, 2 years (1997), Uncertainty in Geospatial Information Representation, Analysis and Decision Support NIMA, PIs, Mike Goodchild, Kate Beard, Keith Clark , Dan Montello. 3 years (1997), University of Maine Center of Excellence in Remote Sensing Applications NASA CoPI, 1yr. (1997) and PEARL - Public Educational Access to Resources on Lakes in Maine USGS 2 years (1997).
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Beard, K. and V. Sharma, 1998. Multilevel and Graphical Views of Metadata. Proceedings IEEE Advances in Digital Libraries (ADL)98. Santa Barbara, CA.
Beard, M. K and B. Buttenfield. 1998. Graphical Detection and Evaluation of Uncertainty. in Geographic Information Systems: Principles and Techniques, Management and Applications. D. Maguire, M. Goodchild, D. Rhind and P. Langley.(Ed). London: Longman Scientific and Technical.
Hassen, K. and K Beard. 1998. Visual Evaluation of GIS Algorithms Using a Reference Grid. Cartography and Geographic Information Systems 25(1) pp. 42-50
Beard, K., T. Smith and L Hill 1997. Meta-information Models for Georeferenced Digital Library Collections. Proceedings IEEE 2nd International Conference on Metadata. Silver Spring, MD.
Beard, M.K and Vijyanti Sharma 1997. Multidimensional Ranking in Digital Spatial Libraries. Special Issue of Metadata. Journal of Digital Libraries. Vol.1. No 1 pp. 153-160.
Beard, M. K and Smith, T.R. 1997. A Framework for Meta-Information in Digital Libraries. in Managing Multimedia Data: Using Metadata to Integrate and Apply Digital Data. A. Sheth and W. Klaus (Eds.).McGraw Hill.
Beard, M.K. 1995. Representing Spatial Data Quality. in Geographic Information Research: Bridging the Atlantic. M. Craglia and H. Couclelis (Eds).London:Taylor and Francis.
Paradis, J. and Beard, M. K.. 1994. Visualization of Spatial Data Quality for the Decision Maker: A Data Quality Filter. URISA Journal Vol. 6 No. 2 p. 25-34.
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Department of Geomatics Sciences & Centre for Research in Geomatics
Laval University
Quebec City
Canada G1K 7P4
(418)656-2131 (ext. 3694), fax (418)656-7411, yvan.bedard@scg.ulaval.ca
Curriculum Vita
Dr Bédard is a professor of GIS and Spatial Databases at Laval University Department of Geomatics Sciences since 1986. He has an engineering background and 24 years of experience in GIS, spatial database design, data warehousing and Spatial OLAP. Dr Bédard is the holder of a Canada Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Industrial Chair in Geospatial Databases for Decision-Support which involves 9 industrial and governmental partners. He is an active member of the Centre for Research in Geomatics (CRG) where he acted as the Founding-Director and again as General Director for a total of 7 years (over 2M $US annual budget and 100 members). He also is an associate professor at the Dept. of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering of the University of New-Brunswick as well as the Director of Geomatics for the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Québec Research Centre (CHUQ). He is one of the most active researchers in the Canadian GEOIDE Network of Centers of Excellence in Geomatics.
Dr Bédard has a strong record in both fundamental and applied research, most projects involving government agencies and private industries in Canada and abroad. He has a multi-millions competitive grants and contract record, including projects for organizations such as Geomatics Canada, National Defence of Canada, Canadian Space Agency, Health Canada, BC Environment Lands and Parks, Quebec Department of Natural Resources, Quebec Department of Transportation, Quebec Department of Environment, Quebec Public Health Center, Hydro-Quebec, SNC-Lavalin, Intergraph, Intelec Geomatics, Kheops Technologies, Holonics, Syntell, DVP-ALTA Group, Harfang Technologies, European Union, World Bank, etc.
His research experience covers investigations in several fields (transportation, topography, digital libraries + geodata infrastructures, forestry, cadastre, environment, agriculture, geology, tax mapping, utilities, public health) as well as work with major commercial GISs (Intergraph, ESRI, MapInfo), DBMSs (Oracle, SQL-Server), CASEs (Oracle tools, Visio, Perceptory), OLAPs (ProClarity, Powerplay, Oracle BI, SQL-Server Analysis Services) and Web mapping technologies (Geomedia WebMap, JMap). He has designed innovative software used in over 40 countries (Perceptory, M3Cat) and recently developed the first commercial spatial OLAP (JMap SOLAP).
Collaboration with various industries and governments led him to participate over the years in the design of commercial products, to participate as an expert in needs analysis, feasibility studies, strategic plans and project evaluations (ex. Vérificateur Général du Québec, Natural Resources Canada, Human Resources Canada, World Bank, Service du Cadastre du Québec, City of Cordoba in Argentina, CDG, Innovatec Québec, banks and private companies) and to become the first Scientific Director (co-founder) of the Quebec Centre for the Development of Geomatics (a joint industry-government-academia organisation).
He has published about 150 papers and book chapters and presented at about 150 conferences worldwide, regularly for non-specialists. In addition, he has been a member of several national and international associations and has given continuing education courses to more than 1000 professionals in Canada, Europe and North Africa. His main research interest today is to improve the efficiency of analysis and design methods as well as the development of new methods and technologies to build better databases for decision-support in a context of web-oriented geographic knowledge discovery (spatial data warehousing, spatial OLAP, spatial data aggregation and summarization).
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Bédard, Y, Larrivée, S., Proulx, MJ, Nadeau, M., 2004. Modeling Geospatial Databases with Plug-Ins for Visual Languages: A Pragmatic Approach and the Impacts of 16 Years of Research and Experimentations on Perceptory, S. Wang et al. (Eds.): ER Workshops 2004, Lectures Notes in Computer Sciences 3289, Springer-Verlag, pp. 17–30, 2004.
Bédard, Y., Devillers, R., Gervais, M. & Jeansoulin, R., 2004. Towards Multidimensional User Manuals for Geospatial Datasets: Legal issues and their Considerations into the design of a Technological Perspective. Proceedings of the Third International Symposium on Spatial Data Quality (ISSDQ'04), Bruck an der Leitha, Autriche, 15-17 avril, vol. 28b GeoInfo Series, pp.183-195.
Devillers, R., Bédard, Y. and Jeansoulin, R. 2004. Multidimensional management of geospatial data quality information for its dynamic use within Geographical Information Systems. Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing (PE&RS) Journal. American Society of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Accepted for publication.
Marchand, P., Brisebois, A., Bédard, Y. et Edwards G, 2003. Implementation and evaluation of a hypercube-based method for spatio-temporal exploration and analysis. Journal of the International Society of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ISPRS), Vol. 59, Issues 1-2, pp. 6-20.
Bédard, Y., Gosselin, P., Rivest, S., Proulx, M.J., Nadeau M., Lebel G. & Gagnon M.F.,2003. Integrating GIS Components with Knowledge Discovery Technology for Environmental Health Decision Support, International Journal of Medical Informatics. Elsevier Sciences, Ireland.vol 70/1 pp 79 - 94.
Brodeur, J., Bédard, Y., Edwards, G. and Moulin, B. 2002. Revisiting the Concept of Geospatial Data Interoperability within the Scope of Human Communication Processes. Transactions in GIS, an International Journal, vol. 7 no. 2, pp. 243-265.
Body, M., Miquel M., Bédard Y. & A. Tchounikine 2002. A Multidimensional and Multiversion Structure for OLAP Applications. ACM Proceedings of the Fifth International Workshop on DATA WAREHOUSING AND OLAP (DOLAP 2002), McLean, VA, USA, November 8th, pp. 1-6.
Bédard Y & Bernier E, 2002. Supporting Multiple Representations with Spatial View Management and the Concept of "VUEL". Joint Workshop on Multi-Scale Representations of Spatial Data, ISPRS WG IV/3, ICA Com. on Map Generalization. Ottawa, CANADA, July 7th-8th.
Bédard, Y., T. Merrett & J. Han, 2001. Fundamentals of Spatial Data Warehousing for Geographic Knowledge Discovery. Chapter of the book "Geographic Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery" edited by H. Miller and J. Han, Research Monographs in GIS series edited by Peter Fisher and Jonathan Raper, Taylor & Francis,p. 53-73.
Bédard, Y., 1999. Principles of Spatial Database Analysis and Design.Chap. 29 in: Geographical Information Systems: Principles, Techniques, Application and Managements, 2e ed. Edited by Paul A. Longley, Michael F. Goodchild, David J. Maguire, and David W. Rhind, New York: Wiley. pp. 413-424.
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Department of Geography
Campus Box 260, University of Colorado
Boulder, Colorado
303-492-3618, fax 303-492-7501, babs@colorado.edu
http://greenwich.colorado.edu
Curriculum Vita
Barbara P. Buttenfield is Professor and Associate Chair of Geography at the University of Colorado in Boulder and Director of the Meridian Lab, a research facility focusing on visualization and modeling of geographic information and technology. She teaches courses in Geographic Information Science, Cartography, and Geospatial Information Design.
Her research focuses on algorithms for Web-based data delivery, multi-scale geospatial database design, and visualization of uncertainty in environmental modeling. She has published two books. The first Map Generalization: Making Rules for Knowledge Representation was co-edited with Robert McMaster, and went into a third printing in 1999. The second Digital Library Use: Social Practice in Design and Evaluation was co-edited with Ann Bishop and Nancy van House, and published by MIT Press in 2003. She is working now on a third project, writing The Handbook of Geographic Information Design, to be published by Wiley.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Yuan, M., Buttenfield, B.P., Gahegan, M., and Miller, H. Geospatial Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery. Chapter 14 in: McMaster, R.B. and Usery, E. L. A Research Agenda for Geographic Information Science. New York: Taylor & Francis (CRC Press). 2004.
Bishop. A., Buttenfield, B.P. and Van House, N. (Eds.) Digital Library Use: Social Practice in Design and Evaluation. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. 2003.
Graf, W., Buttenfield, B. P., Harden, C.P., Jensen, J. Malanson, G.P., MacDowell, P. F., McLafferty, S., Psuty, N. P., Vaux, H. J. Research Priorities in Geography for the U.S. Geological Survey. Washington, D.C: National Research Council Monograph. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. 2002.
Buttenfield, B.P. Transmitting Vector Geospatial Data Across the Internet Progressively. Proceedings, Second International GIScience Conference (GIScience 2002), Boulder Colorado, September 2002: 51-64. 2002.
Tsou, M. H. and Buttenfield, B. P. A Dynamic Architecture for Distributed Geographic Information Services. Transactions in GIS 6(4): 355- 381. www.ingenta.com/journals/browse/bpl/tgis and search on issue volume and number. 2002.
Buttenfield, B. P. and Reitsma, R. Loglinear and Multidimensional Scaling Models of Digital Library Use. International Journal of Human-Computer Systems 57: 101-119. On the Web at http://www.idealibrary.com or http://www.colorado.edu/geography/babs/papers/ijhcs2002reprint.pdf. 2002.
Fabrikant, S. I. And Buttenfield, B. P. Formalizing Spaces for Information Access. Annals, Association of American Geographers, vol. 91(2): 263–280. 2001.
Leitner, M. and Buttenfield, B.P. Guidelines for the Display of Attribute Certainty. Cartography and GIS 27(1): 3-14. 2000.
Harvey, F., Buttenfield, B.P. and Lambert, S.C. Integrating Geodata Infrastructures from the Ground Up. Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing, Special Issue on GIS and Local Government (James Merchant, Ed.): 1287-1291. 1999.
Buttenfield, B.P. Usability Evaluation of Digital Libraries. Science and Technology Libraries, 17(3/4): 39-59. 1999.
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Professor and Director NCGIA at Santa Barbara
Department of Geography
University of California, Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara
CA 93106-4060
805-893-7961, fax 805-893-3146, kclarke@geog.ucsb.edu
http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/~kclarke
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Keith C. Clarke, a research cartographer, is Professor of Geography and Director of the NCGIA at the University of California, Santa, Barbara. He holds the B.A. degree with honours from Middlesex Polytechnic, London, England, and the M.A. and Ph. D. from the University of Michigan, specializing in Analytical Cartography. He joined the faculty at the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1996. Dr. Clarke's most recent research has been on environmental simulation modeling, on modeling urban growth using cellular automata, on terrain mapping and analysis, and as a consultant for UNICEF and US-AID on mapping to support disease control programs in Africa. Dr. Clarke is the former North American Editor of the International Journal of Geographical Information Systems, and is series editor for the Prentice Hall Series in Geographic Information Science. He is the author of the textbooks, Analytical and Computer Cartography (Prentice Hall, 1995), Getting Started with GIS (1997) and about thirty book chapters, journal articles, and papers in the fields of cartography, remote sensing, and geographic information systems. In 1990 and 1991 Dr. Clarke was a NASA /American Society for Engineering Education Fellow at Stanford University, and in 1992 served as Science Advisor to the Office of Research, National Mapping Division of the U.S. Geological Survey in Reston, Virginia. Since 1997, he has been the Santa Barbara Director of the National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Clarke, K. C. (2003) "Geocomputation's future at the extremes: high performance computing and nanoclients", Parallel Computing, Volume 29, Issue 10, October 2003, Pages 1281-1295.
Aerts, J. C. J. H., Clarke, K. C. and Keuper, A. D. (2003) "Testing popular visualization techniques for representing model uncertainty", Cartography and Geographic Information Science, Vol. 30, No. 3, pp. 249-261.
Herold, M, Liu, X. and Clarke, K. C. (2003) "Spatial metrics and image texture for mapping urban land use", Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing, Vol. 69, no. 9, pp. 991-1001.
Artur-Hartranft, S. T., Carlson, T. N. and Clarke, K. C. (2003) "Satellite and ground-based microclimate and hydrological analyses coupled with a regional urban growth model", Remote Sensing of Environment, Vol. 86, pp. 385-400.
Herold, M., Goldstein, N. and K.C. Clarke (2003) The spatio-temporal form of urban growth: measurement, analysis and modeling, Remote Sensing of Environment, Vol. 86(3): 286-302.
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Dean, Faculty of Engineering
Professor, Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering
University of New Brunswick,
P.O. Box 4400 Fredericton, N.B., CANADA E3B 5A3
dcoleman@unb.ca
Curriculum Vita
Dr. David Coleman is the Dean of Engineering and a Professor of Geomatics Engineering at the University of New Brunswick. Prior to obtaining his PhD, he was a project surveyor and engineer with Marshall Macklin Monaghan (1976-78), a General Manager and Vice-President with Northway-Gestalt Corporation (1978-85), a partner in The Cabot Group, a GIS and land information management consulting firm (1988-91) and a Senior Research Associate at the University of New Brunswick (1993-97). He has a B.Sc.Eng. and M.Sc.Eng. degrees in Surveying Engineering from the University of New Brunswick (1976 and 1988 respectively), and a PhD. in Spatial Information Science from the University of Tasmania (1994).
Dr. Coleman is currently a member of the Canadian Defence Science Advisory Board, the GSDI Association Board of Directors, and the Geomatics Canada Advisory Board. He is a Past-President of the Canadian Institute of Geomatics, and has served as a member of the Mapping Science Committee of the U.S. National Research Council, the Champlain Institute Board of Directors, and the Research Management Committee of the GEOIDE Network of Centres of Excellence.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Li, S. and D.J. Coleman [2004]. ³Modelling Distributed GIS Data Production Workflow². Accepted for publication to Computers, Environment and Urban Systems.
Giff, G. and D.J. Coleman [2003] ³Financing Models for SDIs: Are they Applicable in Emerging Nations?² Invited Paper and Presentation at the 2003 Cambridge Conference, St. John¹s College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, U.K., 21-25 July 2003. Available on the Internet at http://www.cambridgeconference.com.
Pegler, K. H. , D. J. Coleman, Y. Zhang and Pelot, R. (2003). " The Potential for Using Very High Spatial Resolution Imagery for Marine Search and Rescue Surveillance." Geocarto International, Vol 18., No. 3, September. pp 35-39.
Li, S. and D.J. Coleman [2003]. ³A Web-Based Collaboration System for Managing Distributed GIS Data Production². Geomatica. Vol 57, No. 1, pp. 59-67.
Giff, G. and D.J. Coleman [2003]. ³Financing Spatial Data Infrastructure Development: Examining Alternative Funding Models² Chapter 13 in Developing Spatial Data Infrastructures: from concept to reality. ed Professor Ian P. Williamson, Dr Abbas Rajabifard, Ms Mary-Ellen F. Feeney. Taylor & Francis Books Ltd.
Coleman, D.J. [2002]. ³Moving Maps and Geographic Information Systems onto the Internet² in Inno¹va-tion: Essays by Leading Canadian Researchers, pp. 44-53. James Downey and Los Claxton, eds. Key Porter Books, Ltd., Toronto.
Coleman, D.J. and R. Groot and J.D. McLaughlin [2000]. "Some human resource issues in the evolving GDI environment". Ch. 6 in Geospatial Data Infrastructure: Concepts, Cases and Good Practise, R. Groot and J.D. McLaughlin, editors. Oxford University Press.
Pegler, K.H., Coleman, D.J., Nguyen, H.T.T. and R. Castonguay [2000]. "Using TIN Random Densification to Minimize the Ridging Phenomenon in Service New Brunswick Digital Terrain Models" Geomatica, Vol. 54, No. 433-440.
Coleman, D.J. and S. Li. (1999). ³Developing a Groupware-Based Prototype to Support Geomatics Production Management² Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, Vol. 23, pp. 1-17. Elsevier Science Ltd.
Finley, D. and Coleman, D.J. [1999] "Introducing Groupware to Distributed Geomatics Production Environments." Journal of Surveying Engineering, American Society of Civil Engineering. (February.)
Coleman, D.J. [1999] "Geographic Information Systems in Networked Environments" in Geographical Information Systems, 2nd Edition, D. J. Maguire, M. Goodchild, D. Rhind and P. Longley, eds., John Wiley & Sons, London, Chapter 22, pp. 317-329.
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Chair, Department of Geography University of South Carolina
Chair - National Research Council Mapping Science Committee
Co - Director NASA Affiliated research Center - University of South Carolina
Columbia, S.C. 29208
(803)777-5234, fax (803)777-4972, cowend@sc.edu
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Cowen is Carolina Distinguished Professor in the Department of Geography and has been the Director of the University of South Carolina Liberal Arts Computing Lab since 1978. He received the B.A. in Geography (S.U.N.Y. Buffalo, 1966), M.A. in Geography (S.U.N.Y. Buffalo - June 1968), and Ph.D. in Geography (Ohio State University, 1971). Among recent professional service activities have included the Editorial Committee of the Intl. Journal of GIS (1986-1998), Board of Directors of the American Cartographic Association of ACSM (1994-1996), Editor of the Annual GIS Special Issue of Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing (1995), Editorial Board of Transactions in GIS (1997), Coordinator for the Committee on Geographic Information of the Governor's Information Resource Committee in South Carolina (1997-1998), and President of the Cartography & Geographic Information Society (1997-1998). He is currently Chair of the Mapping Science Committee of the National Research Council. Among the awards he has received include the South Carolina Water Resources Distinguished Service (1994), Environmental Systems Research Institute - Making a Difference Award (1995), ASPRS Award for Third Best Article in Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (1996), Governor's Information Resource Council Distinguished Service Award (1998), Louise Scutter Distinguished Professor Award (1998), Capstone Area Outstanding Teaching Award (1998) and Fellow American Congress on Survey and Mapping (1998). Over the past years he has directed to successful completion 44 Masters degree students and 10 Ph.D. students.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
1999, co-author with Jensen, J.R., Althausen, J.D., Narumalani, S. And O. Weatherbee, "An Evaluation of the CoastWatch Change Detection Protocol in South Carolina," Chapter 5 in Remote Sensing Change Detection: Environmental Monitoring Methods and Applications, R. S. Lunetta and C.D. Elvidge, Eds., Ann Arbor: Ann Arbor Press, 75-88.
1998, co-author with John Jensen, "Extraction and Modeling of Urban Attributes Using Remote Sensing Technology," in People and Pixels: Linking Remote Sensing and Social Science, Washington: National Research Council, 164-188.
1998, co-author with John Jensen, 1998, "Multi-Scale Economic and Demographic Data," in Stan Morain, Ed., GIS Solutions in Natural Resource Management, Santa Fe: OnWorld Press, pp.207 - 234.
1997, co - author with G. Ehler and H. Mackey, "Development of a Shape Fitting Tool for site Evaluation," in M.J. Kraak and M. Molenaar, Advances in GIS Research II, London: Taylor & Francis,143 - 154.
1996, "Remote Sensing Image Browse and Archival Systems," Geocarto International - A Multi-disciplinary Journal of Remote Sensing & GIS, 11(2):23 - 42 (with J. Jensen, X. Huang and K. He).
1996, co -author with J. Jensen, "Chapter 10: Principles of Change Detection Using Digital Remote Sensor Data," in Starr, J. L., Estes, J. E. and K.C. McGwire, Eds., Integration of Geographic Information Systems and Remote Sensing, London: Cambridge Press, 37-54.
1995, "The Design and Implementation of an Integrated GIS for Environmental Applications," Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing, 61(11):1393-1404. (with J. Jensen, P. Bresnahan, G. Ehler, D. Graves, X Huang, C Weisner, and H. Mackey).
1995, co-author with Geof Ehler, "Incorporating Multiple Experts into a Spatial Decision Support System," Advances in GIS, London: Taylor and Francis, 1:60-72.
1995, co-Author with P. Bresnahan et al. "Using Geographical Data Browsers in a Networked Environment," Advances in GIS, London: Taylor & Francis, 2:921-932.
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Department of Town & Regional Planning
University of Sheffield
Sheffield S10 2TN
+44-114-2720185, fax: +44-114-2722199, gisdata@sheffield.ac.uk
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Massimo (Max) Craglia lectures Information Management and GIS in the Department of Town & Regional Planning, at the University of Sheffield. Other major areas of teaching include Comparative Planning, and European Planning. Dr. Craglia's research focuses on geographic information policy, the development of national and local spatial data infrastructures, and the application of GIS to policy relevant problems in urban management and planning.
Dr. Craglia currently directs the EC-funded INFO2000 project on Methods for Access to Data and Metadata in Europe ( www.info2000-madame.org ) , is Vice-Chair of the Euroconference series on GIS and the Social Sciences, and advisor to the European Science Foundation, the Joint Research Centre of the European Comission, and the EU Committee of the Regions. He is co-director of the Sheffield Centre for Geographic Information and Spatial Analysis, and serves as Member of the Management Board of the Association of Geographic Information Laboratories in Europe (AGILE), and Chair of the European Special Interest Group of the UK Association for Geographic Information (AGI). Between 1993 and 1997, he co-ordinated the European Science Foundation's GISDATA scientific programme ( http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/academic/D-H/gis/gisdata.html ). This programme was supported by the national research councils of fourteen European countries, and had a strong trans-Atlantic dimension through its collaboration with the NCGIA. Between 1989 and 1993, he worked as urban and regional planner with the United Nations' Department for Technical Co-operation and Development in Saudi Arabia.
Since 1995, Dr. Craglia has contributed to obtaining grants for research projects and networks worth 1.7 million ECUs (of which 50% as PI), and £ 230,000. Major projects in which he is currently involved focus on crime pattern analysis, needs analysis and service provision for children and young people, socio-economic modelling, and quality of life indicators in urban areas in distress.
He has co-authored a book in Italian on the Diffusion of GIS in local government (Ciancarella L., Craglia M., Ravaglia E., Secondini P. and Valpreda E. 1998. La Diffusione dei GIS nelle amministrazioni locali italiane: nuove opportunita’ per il governo del territorio). Edited books include GIS Diffusion: The Adoption and Use of Geographical Information Systems in Local Government in Europe, (with I. Masser and H. Campbell, 1996), Geographic Information Research: Trans-Atlantic Perspectives (with H. Onsrud, 1998), and Geographic Information Research: Bridging the Atlantic (with H. Couclelis, 1997). He serves as member of the editorial board of Environment and Planning B, and Computers, Environment, and Urban Systems, and referees papers for the International Journal of GIS, and Urban Studies.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
"A comparative evaluation of approaches to urban crime pattern analysis" (with R. Haining and P. Wiles) in Urban Studies, 2000, (accepted)
"From Global to Local, the Development of Local Geographic Informaiton Strategies in the UK" (with Paola Signoretta) in Environment and Planning B, 2000, (accepted).
"A European Policy Framework for Geographic Information" (with I. Masser) in Computers Environment and Urban Systems, 1998, 21(6), pp. 393-406.
"Building the European Geographic Information Resource Base: towards a Policy-Driven research Agenda" (with Ian Masser) in Craglia and Onsrud, 1998, pp 31-40.
"Decision Makers’ Perspectives on European Geographic Information Policy Issues" (with P. Burrough, I. Masser, and D. Rhind) in Transactions in GIS , 1997, Vol 2 (1), pp. 61-71.
"L’Informazione Geografica: la nascita di nuove infrastrutture economico-territoriali" (with C. Capineri) in Rivista Geografica Italiana, 1997, vol. 103 pp.561-586
"A Comparative Evaluation of GIS Diffusion in Local Government in Nine European Countries" in Masser, Campbell, and Craglia, 1996, pp. 211-234
"Building Networks of European Researchers: GISDATA on the Internet" in Environment and Planning B, 1996 vol. 23, 489-500
"GIS and Multimedia" (with Jonathan Raper). Guest Editorial in Environment Planning B, 1995 vol 22 (6) 634-636
"GIS in Italian Municipalities" Special issue of Computers Environment and Urban Systems, Vol 18 No. 6, 1994, pp. 381-475
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Center for Urban and Regional Affairs
University of Minnesota
330 HHH Center
301 19th Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55455
(612) 625-3321, Fax: (612) 624-0273, wcraig@umn.edu
Curriculum Vita
Dr. William Craig is Associate Director of the Center for Urban and Regional Affairs at the University of Minnesota and also adjunct professor of geography and adjunct professor in the Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs. In past professional positions he served as Director of the Minnesota Center for Survey Research, University of Minnesota (fifty percent time) and Project Director and Systems Director, Minnesota Land Management Information System, University of Minnesota (fifty percent time). Prior to that he served as Director of the Social Sciences Research Facilities Center and Director of the West Bank Computer Center, University of Minnesota.
Dr. Craig earned all of his academic degrees at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis including Ph.D., 1980, geography with supporting fields in economics and statistics, M.A., 1972, geography with same supporting fields and B.A., 1965, mathematics with minor in geography.
Among relevant past awards and professional achievements have included President, University Consortium for Geographic Information Science (UCGIS); President, International Geographic Information Foundation; Chair, Steering Committee for the first International GIS/LIS Conference; President, Urban and Regional Information Systems Association (URISA); State GIS Honor Roll, Lifetime Achievement Award, Minnesota GIS/LIS Consortium; Edgar M. Horwood Award from URISA for Outstanding Service to the organization and to the field; member of the Mapping Science Committee, National Research Council; as well as many others including several keynote addresses at academic conferences within the Australia, England, and New Zealand.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
2004 - “White Knights of Spatial Data Infrastructure: The Role and Motivation of Key Individuals.” Volume 16, Number 2. URISA Journal.
2003 - “Certification and Ethics in The GIS Profession” with William E. Huxhold, Journal of the Urban and Regional Information Systems Association, vol. 15 no., pp 51-64.
2002 - Community Participation and Geographic Information Systems, book edited with Trevor M. Harris and Daniel Weiner, London: Taylor and Francis, 383 pages.
1998 - "The Internet Aids Community Participation in the Planning Process," Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, vol. 22, no. 4, pp 393-404.
1998 - "How and Why Community Groups Use Maps and Geographic Information," Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, vol. 25, no.2, pp 95-104.
1996 - "Democratization of Data: Bridging the Gap for Community Groups," with David S. Sawicki, Journal of American Planning Association, vol. 62, no. 4, pp. 512-523.
1995 - "What the 1990 Census Says About Minnesota: Income and Poverty," with John Tichy, CURA/U of Mn. pp. 153
1995 - "Why We Can't Share Data: Institutional Inertia," Sharing Geographic Information, Harlan J. Onsrud and Gerard Rushton, eds., Center for Urban Policy Research, Rutgers University, pp. 107-118.
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Department of Geography U-2148
354 Mansfield Road
University of Connecticut
Storrs, CT 06269-2148
(860)-486-2059, fax: (860)-486-1348, cromley@uconnvm.uconn.edu
Curriculum Vita
Robert Cromley is Professor of Geography at the University of Connecticut at Director of the University of Connecticut Center for Geographic Information and Analysis. He teaches courses in geographic information science, locational analysis and computer-assisted cartography. Dr. Cromley’s research focuses on generalization issues in digital mapping, location/allocation modeling and web-based spatial analysis.
Dr. Cromley is finishing a four year term as editor of Cartography and Geographic Information Science and will continue to serve on its editorial board. He has been software review editor for the Professional Geographer and co-editor of the Association of American Geographer’s Resource publication series. He is the author of the book Digital Cartography and has published over fifty articles in geography, cartography, and GIS journals.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
R.G. Cromley and R. Mrozinski. forthcoming. "The Retention of Spatial Structure in Choropleth Mapping: The Ordinal Method of Data Classification," The Cartographic Journal.
R. Mrozinski and R.G. Cromley. 1999. "Singly- and Doubly-Constrained Methods of Areal Interpolation for Vector-Based GIS," Transactions in GIS. Vol. 3, pp 285-301.
R.G. Cromley and D.M. Hanink. 1999. "Coupling Land-Use Allocation Models with Raster GIS," Journal of Geographical Systems, Vol. 1, pp. 137-153.
D.M. Hanink and R. G. Cromley. 1998. "Land-Use Allocation in the Absence of Complete Market Values," Journal of Regional Science, Vol. 38, pp. 465-480.
K. Noviello, E.K. Cromley, and R.G. Cromley. 1996. "A Comparison of the Air Passenger and Air Cargo Industries with Respect to Hub Locations," The Great Lakes Geographer, Vol. 3, pp. 75-85.
R.G. Cromley. 1996. "Incorporating GIS Modeling Techniques into an Introductory Economic Geography Classroom," The Pennsylvania Geographer, Vol. 343, pp. 3-23.
E.K. Cromley and R.G. Cromley. 1996. "An Analysis of Alternative Classification Schemes for Medical Atlas Mapping," European Journal of Cancer, Vol. 32A, pp. 1551-1559.
R.G. Cromley. 1996. "A Comparison of Optimal Classification Algorithms for the Choroplethic Displays of Spatially Aggregated Data," International Journal of Geographical Information Systems, Vol. 10, pp. 405-424.
S. November, R.G. Cromley, and E.K. Cromley. 1996. "Multi-Objective Analysis of School District Regionalization Alternatives in Connecticut," The Professional Geographer, Vol. 48, pp. 1-14.
R.G. Cromley. 1995. "Classed Versus Unclassed Choropleth Maps: A Question of How Many Classes," Cartographica, Vol. 32., pp. 15-27.
C. Barber, R.G. Cromley, and R. Andrle. 1995. "Evaluating Alternative Line Simplification Strategies for Multiple Representations of Cartographic Lines," Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, Vol. 22, pp. 276-290.
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Director, Transportation Studies Center
Professor, Urban Studies and Planning
Portland State University
Portland, Oregon 97207-0751
(503) 725-4042, fax (503) 725-8480, e-mail ken@upa.pdx.edu
Curriculum Vita
Kenneth J. Dueker, emeritus professor of urban studies and planning, , is an experienced educator and researcher in transportation and geographic information systems. He directed the Center for Urban Studies from 1979 to 1998 and the Transportation Studies Center from 1997 to 2002 at Portland State University. His areas of interest include: transportation and land use interactions, travel and parking behavior, and Geographic Information Systems - Transportation.
He has chaired the Transportation Research Board Subcommittee on Geographic Information Systems - Transportation. He is a past-president of the Urban and Regional Information Systems Association (URISA) and was a co-editor of the URISA Journal from 1989 to 1999. He was also the year 1999 - 2000 president of Oregon URISA chapter.
In 1997 URISA awarded Dr. Dueker the Horwood Service Award and in 2000 the Transportation Research Board appointed him as emeritus member of the Spatial Data and Information Sciences Committee. In 200l Portland State University honored him with the Millar Award for a distinguished research record. In 2002 the Oregon Chapter of URISA awarded him its first Distinguished Service Award.
Education:
BS (1960), MS (1963), and PhD (1967) in Civil Engineering, University of Washington
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
Dueker, K. and P. Bender, Building and Maintaining a Statewide Transportation Framework, Transportation Research Record (TRR) (forthcoming)
Dueker, K. and P. Bender, White Paper on Issues and Strategies for Building a State Transportation Framework, Center for Urban Studies, Portland State University, 2002. PR 122
Dueker, K., J.A. Butler, P. Bender, and J. Zhang, Clearinghouse Approaches to Sharing of GIS-T Data, Transportation Research Record (TRR) 1768, 2001, pp. 203-209.
James G. Strathman, Kenneth J. Dueker, Jihong Zhang and Timothy Williams, Analysis of Design Attributes and Crashes on the Oregon Highway System, Project Report 121, Center for Urban Studies, Portland State University, June 2001, 61 pages.
Dueker, Kenneth and Tu Ton, Geographical Information Systems for Transport, in Hensher, David and Kenneth Button (eds.), Handbook of Transport Modeling, Volume 1, Pergamon, 2000, pp.253-269.
Dueker, K. J. and J. A. Butler, Geographic Information System Framework for Transportation Data Sharing in Jean-Claude Thill (ed.) Geographic Information Systems in Transportation Research, Pergamon, 2000, pp.13-36.
Kenneth J. Dueker and J. Allison Butler, A Geographic Information System Framework for Transportation Data Sharing, Transportation Research Part C, Vol. 8, 2000, pp. 13-36.
J. Allison Butler and Kenneth J. Dueker, Implementing the Enterprise GIS in Transportation Database Design, Journal of Urban and Regional Information Systems Association, Vol. 13, No. 1, 2001, pp. 63-69.
Kenneth J. Dueker and J. Allison Butler, GIS-T Enterprise Data Model with Suggested Implementation Choices, Journal of the Urban and Regional Information Systems Association 10,1, Spring 1998.
Other recent publications:
Kenneth J. Dueker, Ideas in Motion: A Critique of the Urban Transportation Planning Process: The Performance of Portland’s Year 2000 Regional Transportation Plan, Transportation Quarterly, Vol. 56 No. 2, Spring 2002
James G. Strathman, Thomas J. Kimpel Kenneth J. Dueker, Richard Gerhart, and Steve Callas, Evaluation of Transit Operations: Data Applications of Tri-Met's Automated Bus Dispatching System, Transportation, 29, 3, pp. 321-345, August 2002.
Kenneth J. Dueker and Martha Bianco, Strategies to Attract Auto Users to Public Transportation, TCRP Report 40, Transportation Research Board, 1998.
Kenneth J. Dueker, Hong Chen and Anthony Rufolo, Measuring the Impact of Light Rail Systems on Single-Family Home Values, TRR 1617 pp 38-43.
Kenneth J. Dueker and Janet Vorvick, Transit Time Internet Access, TRR 1618. pp 180-185.
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Spatial Effects
20 Payson Road
Belmont MA 02478 USA
T/F: 617-489-4524, dutton@spatial-effects.com, http://www.spatial-effects.com/
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Geoffrey Dutton is a professional geodata and data visualization consultant based in Belmont, MA. Between 1995 and 1999 he worked as a Research Associate in the Department of Geography, University of Zürich, Switzerland, where he received his Ph.D. in 1998, under the direction of Professors Robert Weibel and Kurt Brassel. Dr. Dutton received a B.A. in Government from Columbia University and a Masters degree in City Planning from Harvard University. From 1969 through 1984 he was a staff researcher at the Laboratory for Computer Graphics and Spatial Analysis at Harvard's Graduate School of Design, where he developed and applied cartographic and geographic modeling software in both theoretical and project-oriented contexts. Subsequently he has served as a private consultant for industrial, nonprofit and academic organizations, worked as a software designer in the computer industry, and has been senior GIS analyst at several design and mapping firms in the Boston area. Recent work has included GIS feasibility study evaluation, web site design, as well as research and writing on map generalization and geodata representation. Dr. Dutton has authored more than 50 professional papers, scientific articles and book chapters, and contributed articles and graphics to trade journals and news magazines. He has served as a proposal reviewer for the Geography & Regional Science Program, US National Science Foundation, as a paper reviewer for Cartography and GIS, Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, GeoInformatrica, Int. Journal of GIS and other journals, and also as member of program/steering committees for Harvard Computer Graphics Conference (1982-83), 5th, 6th & 8th Int. Symp. on Spatial Data Handling (1992/94/98), Int. Symp. on Spatial Data Quality, Hong Kong (1999), NCGIA Research Initiative 8 (1993), Int. Cartographic Assoc., Working Group on Map Generalization (1998-9) and First Int. Symp. on Global Grid Systems (1999-2000).
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Dutton, G. (1999). A hierarchical coordinate system for geoprocessing and cartography. Lecture Notes in Earth Science 79. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. XIX + 231 pp. 97 figs., 12 plates, 16 tabs. ISSN 0930-0317; ISBN 3-540-64980-8.
Weibel, R. and Dutton, G. (1999). Generalization of spatial data and dealing with multiple representations, in Paul A. Longley, Michael F. Goodchild, David J. Maguire, and David W. Rhind, editors (1999) Geographical Information Systems: Principles, Techniques, Applications, and Management. New York: Wiley, v. 1. Chapter 10, pp. 125-155.
Dutton, G. (1999). Global Hierarchical Tessellations. Cartography and Geographic Information Science. 26(3), Note 49, p. 224.
Dutton, G. (1999). Scale, sinuosity and point selection in digital line generalization. Cartography and Geographic Information Science. 26(1), 33-53.
Dutton, G. (1996). Improving locational specificity of map data: A multi-resolution, metadata-driven approach and notation. Int. J. of GIS 10(3) London: Taylor & Francis, 253-268.
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National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis, Department of Spatial Information Science and Engineering, and Department of Computer Science, University of Maine
Orono, ME 04469-5711
http://www.spatial.maine.edu/~max/max.html
(207) 581-2114, fax (207) 581-2206, max@spatial.maine.edu
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Max J. Egenhofer, Professor of Spatial Information Science and Engineering, is the director of the National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis (NCGIA) at the University of Maine, and a cooperative professor in Computer Science. He received a Dipl.-Ing. in Surveying Engineering from the University of Stuttgart, Germany in 1985, and his Ph.D. in Surveying Engineering from the University of Maine in 1989. He held the Libra Professorship of the College of Engineering at the University of Maine (1998-2002), was recognized in May 2002 by a Joint Order from the State of Maine's Senate and House of Representatives, and is the recipient of the 2002 University of Maine Presidential Research and Creative Achievement Award and the 2003 UCGIS Research Award.
Dr. Egenhofer's research interests include spatio-temporal reasoning, user interfaces for geographic information systems, the design of spatial database systems, and mobile spatial information appliances. His current and past funded research includes grants from the National Science Foundation, the National Imagery and Mapping Agency, the Central Intelligence Agency, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, the Scientific and Environmental Affairs Division of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the Advanced Research Project Agency, the Air Force Research Laboratory, Digital Equipment Corporation, Environmental Systems Research Institute Inc., GE Corporate & Center, Intergraph Corporation, Lockheed-Martin Management and Data Systems, Space Imaging Inc., Bangor Hydro-Electric Co., and the Maine Mathematics and Science Alliance. Dr. Egenhofer has authored or co-authored over 160 articles in journals, books, and conference proceedings in the GIS, cartography, and computer science literature on various aspects of GIS design, has given over 30 keynote addresses at conferences and workshops, and is co-editor of eight books.
Dr. Egenhofer serves on the Advisory Board of the Strategic Orientation Committee of the Centre for Research in Geomatics (Université Laval, Canada) and the Scientific Advisory Committee of the Instituto de Engenharia de Estruturas, Território e Construção (Universidade Técnica de Lisboa, Portugal). He chaired the panel on Computational Methods for Representing Geographic Concepts under Varenius, NCGIA's project to advance geographic information science; was a co-leader of the NCGIA research initiatives on Interoperating Geographic Information Systems (1997), Formal Models of Common-Sense Geographic Worlds (1996), and Spatio-Temporal Reasoning in GIS (1993), and chaired the Research Projects Committee of the University Consortium for Geographic Information Science (1999-2003). He is Program Co-Chair of SSTD 2005 (Angra dos Reis, Brazil), was Program Co-Chair of the first three International Conferences on GIScience (GIScience 2004 at Adelphi, MD; GIScience 2002 at Boulder, CO; and GIScience 2000 at Savannah, GA), Program Co-Chair of Interop 97 (Santa Barbara, CA, 1997), General Chair of the Fourth International Symposium on Large Spatial Databases (Portland, ME, 1995), and Program Chair of the 2nd ACM Workshop on Advances in Geographic Information Systems (Gaithersburg, MD, 1994). He serves on the editorial boards of Transactions in GIS, Spatial Cognition and Computation, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, and The International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation. Dr. Egenhofer is a member of the Association of Computing Machinery (ACM) and the IEEE Computer Society.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
A. Rodríguez and M. Egenhofer, Comparing Geospatial Entity Classes: An Asymmetric and Context-Dependent Similarity Measure, International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 18 (3): 229-256, 2004.
J. Campos, K. Hornsby, and M. Egenhofer, A Model for Exploring Virtual Reality Environments, Journal of Visual Languages and Computing, 14 (5): 469-492, 2003.
A. Rodríguez and M. Egenhofer, Determining Semantic Similarity Among Entity Classes from Different Ontologies, IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering, 15 (2): 442-456, 2003.
M. Egenhofer, Toward the Semantic Geospatial Web, ACM-GIS 2002, McLean, VI, A. Voisard and S.-C. Chen (eds.), pp. 1-4, 2002.
F. Fonseca, M. Egenhofer, P. Agouris, and G. Câmara, Using Ontologies for Integrated Geographic Information Systems, Transactions in GIS, 6 (3): 231-257, 2002.
F. Fonseca, M. Egenhofer, C. Davis, and G. Câmara, Semantic Granularity in Ontology-Driven Geographic Information Systems, Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence, 36 (1-2): 121-151, 2002.
K. Hornsby and M. Egenhofer, Modeling Moving Objects over Multiple Granularities, Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence, 36 (1-2): 177-194, 2002.
M. Bertolotto and M. Egenhofer, Progressive Transmission of Vector Map Data over the World Wide Web, GeoInformatica, 5 (4): 345-373, 2001.
A. Rodríguez and M. Egenhofer, A Comparison of Inferences about Containers and Surfaces in Small-Scale and Large-Scale Spaces, Journal of Visual Languages and Computing, 11 (6): 639-662, 2000.
K. Hornsby and M. Egenhofer, Identity-Based Change: A Foundation for Spatio-Temporal Knowledge Representation, International Journal of Geographical Information Science 14 (3): 207-224, 2000.
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Professor for Geoinformatics and Director
Research Center for Geoinformatics and Remote Sensing
University of Osnabrueck
Eichendorffweg 30, D-49377 Vechta, Germany
(+49) 4441-15-423, fax (+49) 4441-15-583, manfred.ehlers@uos.de
URL: http://www.fzg.uni-osnabrueck.de/
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Manfred Ehlers is Professor for Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Remote Sensing at the University of Osnabrueck, Germany. He is the Director of the Research Center for Geoinformatics and Remote Sensing (German acronym: FZG). Dr. Ehlers teaches courses in geoinformatics, GIS, remote sensing, digital image processing, environmental monitoring and environmental information systems. He has held academic appointments at various universities and research institutions in Germany, the United States, and the Netherlands. His research interest focuses on the concepts for integrated geographic analysis and modeling techniques, especially the integration of GIS and remote sensing. Other research areas include geoinformatics concepts, data fusion techniques, advanced techniques for image analysis, and the design and implementation of environmental monitoring/information systems.
Dr. Ehlers was the chairman of several International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ISPRS) working groups on remote sensing and GIS. He has organized and chaired a number of national and international conferences and workshops including the SPIE (International Society for Optical Engineering) Conferences "Remote Sensing for Environmental Monitoring, GIS Applications and Geology", in Toulouse, France (2001), Aghia Pelagia, Crete, Greece (2002), Barcelona, Spain (2003), and Maspalomas, Spain (2004); the "3rd European Research Network for the Application of Geomorphology and Environmental Impact Assessment to Transportation Systems (GETS) European Union (EU) Workshop" in Vechta, Germany (1999); the ISPRS Workshops on "New Developments in GIS", Milan, Italy (1996), "Requirements for Integrated Geographic Information Systems", New Orleans, LA (1994); and "3D in Remote Sensing and GIS: Systems and Applications", Munich, Germany (1991). He has been a team leader for United Nations Missions on Environmental Information Systems in Africa and a member of the European Commission Steering Committee on "Animal Health and Related Problems in the European Union".
Dr. Ehlers has been a Principal and Co-Principal Investigator for a number of research projects from different funding agencies, including National Science Foundation (NSF); German Research Foundation (DFG); NASA; German Agency for Space Applications (DARA); German Ministry for Science and Technology (BMBF); German Ministry of the Interior (BMI); European Union; Ministry of Science, Lower Saxony; Ministry of Environment, Lower Saxony; German Environment Foundation (DBU); University of California at Santa Barbara, CA; International Institute for Aerospace Survey and Earth Sciences (ITC), The Netherlands; and the German Agency for Technical Cooperation (GTZ).
While at the University of Vechta, he has been PI or Co-PI on more than 50 funded research grants totalling over 7 Mio. Euro ($ 9.1 Mio). He has published more than 260 papers on GIS, mapping, digital image processing, remote sensing, Geoinformatics, digital photogrammetry, and environmental monitoring. He is the author of the monograph ‘Digital Image Processing’ published by the Institute of Photogrammetry, University of Hannover. He wrote chapters for a number of books including ASTM publications STP 1126 ‘Geographic Information System (GIS) and Mapping - Practices and Standards’, and STP 1279 ‘Remote Sensing and GIS for Site Characterization: Applications and Standards’, the UNESCO Man and Biosphere (MAB) Digest 12 ‘Advanced Data Acquisition and Analysis Technologies for Sustainable Development’ and the Cambridge University Press publication ‘Integration of Remote Sensing and GIS’.
He has given over 250 presentations at scientific and professional meetings and conferences including Keynote Addresses at the ‘6th International Conference on Systems Research, Informatics and Cybernetics’ in Baden-Baden (Germany), the ‘International Association of Pattern Recognition’ (IAPR) Technical Committee 7 (TC7) Workshop in Delft (The Netherlands), the ‘Swiss Academy of Natural Sciences Symposium’ on ‘GIS and Remote Sensing for Environmental Analysis’ in Zurich, the ‘GEOINFO 2000 Conference’ in Santiago de Chile, at the AGIT 2001 Symposium in Salzburg, Austria, the 2003 SPIE Conference on ‘Remote Sensing for Environmental Monitoring, GIS Applications and Geology’ in Barcelona (Spain), the ‘Asia GIS 2003 Conference’ in Wuhan (China) as well as numerous Invited Papers at various Geoinformatics, mapping and GIS, remote sensing and photogrammetry conferences.
He has edited or co-edited a number of books and proceedings including the SPIE Proceedings on "Remote Sensing for Environemntal Monitoring, GIS Applications, and Geology I - IV (2001 - 2004); the ISPRS Proceedings "Requirements for Integrated GIS" (1994) and "New Developments in GIS" (1997). He was the editor for a special issue of the ITC Journal on "3D in Remote Sensing and GIS" (1992). He serves on a number of Editorial Boards for national and international journals on GIS, remote sensing, and photogrammetry. Dr. Ehlers is also involved as Editor for the FZG publication series "gi-reports@fzg" and "Vechta Notes on Environmental Sciences" (MUWV).
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Schiewe, J. and M. Ehlers, 2004. A Novel Method for Generating 3D City Models from High Resolution and Multi-Sensoral Remote Sensing Data, International Journal of Remote Sensing (in print).
Ehlers, M. und S. Klonus, 2004. Erhalt der spektralen Charakteristika bei der Bildfusion durch FFT basierte Filterung, Photogrammetrie-Fernerkundung-Geoinformation (PFG) 6/2004, pp. 495-506.
Ehlers, M. and K. Stroemer, 2004. ‘Fahrradies’: The GIS Based Bicycle Routing System for the World Wide Web (WWW) and Mobile Use, Geo-Informations-Systeme 3/04, pp. 29-34.
Ehlers, M., M. Gähler and R. Janowsky, 2003. Automated Analysis of Ultra High Resolution Remote Sensing Data for Biotope Type Mapping: New Possibilities and Challenges, ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Vol. 57, pp. 315-326.
Ehlers, M., J. Schiewe and M. Möller, 2003. 3D City Modelling Using High Resolution and Multi-Sensoral Remote Sensing, Geo-Informations-Systeme 6/03, pp. 30-37.
Ehlers, M., M. Möller, S. Marangon, N. Ferre, 2003. The Use of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) in the Frame of the Contingency Plan Implemented During the 1999-2001 Avian Influenza (AI) Epidemic in Italy, Avian Diseases, Vol. 47(3), pp. 1010-1014.
Schiewe, J., L. Tufte and M. Ehlers, 2001. Potential and Problems of Multi-Scale Segmentation Methods in Remote Sensing, Geo-Informations-Systeme 6/01, pp. 34-39.
Gahegan, M. and M. Ehlers, 2000. A Framework for Modeling of Uncertainty in an Integrated Geographic Information System, ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Vol. 55, pp. 176-188.
Ehlers, M., 2000. Integrated GIS – From Data Integration to Integrated Analysis, Surveying World, Vol 9, pp. 30-33.
Shi. W., M. Ehlers and K. Tempfli, 1999. Analytical Modelling of Positional and Thematic Uncertainties in the Integration of Remote Sensing and Geographical Information Systems, Transactions in GIS, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 119-136.
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Department of Economic Geography & Geoinformatics
Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration
Rossauer Lände 23/1
A-1090 Vienna, Austria
+43-1-31336-4836, fax +43-1-31336-703, manfred.fischer@wu-wien.ac.at
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Manfred M. Fischer is Professor of Economic Geography and Geoinformatics at the Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration, and Dean of the Social Sciences. He graduated from the Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen in geography and mathematics (1974), holds a Ph.D. (summa cum laude) in urban modelling from the same University (1975), and a habilitation degree in human geography from the University of Vienna (1982).
After 13 years at the University of Vienna, he moved to the Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration in 1988. He was elected Chair of the IGU-Commission on Mathematical Models from 1988 to 1996; elected Council member of the Regional Science Association International from 1999 to 2001. From 1996 to 1998 he also held the position of the Director of the Institute for Urban and Regional Research at the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
In 1995 he was elected as a member of the International Eurasian Academy of Sciences, in 1996 as a corresponding member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences and in 1999 as a foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is founding editor-in-chief [jointly with Dr. Arthur Getis] of the international Journal of Geographical Systems, and one of the first-rate book series on Advances in Spatial Sciences [Springer], and currently serves on the editorial board of seven other journals.
His research spans a broad array of fields including regional and urban economics, housing and labour market research, transportation systems analysis, innovation economics, spatial behaviour and decision processes, spatial analysis and spatial statistics, and GIS. His early and original work and his later contributions on neural spatial interaction modelling are key references in the field.
Dr. Fischer has produced around 250 scientific publications, including 75 articles in international scholarly journals and 28 monographs and edited books. He has co-operated in his research with scholars from the Free University of Amsterdam, University of Boston, University of Leeds, Chinese University of Hongkong, San Diego State University, and several others.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Fischer, M.M. and Varga, A. (2003): Spatial knowledge spillovers and university research: Evidence from Austria. Annals of Regional Science 37(2), pp 303-322.
Fischer, M.M., Reismann, M. and Hlavackova-Schindler, K. (2003): Neural network modelling of constrained spatial interaction flows: Design, estimation and performance issues. Journal of Regional Science 43(1), pp. 35-61.
Fischer, M.M. (2002): Learning in neural spatial interaction models: A statistical perspective. Journal of Geographical Systems 4(3), pp. 287-299.
Fischer, M.M. and Reismann, M. (2002): Evaluating neural spatial interaction modelling by bootstrapping. Networks and Spatial Economics 2(3), pp. 255-268.
Koller, W. and Fischer, M.M. (2002): Testing for non-linear dependence in univariate time series: An empirical investigation of the Austrian unemployment rate. Networks and Spatial Economics 2(2), pp. 191-209.
Cukrowski, J. and Fischer, M.M. (2000): Theory of comparative advantage: Do transportation costs matter? Journal of Regional Science 40(2), pp. 311-322.
Fischer, M.M. and Staufer, P. (1999): Optimization in an error backpropagation neural network environment with a performance test on a spectral pattern classification problem. Geographical Analysis 31(2), pp. 89-108.
Fischer, M.M. and Leung, Y. (eds.) (2001): GeoComputational Modelling: Techniques and Applications. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg and New York (275 pp.).
Fischer, M.M. (2001): Spatial analysis in geography. In Smelser, N.J. and Baltes, P.B. (eds.): International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 22, pp. 14752-14758. Elsevier, Oxford.
Fischer, M.M. (2000): Travel demand -- Theory. In Polak, J.B. and Heertje, A. (eds.): Analytical Transport Economics, pp. 51-78. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham.
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Department of Math and Computer Science
Virginia Military Institute
Lexington, VA 24450
gluckmh@vmi.edu
Curriculum Vita
Myke Gluck is currently a Professor at the Virginia Military Academy. He holds a bachelors degree in mathematics from the University of Michigan with a minor in geography, a MA in mathematics and an MS in Information Studies from the University of Oklahoma, and a Ph.D. in Information Transfer from Syracuse University (1993). While at Syracuse he took additional course work in geographic thought, geographic representation, and cognitive cartography. His research interests include understanding user needs for spatial information, developing and testing methods and tools for assisting users to resolve their spatial information needs, and improving interfaces and standards for geographic information systems. He has received numerous grants to investigate these issues. He has published numerous papers on various aspects of spatial information including system performance, use of focus groups to evaluate cartographic products, semiotics of cartographic representations, use of multimedia for exploratory spatial data analysis, role of GIS in public libraries, usability of geospatial information in public libraries, and the usability of geospatial metadata. He is the Director of the FSU Usability Center laboratory. He has served as a reviewer for CaGIS, Journal of Geography, Cartographic Perspectives, and several journals in information science and information systems on items related to GIS and/or spatial representation; he serves on the editorial board of the Journal of the American Society for Information Science (JASIS). He is active member of AAG and is a member of NACIS. He also serves on several geography doctoral student committees at FSU.
Relevant grants include (1) Principal Investigator. Usability Analysis of Lexis-Nexis's UNIVerse Search Tool. Lexis-Nexis, 1997, (2) Principal Investigator. A Descriptive Study of the Usability of Geospatial Metadata. OCLC, 1996, (3) Florida State University Planning Grant: Usability and Usefulness Analysis of Spatial-Statistical Permutation Matrices for Pattern Recognition. FSU CRO May 1996, and (4) Co-Principal Investigator with Dean Jue. The Integration of Citizens and State and Local Governments into the National Spatial Data Infrastructure Initiatives. U.S. Dept of Interior/U.S. Geological Survey. Cooperative Agreement Number 1434-94-A-1288. 1994-5.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
"Geographic Information Systems: Background, Frameworks, and Uses in Libraries" with Lixin Yu. Advances in Librarianship v.23 1999:1-38.
"Augmented Seriation: Usability of a Visual and Auditory Tool for Geographic Pattern Discovery with Risk Perception Data." GeoComp ë99. In Proceedings CDROM: July, 1999 Fredricksburg, VA M.Gluck, Lixin Yu, Boryung Ju, Woo-Seob Jeong, and Ching-Tung Chang. (Refereed based on submission of full article)
"Content Analysis, Semiotics, and Social Semiotics for Cartographic Analysis: Interpreting Geospatial Representations." Cartographic Perspectives (31: Fall 1998): 4-25.
"Geographic Information Retrieval and the World Wide Web: A Match Made in Electronic Space." D. Johnson & M. Gluck. Cartographic Perspectives (26: Winter 1997): 13-26.
"The Usability Approach in Library and Information Centers for Resource Selection and Deployment. 1997. Journal of Education for Library and Information Science (JELIS) 29(2):90-99.
"Standards for Electronic Access to Geographic and Spatial information." In Logan & Gluck, eds. Electronic Publishing: Applications and Implications. Information Today, 1997:27-40.
"Electronic Publishing: Applications and Implications." Monograph for ASIS series adapted selected items from proceedings of the ASIS Midyear Meeting 1995. Editors Beth Logan and M. Gluck. Information Today, 1997. 163 pp.
Spatial Information Needs of the General Public: Texts, Maps, and Users Tasks. In GIS and Libraries: Patrons, Maps, and Spatial Information. 32nd Annual Clinic on Library Applications of Data Processing. University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, IL. April 2-4, 1995:151-172. Published May, 1996. University of Illinois Press.
"GIS and Libraries: Patrons, Maps, and Spatial Information." Editors Linda Smith and M. Gluck, 32nd Annual Clinic on Library Applications of Data Processing Proceedings. University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, IL. April 2-4, 1995. Published, May, 1996. 240 pp.
"Focus Groups for Design Improvement in Dynamic Cartography." M. Monmonier and M. Gluck, 1994. Cartography and Geographic Information Systems. 21(1):37-47.
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Department of Geography
University of California
3611 Ellison Hall
Santa Barbara, CA 93106-4060, USA
805 893 8049, fax 805 893 3146, mobile 805 701 6994, good@ncgia.ucsb.edu
Curriculum Vita
Michael F. Goodchild is Professor of Geography at the University of California, Santa Barbara; Chair of the Executive Committee, National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis (NCGIA); Associate Director of the Alexandria Digital Library Project; Director of NCGIA’s Varenius project, and chair of the Department of Geography. He received his BA degree from Cambridge University in Physics in 1965 and his PhD in Geography from McMaster University in 1969. After 19 years at the University of Western Ontario, including three years as Chair, he moved to Santa Barbara in 1988. He was Director of NCGIA from 1991 to 1997. In 1999 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by Laval University. In 1990 he was given the Canadian Association of Geographers Award for Scholarly Distinction, in 1996 the Association of American Geographers award for Outstanding Scholarship, and in 1999 the Canadian Cartographic Association’s Award of Distinction for Exceptional Contributions to Cartography; he has won the American Society of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing Intergraph Award and twice won the Horwood Critique Prize of the Urban and Regional Information Systems Association. He was Editor of Geographical Analysis between 1987 and 1990, and serves on the editorial boards of ten other journals and book series.
His major publications include Geographical Information Systems: Principles and Applications (1991); Environmental Modeling with GIS (1993); Accuracy of Spatial Databases (1989); GIS and Environmental Modeling: Progress and Research Issues (1996); Scale in Remote Sensing and GIS (1997); Interoperating Geographic Information Systems (1999); and Geographical Information Systems: Principles, Techniques, Management and Applications (1999); in addition he is author of some 300 scientific papers. He is currently Chair of the National Research Council’s Mapping Science Committee. His current research interests center on geographic information science, spatial analysis, the future of the library, and uncertainty in geographic data.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
M.F. Goodchild, M.J. Egenhofer, K.K. Kemp, D.M. Mark, and E. Sheppard (1999) Introduction to the Varenius project. International Journal of Geographical Information Science 13(8): 731—745.
P.C. Kyriakidis, A.M. Shortridge, and M.F. Goodchild (1999) Geostatistics for conflation and accuracy assessment of digital elevation models. International Journal of Geographical Information Science 13(7): 677—708.
V.T. Noronha, M.F. Goodchild, R.L. Church, and P. Fohl (1999) Location expression standards for ITS: testing the LRMS Cross Street Profile. Annals of Regional Science 33: 197—212.
N. Schuurman (1999) An interview with Michael Goodchild, January 6, 1998, Santa Barbara, California. Environment and Planning D 17: 3—15.
M.F. Goodchild, M.J. Egenhofer, R. Fegeas, and C.A. Kottman, editors (1999) Interoperating Geographic Information Systems. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
P.A. Longley, M.F. Goodchild, D.J. Maguire, and D.W. Rhind, editors (1999) Geographical Information Systems: Principles, Techniques, Applications and Management. New York: Wiley.
D.G. Janelle, B. Klinkenberg, and M.F. Goodchild (1998) The temporal ordering of urban space and daily activity patterns for population role groups. Geographical Systems 5(1—2): 117—138.
M.F. Goodchild (1998) Geographic information systems and disaggregate transportation modeling. Geographical Systems 5(1—2): 19—44.
M.F. Goodchild (1997) Towards a geography of geographic information in a digital world. Computers, Environment and Urban Systems 21(6): 377—391.
M.F. Goodchild and R. Jeansoulin, editors (1998) Data Quality in Geographic Information. Paris: Éditions Hermes.
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Department of Information Systems (LSI)Z
Universitat "Jaume I"
E-12071 Castellón, Spain
www.mgould.com
Curriculum Vita
Michael Gould (PhD from NCGIA, Univ. at Buffalo) is tenured senior lecturer (Profesor Titular de Universidad) of Information Systems at the Universitat Jaume I, in Castellón (Community of Valencia) Spain. He teaches Geographic Information Systems to 3rd year Informatics students, Introductory Computation to 1st year Agricultural Engineering students, and Computing Projects (Master's project tutorial) to 5th year Informatics students, in addition to co-teaching a doctoral course on Systems Integration. Dr Gould's research is focused on interoperability, the Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI) including metadata services, web-based systems for delivery of geographic information, and emerging technologies based on XML. Additionally he is member of the department's Computer Graphics group, where he interacts with researchers on terrain modelling issues.
Dr. Gould serves as board (or council) member of the Association of Geographic Information Laboratories in Europe (AGILE) and also served on the Spanish national GIS association (AESIG). He is also a member of the Spanish Assoc of Standards (AENOR) committee 148 on spatial data standards (members of ISO/TC211 and CEN/TC287). He has participated as guest lecturer in more than 20 Masters and other postgraduate programmes in Spain, and is a tutor in the UNIGIS distance Masters programme (version for Spain and Latin America). His funded research projects have included work in the area of he emerging European SDI (now INSPIRE), including three years as co-PI of the European Spatial Metadata Infrastructure (ESMI) project, technical coordinator of an Interoperability Observatory project funded 2000-2001 by the European Commission, principal investigator on the ACE-GIS project on GI service composition (www.acegis.net), and now (2005-2007) on the AWARE project under the EU Space programme.
He was a founding member of the editorial board for GeoEurope (ex GIS Europe) magazine, for which he wrote several columns and articles since 1992. He has reviewed manuscripts for several professional journals (including IJGIS, URISA Journal, Computers & Geosciences) at the national and international level, as well as for several international conferences, most recently as scientific programme chair for AGILE 2002 and AGILE 2003. He also organised Geographic Information Management 2004 (http://gim04.unizar.es) and is a founding member of the Vespucci Initiative and co-organizes the Vespucci summer schools (www.vespucci.org). Finally, Gould has worked for several commercial organizations including major GIS vendors, OGC, etc. as consultant (internal and external) during the past decade.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Gutiérrez Puebla, J. and M. Gould. "SIG: Sistemas de Información Geográfica" (book), Madrid: Editorial Síntesis) 1994. ISBN: 84-7738-246-8
Mark, D.M, Comas, D., Egenhofer, M., Freundschuh, S., Gould, M. and J. Nunes. "Evaluating and refining computational models of spatial relations through cross-linguistic human-subjects testing". In Spatial Information Theory, Lecture Notes in Computer Science 988 (Berlin: Springer Verlag) 1995, 553-568.
Gould, M. "Tailoring GIS Courses for Employment". In GIS in School Education: An Introduction for Teachers and Students (London: Taylor & Francis), 2001.
Poveda, J. and M Gould. "Directional neighborhood calculations in spatial partition trees". Proceedings DEXA2004 (IEEE Press)
Poveda, J. and M Gould. "Multidimensional binary indexing for neighborhood calculations in spatial partition trees".Computers & Geosciences (accepted Oct 2004)
Poveda, J., M. Gould and C Granell. "Composition of E-commerce and Geographic Information Services for Emergency Management". EGOV'04 (Lecture Notes in Computer Science 3183), Sept 2004.
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Department of Geography
144B Eggers Hall
Syracuse University
Syracuse, NY 13244-1060
(315) 443-5637, fax (315) 443-4227, griffith@maxwell.syr.edu
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Griffith is Professor of Geography as well as on the faculty of the Interdisciplinary Program in Statistics at Syracuse University and an adjunct faculty member of the SUNY/Environmental Sciences and Forestry Program. He is a specialist in the subfield of quantitative/urban/economic geography, and has published extensively in the geography, regional science, and statistics literatures on the topic of spatial statistics. His more recent thematic areas of interest include error propagation, superfund remediation, model-based small geographic area agricultural production estimation, spatial epidemiology, and urban population density modelling. His more recent methodological areas of interest include implementation of spatial statistical techniques within a GIS environment. Presently his research activities are funded by the National Science Foundation (Geography & Regional Science/Measurement, Methods and Statistics Programs), the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture--National Agricultural Statistics Service, and the National Cancer Institute.
His educational background includes Ph.D. in geography, University of Toronto, 1978 (supervisor: L. Curry), M.S. in statistics, The Pennsylvania State University, 1985 (supervisor: J. K. Ord), M.A. in geography, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, 1972 and B.S. in mathematics, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, 1970. Among the honors and recognition he has received include Distinguished geographer of the year, Pennsylvania Geographical Society (1999), ASA/USDA-NASS Research Fellow (1997/98), President, North American Regional Science Council (1996/97), Fulbright Research Fellow to Canada (1992/93), and elected a member of Sigma Xi. He has delivered keynote addresses to Third International Symposium on Spatial Accuracy Assessment in Natural Resources and Environmental Science (1998), NARSA (1997), Tinbergen Institute/Rotterdam (1995), Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique-URBANISATION (1993), and Max Planck Institute/Stuttgart (1991).
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
(with Z. Zhang) Integrating GIS components and spatial statistical analysis in DBMS, International J. of Geographical Information Science, forthcoming.
(with L. Layne) A Casebook for Spatial Statistical Data Analysis: A Compilation of Analyses of Different Thematic Datasets, Oxford University Press, forthcoming.
1999 (with G. Arbia and R. Haining) Error propagation modelling in raster GIS: addition and ratioing operations, Cartography & Geographic Information Systems, 26: 297-315.
1998 (with P. Doyle, D. Wheeler, and D. Johnson) A Tale of two swaths: urban childhood blood lead levels across Syracuse, NY, Annals, AAG, 88: 640-665.
1998 (with G. Arbia and R. Haining) Error propagation modelling in raster GIS: overlay operations, International Journal of Geographical Information Systems, 12: 145-167.
1997 (with Z. Zhang) Developing user-friendly spatial statistical analysis modules for GIS: an example using ArcView, Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, 21: 5-29.
1997 (with C. Amrhein) Multivariate Statistical Analysis for Geographers, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
1994 (with S. DeGloria and L. Herrington) Characterizing geographic information and analysis needs in New York State: an overview and assessment, Cartography and Geographic Information Systems, 21: 69-80.
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Department of Geography
University of Wisconsin - Madison
160 Science Hall
550 North Park Street
Madison, WI 53706
(608)265-0012, maharrower@wisc.edu
homepage: http://www.geography.wisc.edu/~harrower/
Curriculum Vita
Mark Harrower is an Assistant Professor of Geography and joined the faculty at UW-Madison in July 2002 after completing his MS and PhD at Penn State. At UW-Madison, Mark is responsible for the undergraduate and graduate programs in cartography and geovisualization. With a solid grounding in both physical geography and cartography, his work often looks at how GIScience can develop more useful and usable methods for representing a dynamic physical world with interactive and animated mapping systems. Currently, Mark is exploring two avenues of research: (1) perceptual and cognitive issues in map animation and (2) interface design in Web-based mapping. This work is inherently multi-disciplinary as it draws from psychology and perception (e.g., how the eye attends to moving objects), HCI and information visualization (e.g., understanding how to design better computer environments), as well as any of the human and physical geography domains to which GIScience can be applied (e.g., climatology, epidemiology). Mark also serves on the editorial board of Cartographica and is an active member of the Cartography Specialty Group of the AAG, the ICA Commission on Visualization and Virtual Environments, and the North American Cartographic Information Society.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Harrower, M., and B. Sheesley (2005). Navigating digital maps: Evaluating techniques for panning and zooming. Transactions in GIS.
Harrower, M. (2004). A look at the history and future of animated maps. Cartographica 39(3): 33-42.
Harrower, M. (2003). Designing effective animated maps. (invited techniques article). Cartographic Perspectives 44 (Winter 2003): 63-65.
Harrower, M. and C. Brewer (2003). ColorBrewer: An online tool for selecting color schemes for maps. The Cartographic Journal 40(1): 27-37.
Harrower, M. (2002). Visualizing change: Using cartographic animation to explore remotely-sensed data. Cartographic Perspectives (39): 30-42.
Gahegan, M., M. Wachowicz, M. Harrower, and T-M. Rhyne (2001) The integration of geographic visualization with knowledge discovery in databases and geocomputation. Cartography and Geographic Information Science 28(1): 29-44.
Harrower, M., A. M. MacEachren, and A. Griffin (2000). Developing a geographic visualization tool to support earth science learning. Cartography and Geographic Information Science 27(4): 279-293.
Edsall, R., M. Harrower, and J. Mennis (2000). Visualizing properties of spatial and temporal periodicity in geographic data. Computers and Geosciences 26(1): 109-118.
Harrower, M. (1999). Freelance in the age of powerful computing. In the “1999 U.S. National Report to the International Cartographic Association” (ed. C. Brewer). Cartography and Geographic Information Science 26(3): 209.
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Associate Professor
Department of Geography
414 Social Sciences Building
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, MN 55455
(612)625-2586, fax (612)624-1044, fharvey@umn.edu
http://www.tc.umn.edu/~fharvey
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Francis Harvey is Associate Professor of geography at the University of Minnesota. He teaches courses on geographic information technologies, virtual geographies, and science and technology studies. He is currently beginning a project to study the development of cadastres in Poland with an emphasis on divisions between the Polish cadastre registries and land tenure regimes. This work builds on research conducted in the US examining local government use and coordination of geographic information. His previous work has included cross-cultural comparisons of GIS implementation issues, history of systems thinking in geography, interoperability, and quality dimensions of metadata. Dr. Harvey reviews manuscripts for the URISA Journal, Routledge, International Journal of Geographic Information Science, Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, and Environment and Planning A.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Harvey, F. (1999). Designing for interoperability: Overcoming semantic differences. Interoperating Geographic Information Systems. M. F. Goodchild, M. J. Egenhofer, R. Fegeas and C. A. Kottman. Boston, Kluwer Academic Publishing: 85-98.
Harvey, F. (2000). "The social construction of geographical information systems (Editorial introduction)." International Journal of Geographic Information Science 14(8): 711-713.
Harvey, F. (2001). "Constructing GIS: Actor Networks of Collaboration." URISA Journal 13(1): 29 - 37.
Harvey, F. (2001). NSDI from the Trenches. Local Government Perspectives. Geospatial Solutions. 11: 38-40.
Harvey, F. (2002). Processing Spatial Data. Manual of Geospatial Technology. J. Bossler. New York, Taylor and Francis: 450-464.
Harvey, F. (2003). "Developing geographic information infrastructures for local government: The role of trust." Canadian Geographer 47(1): 28-37.
Harvey, F. (2003). How Do Local Governments Share and Coordinate Geographic Information? 21st International Cartographic Conference, Durban, South Africa, International Cartographic Association.
Harvey, F. (2003). "Preface: Transitions in U.S. Cartography and Geographic Information Science." Cartography and Geographic Information Science 30(2): 95-98.
Harvey, F., W. Kuhn, et al. (1999). "Semantic Interoperability: A Central Issue for Sharing Geographic Information." Annals of Regional Science 33(2): 213-232.
Harvey, F. and F. Vauglin (1997). No Fuzzy Creep! A clustering algorithm for controlling arbitrary node movement. AutoCarto 13, Seattle, ASPRS/ASCM.
Harvey, F. J. and N. R. Chrisman (2004). The imbrication of geography and technology: The social construction of geographic information systems. Geography and Technology. S. D. Brunn, S. L. Cutter and J. W. Harrington Jr. Dordrecht, Netherlands, Kluwer Academic Publishers: 65-80.
Harvey, F., Buttenfield, B. P., & Lambert, S. C. (1999). Integrating geodata infrastructures from the ground up. Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing, 65(11), 1287-1292.
Harvey, F. (1999). Designing for interoperability: Overcoming semantic differences. In M. F. Goodchild, M. J. Egenhofer, R. Fegeas, & C. A. Kottman (Eds.), Interoperating Geographic Information Systems (pp. 85-98). Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishing.
Harvey, F. (1998). National Cultural Influences on GIS Design. In M. Craglia & H. Onsrud (Eds.), Geographic Information Research: Trans-Atlantic Perspectives (pp. 55-68). London: Taylor & Francis.
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The School of Public Policy, MS 3C6
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030
khaynes@gmu.edu
Curriculum Vita
Dr. Kingsley Haynes is University Professor of Public Policy, Professor of Decision Sciences in the Department of Geography and Public Affairs and is Dean of the School of Public Policy at George Mason University. He received a BA from Western Mich Univ., MA from Rutgers Univ., and PhD from Johns Hopkins. His fields of specialty include Resources and Enviromental Management Policy, Urban and Regional Economic Development and Planning, Economic Geography and Regional Science, Social Systems Modeling and Policy Analysis, and Transportation and Land Use Analysis.
His distinctions include: Past President of the Regional Science Association International, member of the National Academy of Public Administration, Anderson Medal in Applied Research for the Association of American Geographers, Ullman Prize in Transportation, and the Boyce Award in Regional Science.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Hayes, Kinglsey M. "Integrating Models for Regional Development Decisions: A Policy Perspective” Annals of Regional Science (2003) 37: 31-53 (with M. Dinc and M. Tarimcilar)
Hayes, Kinglsey M. Handbook of Transportation Geography and Spatial Systems Vol. 5, co-editor Amsterdam: Elsevier (2004) 672 (with D. Hensher, K. Button and P. Stopher)
Hayes, Kinglsey M. "Transportation, Location and Environmental Justice: A U.S. Perspective” in Handbook of Transportation Geography and Spatial Systems Vol. 5, Chapter 5 (eds. Hensher, Button. Haynes and Stopher) Amsterdam: Elsevier (2004) 45-64
Hayes, Kinglsey M. "Sustainable Transportation Institutions and Regional Evolution: Global and Local Perspectives” Journal of Transport Geography (2004) 25: 25-40 (with J. Gifford and D. Pelletiere)
Hayes, Kinglsey M. "Analytical Alternatives in Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Evaluation” in Economic Impact of Intelligent Transportation Systems, Innovations and Case Studies Research in Transportation Economics Series Vol. 8 (eds. Bekarias and Nakanishi) Amsterdam: Elsevier (2004) 127-149 (with M. Li)
Hayes, Kinglsey M. "The FAA and Microwave Landing Systems” in Defining Aerospace Policy (eds. Button, Lammerson-Baum and Stough) Burlington: Ashgate (2004) 134-148 (with R. Stough)
Hayes, Kinglsey M. "Toward a Theory of Public Sector Entrepreneurship” in Transatlantic Perspectives on Liberalization and Democratic Governance (eds. Bohne, Bonser and Spencer) Munster: Lit Verlag (2004) 489-518 (with G. Shockley, P. Frank and R. Stough)
Hayes, Kinglsey M. "Sustainable Institutions for Transportation Management: Principles and Evolution in Transportation Engineering and Planning” (ed. T.J. Kim) in The U.N. Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) Oxford: Eolss Pub. (2003)
Hayes, Kinglsey M. "Efficiency Measurements with Linear Models” Journal of Applied Economics (2003) 35: 1459-1467 (with N.K. Womer, H.E.F. Schroff and T. Gulledge)
Hayes, Kinglsey M. "Geographic and Network Neighbors: Spillover Effects of Telecommunications Infrastructure” Journal of Regional Science (2002) 42(2): 339-360 (with S. Yilmaz and M. Dinc)
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School of Policy, Planning, and Development
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0626
213-821-1037, fax 213-740-1801, heikkila@usc.edu
http://www-rcf.usc.edu/~heikkila
Curriculum Vita
Eric Heikkila is Professor in the School of Policy, Planning, and Development, University of Southern California, where his teaching and research focus on the economic, cultural, geographic, and historical aspects of urban development in the United States and abroad, especially East Asia. He is a founding member of the Editorial Board for Planning Theory & Practice, and serves on the Editorial Boards of Environment and Planning B and other scholarly journals. He is the author of The Economics of Planning, CUPR Press, Rutgers University (2000) and co-editor of Southern California and the World, Praeger Press (2002). Several of his recent publications introduce and expound upon the concept of “fuzzy urban sets”.
Refereed Journal Articles, Book Chapters and Books within the Past Five Years
(list a maximum of ten)
Heikkila, E.J. and Lingqian Hu (2005) Entropy and Space, Paper presented to the Western Regional Science Association, San Diego, February. Under review.
Heikkila, E.J. (2004) Is Los Angeles fuzzier than Chicago?, Paper presented to the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning, Portland, October. Under review.
Heikkila, E.J., (2004) What is the Nature of the 21st Century City?, Planning Theory and Practice, Interfaces, vol. 5(3), September, 379 – 387.
Heikkila, E.J., Tiyan Shen and Kaizhong Yang (2003), Fuzzy Urban Sets: Theory and application to desakota regions in China; Environment and Planning B, vol. 30(2), 239-254.
Heikkila, E.J., (2000) The Fuzzy Logic of Accessibility; invited chapter for Information, Places, and Cyberspace Issues in Accessibility, Don Janelle and David Hodge (eds.), Springer-Verlag, 91-106.
Heikkila, E.J., (1998) GIS is Dead; Long Live GIS!, Journal of the American Planning Association, vol. 64(3), 350-360.
Heikkila, E.J., (1997) A Comment on Accessing Urban Data, Geographical Systems, vol. 4(3), 309-326.
Heikkila, E.J. and Edwin Blewett (1992) Using Expert Systems to Check Compliance with Municipal Building Codes, Journal of American Planning Association, vol. 58(1), Winter, 72-80.
Heikkila, E.J. and Chrisoula Kantiotou (1992) Calculating Fiscal Impacts Where Spatial Effects Are Present, invited contribution, Regional Science and Urban Economics, Special Issue on Spatial Regression Analysis, vol. 22(3), 475-490.
Heikkila, E.J. and Edwin Blewett (1991) Expert Systems as Plan Checkers; invited chapter for Expert Systems Applications to Urban Planning, J. Kim, L. Wiggins, and J. Wright eds., Springer-Verlag.
Heikkila, E.J., (1990) Modeling Fiscal Impacts Using GIS and Expert Systems: Theory and Strategy, Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, vol.14(1), 25-35.
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Professor and Chair
Department of Information Science and Telecommunications
School of Information Sciences
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
412-624-9434, fax 412-624-2788, secretary 412-624-9402, sch@sis.pitt.edu
http://www.sis.pitt.edu/~dist/people/Bios/hirtle.html
Curriculum Vita
Stephen Hirtle is a Professor in the Department of Information Science and Telecommunications and has been chair of that department since 1992. He also has appointments in the Intelligent Systems