About | Contact | SUBMIT PRESS | Advertise | FAQ
Newsletters | Twitter |
HomeNewsArticlesExpertsDataJobsEDULBSSTOREEVENTSDirectoryBLOGPHOTOSSocial Media
Software | Spotlights on Geospatial Data | Webmaps and Web Services | Mashup Zone | IMAGING | Hardware | Social Media  
advertisement

Top Geo News
Put Your News here! 
Social Connect




vimeostumble


GISuser Sponsor


GISuser Videos


See also SpatialVideos Youtube

Recent Site Additions
Webinars
GIS Job Opportunities
 

Loads of GIS Jobs!

Research Analyst in Geospatial Analytics
GIS Specialist III
Implementation Specialist
GIS Technician (Temporary)
quantitative Internet Geographer/Sociologist
Engineering Technician-GIS
Senior GIS Web Developer
UX Designer/Developer Lead
State GIS Coordinator
Project Manager
GISuser Sponsor

Directory
Eye-fi 
Category: Geotagging Tools


GISuser Sponsor


feed

AnyGeo - Anything Geospatial

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

GISuser Feed

Hot Job

hot gis tech job
JavaScript Developer, VA

Home arrow Articles arrow Remote Sensing , Earth Imaging arrow Wanted: Citizen scientists for hurricane project Volunteers needed to assess archived images online     

HOT JOB
post a GIS job * JOBS * Project Manager VA / JavaScript Developer 
Browse GIS/GEO Job Opportunities
/ 2013 Geotech Salary Survey
Submit News/tips to press @gisuser.com
Wanted: Citizen scientists for hurricane project Volunteers needed to assess archived images online E-mail
GISuser Feature Articles - Remote Sensing , Earth Imaging
Written by NOAA   
05 October 2012


Today, NCDC announced the launch of a new website that could help climate scientists estimate the historical intensities of hurricanes around the world faster than before—and the public is invited to help. The website, CycloneCenter.org, allows volunteers to examine color-enhanced images from 30 years of tropical cyclones taken from the archives of NCDC’s Hurricane Satellite Data system. Then, the site will guide users through a process to analyze a specific hurricane image and answer questions, using a simplified technique for estimating the maximum surface wind speed of tropical cyclones.

CycloneCenter.org was developed in partnership with the Citizen Science Alliance, the Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites, and the University of North Carolina at Asheville.

The method for determining the strength of tropical cyclones has been applied differently around the world and has changed over time. That inconsistency has led to uncertainties in the global historical record of tropical cyclone activity, especially in parts of the world where additional data sources such as aircraft reconnaissance are not available. After many people review the same image, scientists will then use that feedback to come up with new estimates of a cyclone’s intensity.

“The human eye can best recognize patterns in storm imagery, which is why we are enlisting the public to identify image patterns and build a consistent analysis of tropical cyclone data worldwide,” said Chris Hennon, Ph.D., an associate professor of atmospheric sciences at UNC Asheville and a principal investigator for this project.

The end product will be a new global tropical cyclone dataset that will provide 3-hourly tropical cyclone intensity estimates, confidence intervals, and a wealth of other metadata that could not be realistically obtained in any other fashion. Using citizen scientists could allow meteorologists to make more rapid progress on the analysis of historical tropical cyclone data. NOAA climate scientists and other researchers will use the new dataset in an attempt to better understand and research global tropical cyclone activity.

“The main advantage of a citizen science approach is that dozens of people, rather than one or two, will analyze a single image,” said Thomas R. Karl, L.H.D., NCDC director. “Scientists will be able to use the analysis by a large number of people to better define the accuracy of the historical intensity of tropical cyclones.”

Hennon added, “We have nearly 300,000 hurricane images from around the world – more than a full length motion picture has movie frames. By collaborating with the public, we hope to perform more than a million classifications in two months, something that would take a team of analysts more than a decade to accomplish.”

Start examining tropical cyclone images now at CycloneCenter.org!

 

Source: ncdc.noaa.gov via Glenn on Pinterest

 
< Prev   Next >

Submit Your GIS/Geo News/PR

blog comments powered by Disqus
Geo EDU Tip
EDU Webinars - 10 Awesome GeoTech Webinar Resources
SUGGESTED BOOK - Getting to Know ArcGIS for Desktop
HOT Devices
Video - Trimble Positions and the Geo Explorer 6000 XH
Social Media Tips
10 Map Services Your Business MUST Be Listed in
500 Social Media Marketing Tips: Essential Advice, Hints and Strategy for Business: Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Google+, YouTube, Instagram, LinkedIn, and More!
 
Recent Directory Listings
1. GeoJobsBIZ
    Category: Careers and Employment
    Created: May 21, 2013
2. Wolf-GIS - Mobile GIS...
    Category: iOS Developers
    Created: May 14, 2013
3. Wolf-GIS
    Category: Application Developers
    Created: May 14, 2013
4. Purple WiFi Presence...
    Category: Location Based Services (LBS)
    Created: May 14, 2013
5. Cal Poly - certificate...
    Category: College Programs and Universities
    Created: May 14, 2013
Show more...
Featured Events

 List Your Event Here 

THE GISuser Newsletter

See Recent edition
newsletter

subscribe GISuser

We won't share your address!
Sponsor

Popular Stuff!


GISuser Site Sponsor


Most Popular
Dev Tips


Programming with Python

GISuser HOT Spots!

Google Mashup Zone
GISuser WebMaps
Free Data Articles
Spotlights & Tips
GISuser Resumes
Data Links
10 Cool Things
The LBS Zone!


Partner Sites


lbszone.com


symbianone

A Spatial Media LLC property




Spatial Media, LLC ©2003 - 2013 All rights reserved / Privacy Statement