PERS_July2014_Flipping - page 579

PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING & REMOTE SENSING
July 2014
579
PHOTOGRAMME TR I C ENG I NE ER I NG & REMOT E SENS I NG
The official journal for imaging and geospatial information science and technology
July 2014 Volume 80 Number 7
H I GHL I GHT ART I C L E
F EATURE ART I C L E
John All, Narcisa Pricope,
and
Kamal
Humagain
I NT ERV I EW
PE ER - REV I EWED ART I C L ES
Amin Alizadeh Naeini, Mohammad Saadatseresht,
and
Saeid Homayouni
An innovative approach for automatically estimating the number of clusters in
hyperspectral imagery using the residual and change-point analyses.
Aaron J. Poznanovic, Michael J. Falkowski, Ann L. Maclean, Alistair M.S. Smith,
and
Jeffrey S. Evans
An accuracy assessment of three pixel-based approaches and two object-oriented
classification approaches for estimating western juniper (Juniperus occidentalis) canopy
cover.
T. Goulden, C. Hopkinson, R. Jamieson, S. Sterling, A. Sinclair,
and
D. Hebb
An assessment of the variability of flow and sediment derived from SWAT to lidar-
derived DEMs of varying spatial resolution.
Jaehoon Jeong
and
Taejung Kim
Stereo geometry and positioning accuracy of dual-sensor stereo pairs are analyzed with
respect to convergence angle, bisector elevation angle and asymmetry angle.
Dongliang Wang, Jun Yang, Guangcai Sun, Matthew Brolly, Xin Tao, Jianhua Xiao,
Guoqing Sun,
and
Youchuan Wan
A novel method for SAR imaging and interferometry using the parameters estimated
from raw data; products obtained are then compared directly with those produced using
commonly employed methods which incorporate accurate orbit meta-data supplied with
the processed data product.
So-Ra Kim, Anup K. Prasad, Hesham El-Askary, Woo-Kyun Lee, Doo-Ahn Kwak,
Seung-Ho Lee,
and
Menas Kafatos
A study to identify the optimal data form for land cover classification using periodic data
for land cover.
COLUMNS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Call for Papers
,
DEPARTMENTS
The topographical
complexities that
make alpine research
problematic find their
fullest expression in
Nepal where there
is greater than 8000
meters of vertical relief
in under 100 horizontal
kilometers. The location
of the Himalaya in the
mid latitudes helps
drive the monsoonal
circulation patterns that dictate water availability for
nearly a third of the world’s population. The American
Climber Science Program team has gathered data from
elephant-back near sea level in Chitwan National Park
to the summit of Mt. Everest. This cover has some of
the ground reference points that we collected in the
Everest region - they are highlighted all of the way
up and slightly over the summit of Everest from the
North side of the mountain. A similar data collection
mission on the South side was derailed by dangerous
mountain conditions this spring as global climate
change melts the Khumbu glacier into a memory.
Remnant ice on the mountains is unstable and will
continue deteriorating for the foreseeable future - thus
making this research more critical than ever.
For more information, contact Dr. John All, Associate
Professor, Director, American Climber Science Program
(ACSP),
. Cover design by
Sylvie Arques, ACSP, Western Washington University.
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