Browsing by Author "Couloigner, Isabelle"
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Item Open Access Automated road network extraction from high spatial resolution multi-spectral imagery(2006) Zhang, Qiaoping; Couloigner, Isabelle; Habib, AymanItem Open Access Change detection of man-made objects using very high resolution images(2005) Phalke, Santosh; Couloigner, IsabelleItem Open Access Protocol for 'Tick Surveillance Systems in North America: A Scoping Review'(2021-07) Romney, Elise; Cork, Susan; Envik, Akaysha; Ganshorn, Heather; Couloigner, Isabelle; Checkley, SylviaIntroduction: Tick surveillance is important to detect new ticks or changes in tick occurrence and distribution within a region. This facilitates communication of and response to changes in tick distribution. Tick surveillance systems also provide a framework from which to assess tick-borne disease carriage. This information can be used to launch further investigation and inform risk assessments and mitigation strategies for tick-borne disease in people and animals. For example, many tick surveillance systems focus on blacklegged ticks, like Ixodes scapularis, that can carry Borrelia burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease. Lyme disease can cause clinical signs such as erythema migrans, meningitis, cranial neuropathy, arthritis, carditis (1 ) in people and some animal species like dogs and horses. White-footed mice and other small mammals are important natural reservoirs of the bacteria while deer and other mammals can carry the ticks (2,3). Hard ticks (Family: Ixodidae) are found in an increasingly broad range of environments as climate change apparently makes it possible for them to survive in regions where they had not previously been found (4). Lyme disease, and other tick-borne diseases such as Rocky Mountain spotted fever and Anaplasmosis, are a One Health problem, at the interface between human health, animal health, and the environment. Objectives: The primary objective of this scoping review is to describe the characteristics of tick surveillance systems from 1960 onward. This research will focus on reviewing published and grey literature and then describing the characteristics of tick surveillance systems, including location, year, type of surveillance, and method of data collection. Methods: This scoping review will be carried out following PRISMA guidelines for scoping reviews. Databases used include MEDLINE, CAB Abstracts, BIOSIS Previews and the Web of Science Core Collection. ProQuest Dissertations will be searched for relevant dissertations. The articles will be screened at the title and abstract, and full text levels by two reviewers blinded to each other's assessment. Articles published prior to 1960 will be excluded, and only articles that describe surveillance systems will be included. Government websites will also be searched for information about tick surveillance programs, globally.Item Open Access Quality assessment of Ikonos and Quickbird fused images for urban mapping(2005) Meenakshisundaram, Valarmathy; Couloigner, IsabelleNew series of very high spatial resolution (VHR) satellites Ikonos and Quickbird have enabled mapping and updating of GIS databases of urban areas that is presently carried out using field surveys and aerial images. Satellites provide higher spatial resolution in panchromatic (PAN) mode compared to that in multispectral (MS) mode. High spatial and high spectral resolution are desirable for urban mapping as high spatial resolution provides better geometric quality while high spectral resolution provides better object identification. Image fusion techniques aim at increasing the spatial resolution of MS images using information from PAN image. However, fusion methods alter the spectral content of the original images. This is not desirable in applications requiring spectral information such as visual interpretation or classification procedures that depend on the spectral information of MS images. In this study, fused images obtained for Ikonos PAN and MS and Quickbird PAN and MS images by the standard methods namely IHS (Intensity-Hue-Saturation) and PCA (Principal Component Analysis), and simple wavelet methods namely, IHS with wavelet (IHS+W), PCA with wavelet (PCA+W), Wavelet Addition (WA) and Wavelet Substitution (WS) and complex ARSIS ("Amelioration de la Resolution Spatiale par Injection of Structures") methods are compared and analysed visually and statistically for urban mapping. Since PAN is less correlated with the Blue band, it results in high spectral error in the fused Blue band ofIHS, IHS+W, WA and WS methods. The ARSIS models aim at synthesizing the images at high resolution close to reality. However, it is found that the ARSIS models produce similar results to the WA and WS methods in some bands and introduce more error in the NIR band compared to other methods. The ARSIS M2 method provides similar results as the PCA method. Based on the subjective (visual) assessment, of all the methods ARSIS M2 and PCA method provides good spatial quality while best preserving the colour of objects. Thus, these fused MS images are better for visual interpretation and mapping. VHR images have inadequate spectral resolution for complete discrimination of urban classes: roads and buildings. The high within-class spectral variance in VHR images results in misclassifications. The problem is increased in the fused images where there are more spatial details compared to the original MS images. Also, the spectral variance in each class is further increased by fusion methods resulting in more misclassifications. However, because of the high redundancy in the MS bands, the classified fused images of different methods do not show much difference. Considering other pre and postprocessing steps involved in automated urban feature extraction, classification is only a part of the whole process. Future Worldview satellite from Digital Globe will provide higher spatial resolution for PAN (0.5 m) and 8-MS bands (2 m). With such a very high resolution, the need for the fusion of PAN and MS images has to be further investigated especially for automatic feature extraction procedures.Item Open Access Wetland mapping through semivariogram guided fuzzy segmentation of multispectral satellite imagery(2005) Chiu, Wen-Ya; Couloigner, Isabelle