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1 Whether you are looking for something to occupy an afternoon, or for reasons to stay through the weekend after the conference, Denver has something to appeal to every preference. Denver has 300 days of sunshine a year. With a mild, dry and sunny climate, Denver has more hours of sun than Miami Beach. Remember to use your sunscreen and moisturizer! Denver’s history is colorful. The Rush brought some of the wildest events in the country’s history to Denver. This fascinating period lives again in museums, old gold mining villages and elegant Victorian buildings throughout the city. Denver has the largest city park system in the nation. There are more than 200 parks within the city and 20,000 acres of parks in the nearby mountains. With 70 golf courses and 27 formal flower gardens and one of the nation’s largest urban trail systems, Denver residents and visitors have countless ways to enjoy the outdoors. Denver is a cultural city. Denver citizens contribute more public funding for the arts per capita than any other U.S. city. The Denver Performing Arts Center has nine theaters and is second only to New York’s Lincoln Center in size. Visit www.denvercenter.org to see the events scheduled during your visit. Denver loves its sports. Denver has seven professional sports teams! In addition to football, basketball, hockey, baseball and soccer, Denver has lacrosse and arena football – a dream come true for the sports fan. Denver really is exactly one mile high. By an amazing stroke of good luck, the 13th step on the State Capitol is exactly 5,280 feet above sea level. Denver has the 10th largest downtown in America. Denver has a definitive, exciting and walkable downtown – within a mile radius are three major sports stadiums, the Denver Performing Arts Center, three colleges, an assortment of art and history museums, a mint producing 10 billion coins a year, a river offering white water rafting and over 300 restaurants. Denver is near the mountains, not in them. Located on high rolling plains, Denver is 12 miles east of what locals call the “foothills,” a series of gentle mountains that climb to 11,000 feet. Just beyond is the Front Range, formidable snowcapped peaks rising to 14,000 feet that can be seen from Table of Contents practically everywhere in the city. Be sure to take lots of pictures. Sponsors...... 2 Denver brews more than any other city. On an average day, Denver Welcome from the Chair ...... 3 brews over 80 different beers and is the “Napa Valley” of beer. Brewers use the great taste of Rocky Mountain spring water as their key ingredient. Officers, Committee, & Staff ...... 4 Denver is a great base for day trips. Whether you are in the mood to visit Welcome from the President ...... 5 a casino, see a narrow gauge railway or tour the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame, all General Information ...... 6 are available within 80 miles of Denver. Rocky Mountain National Park is only 71 miles (114 km) northwest of Denver. It features 400 square miles (1,036 Session Categories...... 7 sq km) of scenic beauty, including Trail Ridge Road, the highest continuous My Day-at-a-Glance highway in the world, which traditionally opens Memorial Day weekend. The Saturday & Sunday ...... 8 Monday ...... 12 park has hundreds of miles of hiking trails, tranquil lakes, waterfalls, wildlife Tuesday ...... 18 and horseback riding. Wednesday ...... 36 Thursday...... 56 Program ...... 9 Exhibit Hall Floor Plan ...... 68 Exhibitor Listing ...... 69 Exhibitor Directory ...... 70 Cover Image: DigitalGlobe image of Overland fire in Jamestown, Colorado processed Presenter Index ...... 84 with RSI’s ENVI remote sensing software. Hotel Floor Plan ...... 87 Other image provided by the Denver Convention and Visitors Bureau. Denver, Colorado! 1 ASPRS and the conference planners thank the following sponsors for their generosity.

Exhibitors’ Reception 70th Anniversary Party

TheNational Geo-Spatial Intelligence Agency (NGA) is a co-sponsor, with the Tuesday afternoon coffee break AmericanSociety for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ASPRS), for the operationof the Classified Session of the ASPRS Annual Conference, May 28, 2004

Lewis& Expedition Film, IMAX Theatre Tuesday morning coffee break Denver Museum of Nature and Science

70thAnniversary Party and conference bags Sponsors 2 3 The ASPRS Rocky Mountain Region, the 2004 Conference Planning Committee and I are pleased to welcome you to the ASPRS 2004 Conference in Denver and to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the Society! The theme for our conference this year is “Mountains of Data è Peak Decisions”, which recognizes these various timely themes in building our conference program. We will consider how our technical tools and expertise can be used in managing natural resources, affecting land use patterns and understanding anthropomorphic changes to our environment. Our technical program is one of the largest ever for an ASPRS-only event, with over 440 technical presentations for participants. This year we have 16 special session “tracks”, with invited papers comprising a detailed look at particular topics of interest. New this year is an educational track, with sessions and papers covering education in the geospatial technologies from the middle school to post- graduate level. Also new this year is a career development session, organized for those recently joining the field, as well as those changing careers. Our Applications Showcase Poster Session will be special with 70+ presentations. We are hosting several technical tours and a Classified Session on the final day of the conference. Our Keynote address will be given by Dr. Ahmed K. Noor, eminent scholar and William E. Lobeck Professor of Aerospace Engineering at Old Dominion University. Dr. Noor is a leading thinker in advanced visualization and use of emerging technologies. We have plenary session speakers on Wednesday and Thursday -- Keith Lenard, vice president of Lands for the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, and Lynne Sherrod of the Colorado Cattlemen’s Agricultural Land Trust. We will also hear from incoming ASPRS President Dr. Congalton. This year we are celebrating the Bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, one of the defining events in making America what it is today. Over 200 years ago Lewis and Clark set out on a mission of exploration and discovery. Back then exploration was largely experiential: find and observe, document and describe. Today, with our numerous sources of data we can model, simulate, predict and even explore, all from our desktop. The process of discovery is much different, and exploration, while still a posteriori, is driven and directed by considerable a priori knowledge. Examining that evolution is useful because it causes us to reflect upon our use of technology, and how our processes and tools might be better utilized and applied (or are extraneous). In addition to the celebration of the ASPRS’s 70th anniversary on Tuesday evening in the Exhibit Area, we are celebrating the retirement of the mortgage on our National Headquarters at the Opening General Session. This is an important milestone, achieved ahead of projected schedule, due to the extraordinary commitment by you, ASPRS individual and sustaining members! Our evening social event is at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science on Wednesday. The Museum has recently expanded with a major addition, making it one of the premier science museums in the country. Awards will be presented to deserving recipients throughout the week at various sessions. All awardees will be honored at the Awards Luncheon on Wednesday. As a means of honoring the men and women, now deceased, who have made remarkable contributions to our profession, plan to attend the Memorial Address on Tuesday afternoon. This year’s honorees are Amrom H. Katz and Tamsin G. Barnes. I particularly want to thank our exhibitors and sponsors for their support, and encourage you to learn about their products and services. Finally, I want to thank you, participants in this conference, for your continued support of ASPRS and this conference. The and creativity of using photogrammetry, remote sensing, and geospatial technologies to manage and improve our world s Welcomes

comes from you, and the organizations dedicated to making these technologies work. ’

Welcome to Denver!

Allen E. Cook

Conference Chair Chariman 2 3 2003-2004 ASPRS Professional Practice ASPRS Conference Planning Program Manager John R. Simmers Committee Chair Jesse Winch Officers Daniel J. Paulsen Kari Craun Technical Editor, PE&RS President Photogrammetric Applications ASPRS National Workshop James B. Case Donald T. Lauer John Bloodgood Coordinator Cedar City, Utah Charles K. Toth Russell Congalton President-Elect PE&RS Advertising/Exhibit Sales Russell G. Congalton Geographic Information Social Event Chair Representative Vice President Systems Ken Turnbull Kim Kelemen Karen L. Schuckman Marguerite M. Madden The Townsend Group, Inc. Dave Greenlee Financial Coordinator Past President Alassane Toure Editor, PE&RS Terrence J. Keating Jim Merchant Sustaining Members Meeting/Marketing Manager University of Nebraska - Lincoln Treasurer Council Anna Marie Kinerney Michael S. Renslow Kevin Perkins Manuscript Coordinator, PE&RS PE&RS Advertising/Exhibit Sales Donna Stadig Michael Hut Representative University of Nebraska - Lincoln Board of Directors Kim Kelemen Lorraine Amenda Web Site Editor Mark W. Brennan At-Large Committee Members James D. Hipple Lloyd H. Blackburn 2004 ASPRS Convention Scott Bennett Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota John Bloodgood Planning Committee Kevin Hutchins John T. Boland John Parker Web Site Assistant David R. Bowen Chairman Martin Wills Paul D. Brooks Allen Cook University of Missouri - Columbia Daniel L. Civco Allen E. Cook Secretary ASPRS Staff Kari J. Craun Marceil James Terry A. Curtis Executive Director Technical Program Co-chairs Edwin Freeborn James Plasker Jeff Liedtke Douglas H. Fuller Roger Hoffer Lawrence R. Handley Communications Director / William H. Heidbreder Assistant Executive Director Corporate Sponsorship Kimberly A. Tilley Marguerite M. Madden Brian Soliday Charles E. Olson, Jr. Finance Manager Thomas L. Pagh, C.P. User Group Co-chairs Lindey Brown Kevin Perkins Ian Lawrence R. Pettinger Matt Bobo Accounting Assistant John R. Simmers Kathy Konapelsky Scot Keynote Program Coordinator Jerry A. Wagner Tina Cary Membership Manager Sokhan Hing Volunteer Coordinator Division Officers Stella Todd Membership Services Assistant Tishar A. Cook Primary Data Acquisition Technical Tours Chair John T. Boland Sheila Pelczarski Production Manager Brian Huberty Rae Kelley Classified Session Co-chairs Remote Sensing Applications Scott Loomer Meeting/Marketing Manager Daniel L. Civco Keith Elliott Anna Marie Kinerney James Vogelmann Officers, Committee & Staff & Committee Officers, 4 5 Welcome to Denver, Colorado and the 2004 ASPRS Annual Conference and Exhibition. I’m pleased you could join us to celebrate the 70th Anniversary of the Society and to participate in what promises to be an outstanding program. The ASPRS conference has grown over the past several years to offer participants a wide variety of educational and networking experiences. You can choose to attend pre-conference workshops and user group meetings, participate in ASPRS Committee and Division activities, experience the keynote and educational sessions, explore the state-of-the-technology in the Exhibition Hall, and enjoy a variety of social events including an evening at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science. A lot of planning and behind the scenes work goes into the development and execution of such a diverse conference and I thank all of those involved, both our regional hosts and the national staff. This anniversary year is one of great milestones for the Society. At this conference we are celebrating the retirement of the mortgage on the National Headquarters building and are planning to establish an ASPRS Foundation to provide for a more robust ASPRS Awards and Scholarships program. In addition, we are publishing several new manuals this year, including the 5th edition of the Manual of Photogrammetry and two more volumes of the Manual of Remote Sensing. ASPRS continues to work on the next phase (Phase IV) of the Remote Sensing 10-Year Industry Forecast, which is providing excellent information on the health and needs of the remote sensing industry. A summary of the first three years of work on the Forecast was published in the January 2004 issue of PE&RS. These publications are mainstays of this Society and we are proud to be able to maintain the high level of quality expected by professionals in the field. During my year as President we have also been focusing on membership recruitment. ASPRS is a strong and vibrant organization and is involved in many aspects of the geospatial information community. It’s an organization that has spent 70 years serving the profession and has every intention of doing so for as many years into the future. For that, we need a continued infusion of new, younger members to carry on our work. Therefore, I ask each of you here at this conference to reach out to your non-member colleagues, invite them to join ASPRS, and then mentor these younger professionals entering the field so that they can take up positions of leadership in ASPRS when their time comes. I have enjoyed my term as ASPRS President. If I can be of service to you in any way in the future, please do not hesitate to contact me. Enjoy this wonderful conference and I’ll see you throughout the week.

Donald T. Lauer, PhD s Welcomes

ASPRS President ’ President 4 5 Where is the Conference Registration? Why do I need a name badge and tickets? The Conference Registration is located in the Plaza Building, Concourse Level. Conference name badges are required for admission to workshops, the keynote, plenary and technical sessions, Exhibit Hall and any social functions to identify Where are all General & Technical Sessions of this Conference ASPRS attendees. In addition to your name badge, you may have tickets for being held? social functions. Tickets are necessary to identify those who have paid for the Adam’s Mark Hotel. See hotel map on page 87. event. There is a $5.00 replacement fee for lost badges and tickets.

What are the Registration Hours? Is there a place to post my resume or job opening? Saturday, May 22 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm Resumes and job openings may be posted in the Exhibit Hall inside the ASPRS Sunday, May 23 7:30 am – 5:00 pm Career Fair Booth 1024. Prospective employers can review resumes and those Monday, May 24 7:30 am – 5:00 pm looking for job opportunities may scan the postings. It is suggested that several Tuesday, May 25 7:30 am – 5:00 pm copies of all postings be provided. Wednesday, May 26 7:30 am – 5:00 pm Thursday, May 27 7:30 am – 12:00 pm Is there a place for speakers to prepare their presentations? We encourage workshop instructors and technical session presenters to preview Where is the Exhibit Hall and what are the Show Hours? their presentation materials. The ASPRS Speaker Ready Room is located on the The Exhibit is located in Exhibit Area and Plaza Ballrooms A, B, C on the Concourse Level of the Plaza Building in Plaza Court Room 6. Equipment will be Concourse Level of the Plaza Building of the Adam’s Mark Hotel. available throughout the conference on a first-come first-served basis. Monday, May 24 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm Opening Reception 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm Is there a place for the press? Tuesday, May 25 10:00 am – 6:30 pm Press personnel may use Client Office 2 located on the Concourse Level Anniversary Celebration 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm of the Plaza Building as a work area. Press conferences may be held on a space available basis. Please contact Anna Marie Kinerney, ASPRS Meetings/ Wednesday, May 26 10:00 am – 4:30 pm Marketing Manager, through the conference registration desk for details.

Are workshops included with registration? Volunteers? Workshops are not included in the full registration fees. Workshops require Conference volunteers should report to the ASPRS Staff Office, located behind individual registration and additional payment to the general conference the conference registration desk on the Concourse Level of the Plaza Building, registration fees. Availability is based on space. On-site registration will be for work assignments and to receive their lunch stipend on the days they available for confirmed workshops with additional space. Please use the On- volunteer. Site Registration Form available at the conference registration desk located on the Concourse Level of the Plaza Building and present it to the registration What is My Day-at-a-Glance? desk staff with the appropriate registration fee. My Day-at-a-Glance is designed to allow conference attendees to tailor their educational program to their particular interests. It lists daily events. My Day- What does a daily registration include? Daily registrations include select day’s educational sessions, exhibits and at-a-Glance is shown in the program at the beginning of each day and a space proceedings. Social function tickets may be purchased for an additional is provided to check off the events of interest. charge. Please use the On-Site Registration Form available at the conference Additional Information registration desk located on the Concourse Level of the Plaza Building and Evaluations — Your input is important to us! We want to know your thoughts present it to the registration desk staff with the appropriate fee. on this year’s speakers and topics for future conference planning. Please What does a spouse/guest registration include? complete the evaluation form included in your registration packet and leave A spouse/guest registration includes Exhibit Hall Admission, Exhibitors’ in the designated collection box at the Registration Desk. By completing Reception and the Evening at the Museum of Nature and Science. If a spouse and returning the evaluation form you are eligible to win a complimentary or guest would like to attend the Keynote, Plenary or technical sessions, they registration for the ASPRS Fall Conference, September 13-16 2004 in Kansas are required to pay the rate of a full registration or daily registration. Please City, Missouri. use the On-Site Registration Form available at the conference registration Lost and Found — Contact Hotel Security for all lost items. desk located on the Concourse Level of the Plaza Building and present it to the registration desk staff with the appropriate fee. Emergency — Locate a conference staff person at the conference registration desk or pick up any hotel house phone and ask for Security. Can I visit the Exhibit Hall only? Messages — Written messages may be placed on the conference message Individuals who wish admission to the Exhibit Hall only are required to pay a $50 registration fee for Monday that includes the Exhibitors’ Reception, board located in the conference registration area, Concourse Level, Plaza $35 for Tuesday or Wednesday. Please use the On-Site Registration Form Building. There are over 1000 attendees, and we cannot guarantee delivery, available at the conference registration desk located on the Concourse Level as we do not know your individual schedules. Please be mindful of those who of the Plaza Building and present it to the registration desk staff with the need to reach you during the conference and provide them with detailed appropriate fee. The badge that will be supplied will allow admission to the information on how to contact you directly. Exhibit Hall only during show hours. Adam’s Mark Hotel 1550 Court Place Are extra copies of the CD-Rom Proceedings available? Denver, Colorado 80202 Additional proceedings (CD-ROMs) may be purchased at the conference 303-893-3333; 303-626-2542 Fax registration desk for $35 per copy. Proceedings lost, stolen or misplaced at GeneralInformation the conference will not be replaced. 6 7 General Interest Natural Resource Applications State Wide Mapping Programs Agriculture 8 46, 57, 67, 78, 89, 111 Remote Sensing and GIS Applications on the U.S./Mexican Border Forestry 9 2, 13, 24, 35, 48, 58, 64, 70, 79, 90, 98, 105, 116, 126 Evolution of the Digital Orthophoto Program and Its Future Geology 15, 26 38 Accuracy Assessment Considerations Environmental and Land Cover Assessment 34 8, 9, 14, 25, 36, 47, 68, 71, 72, 83, 117, 118, 124, 125, 137 GeoCover — Ortho: Global Mapping with Landsat Meteorology 37, 59, 117 3 National Geospatial Information Agency (NIMA) Academic Research Program Urban Environments 52, 65 50, 56, 66, 77, 88, 97, 109, 120, 123 Developing New Standards for a Changing Geospatial World Vegetation Assessment 55, 76, 87, 96 21, 32, 43 New and Emerging Sensor Systems Water Resources 74, 85, 94 10, 22, 33, 44, 63, 106, 132 Is Digital Photography Admissible? Wildlife 102 11 Global and National Land Cover Data Bases: Status and Utilization 125 National (& Global) Spatial Data Infrastructure and its Activities with the National Map Program, the President’s Applications Showcases — Poster Paper Sessions 45, 99 Management Program on E-Gov and the Geospatial Education One-Stop Portal Education in the Geospatial Sciences 5, 18, 29, 41, 53, 73, 84, 107, 119 1, 12, 23, 39, 52, 65, 92, 101, 113, 122, 133 Photogrammetry GIS Photogrammetric Orientation GIS Analysis Techniques and Standards 6, 19, 30, 54 61, 110, 121, 125, 131, 136 Photogrammetric Techniques and Applications Remote Sensing and GIS Applications 37, 75, 86, 95, 100, 108, 128, 135 9, 11, 13, 24, 32, 35, 46, 47, 48, 51, 57, 58, 67, 77, 78, 79, 89, 90, 98, Generation and Use of DEMs 105, 109, 111, 116, 120, 124, 132 86, 95 GIS Division Sessions Sensors and Sensor Systems 47, 61, 98 Sensor Systems and their Data Characteristics (General) 34, 55, 59, 74, 75, 85, 87, 94, 100, 102, 129, 138 Image and Data Processing GPS Analysis Techniques 60, 100, 112 49, 62, 66, 69, 80, 91, 103, 104, 105, 110, 114, 115, 123, 127, 130, Hyperspectral Sensors and Applications 131, 134, 136 103, 114 Data Calibration Issues, Standards and Techniques Lidar 16, 34, 37, 42, 55, 59, 76, 81, 87, 96, 100, 112, 117, 121, 129, 138 16, 27, 81, 82, 118, 127 Lidar Orthophotos Applications in Mapping Natural & Cultural Resources 15, 26, 42 2, 50, 63, 70, 71, 106, 118, 126, 137 Radar and Microwave Sensors and Applications Lidar Sensors, Data Analysis and Other Uses 7, 20, 31 16, 27, 73, 81, 82, 127 Lidar in Education Special Sessions 39, 92 Special Sessions Organized by Various Individuals and Committees of ASPRS Multi-temporal Image Analysis 1, 2, 4, 5, 9, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 23, 26, 27, 28, 29, 37, 39, 40, Methods 41, 46, 47, 50, 51, 52, 53, 55, 59, 61, 63, 64, 65, 67, 70, 71, 72, 73, 4, 17, 40, 72, 93 76, 81, 82, 83, 84, 87, 92, 93, 98, 100, 101, 102, 106, 107, 112, 113, Change Detection Applications 117, 118, 119, 122, 126, 127, 133, 137 28, 51, 64, 83, 93 Session Categories 6 7 Saturday, May 22nd Time Event Room Attending 7:30 am to 5:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Executive Committee Directors Row J Sunday, May 23rd 8:00 am to 5:00 pm WS #1 — Integrating Imagery into Your GIS Governor’s Square 10 WS #2 — A Global Spatial Data Model (GSDM) for the Digital Revolution Governor’s Square 11 WS #3 — Image Classification Techniques for the Development of Accurate, Governor’s Square 14 Detailed, Quantitative Land Cover Data WS #4 — Professional Airborne Digital Mapping Systems — An Overview Governor’s Square 15 8:00 am to 12:00 noon WS #5 — The National Map Hazards Data Distribution System Governor’s Square 9 10:00 am to 12:00 noon ASPRS Committee Meeting — Journal Policy Committee Plaza Court 3 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Evaluation for Certification Committee Plaza Court 2 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — External Affairs Committee Plaza Court 3 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Region Officers Plaza Court 5 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Electronic Communications Committee Plaza Court 2 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — By-Laws Committee Plaza Court 3 4:00 pm to 5:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Data Preservation and Archiving Committee Plaza Court 4 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm WS #7 — Preparation for the ASPRS Technologist Certification Governor’s Square 9 WS #8 — Remote Sensing 101 Governor’s Square 16 My Day-At-A-GlanceMy 8 9 Saturday, May 22nd WS #3 Image Classification Techniques for the Development of Accurate, Detailed, Quantitative Land Cover Data ASPRS Committee Meeting Kenneth A. Stumpf and John Koltun, Geographic Resource Solutions Room: Governor’s Square 14 Executive Committee Meeting 7:30 am to 5:00 pm The workshop is designed as the presentation of a workflow that takes Room: Directors Row J participants through the major stages and aspects in the development of a successful land cover mapping/data development project. The instructors will present major issues and concerns while contrasting traditional and alternative techniques. Successfully completed projects will serve as examples throughout the workshop. The workshop starts with a discussion of what results are possible using image classification Sunday, May 23, 2004 methodologies. Different methodologies generate different results. Alternative perspectives on successful implementation of terrain- sensitive illumination correction/normalization procedures, training Workshops site development techniques, and planning and implementation of field data collection efforts are presented. The agenda progresses 8:00 am to 5:00 pm into the image training development and classification stages, expanding on alternative treatments of cover characteristics and class data to maintain detailed information at the pixel level, techniques for the resolution of confusion, and the development of a final pixel WS #1 map/database. Finally, the instructors present a methodology for the Integrating Imagery into Your GIS development of minimum mapping unit areas and polygon data by James Smith and David Buckley, Space Imaging, LLC means of rule-based aggregation processes, discussing traditional Room: Governor’s Square 10 pixel-cleanup techniques such as segmentation and pixel filtering and The world of imagery and GIS are expanding tremendously. While it is modeling. The workshop wraps up with a comprehensive summary assumed by many that imagery and GIS data are always compatible, followed by questions and answers. it takes knowledge of both worlds to merge them effectively. GIS professionals must make decisions about how to integrate imagery, with serious cost and data quality ramifications. Many GIS professionals were not well trained to answer these questions, or their training is out-of-date. Continuing Education Units (CEUs) ASPRS, in conjunction with the University of Maryland, College

Park, is pleased to offer ASPRS 2004 Annual Conference th Workshop attendees the opportunity to earn Continuing WS #2 Education Credits (CEUs). All attendees are eligible for CEUs if A Global Spatial Data Model (GSDM) for the they attend the above noted Workshops, register for CEUs and Digital Revolution pay the processing fee of $20 for each Workshop attended. One Earl Burkholder, New Mexico State University CEU for every 10 hours of eligible sessions attended is awarded Room: Governor’s Square 11 to CEU registrants. (Full day workshops are 8 hours and receive 0.8 CEUs. Half day workshops are 4 hours and receive 0.4 CEUs). This workshop will build on concepts of geodesy as related to geometry Registration forms will be distributed during the Workshops. of the ellipsoid, level surfaces, and datums to show how spatial data for CEU participants will receive a certificate of completion 23Sun.,to a GIS can be referenced in a common 3-D spatial data base whether the

awarded by the University of Maryland, College Park, nd data are collected with GPS, by traditional total station surveying, or by approximately one month after the conference. photogrammetric mapping operations. However, this presentation will also look at issues regarding implementation and spatial data accuracy Please note: CEUs are awarded to Workshop attendees only. as defined by the GSDM. The session will close with questions about Tutorials, General Sessions, Poster Sessions, or any other possible standardizations of procedures between disciplines for scheduled special event at this conference are not eligible collecting, manipulating, storing, and using spatial information and for for CEUs.

assessing the accuracy of 3-D spatial data. 22Sat., 8 9 Continuedfrom Sunday, May 23 rd,8:00 am to 5:00 pm Workshops 8:00 am to 12:00 noon WS #4 Professional Airborne Digital Mapping Systems — An Overview WS #5 Dave Fuhr, Airborne Data Systems The National Map Hazards Data Distribution Brian Huberty, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Room: Governor’s Square 15 System Brenda and Ron Risty, USGS EROS Data Center/SAIC The primary objective of this course is to review current and future Room: Governor’s Square 9 professional airborne digital mapping camera systems. We will discuss all advantages and disadvantages of these new, dynamic systems - This introductory level workshop focuses on the use of The National technical, costs, feasibility, calibration and applications. Participants Map Hazards Data Distribution System (HDDS). The class will will leave with a better understanding of what it takes to either provide information about the resources available and the decision contract airborne digital mapping camera projects or what to look for process used to determine the best remote sensing sources for if you wish to purchase a system or two. hazards response. It will provide a general overview of the different satellites and sensors along with their characteristics, sample products, cooperative agreements, and new technology research and applications. It will establish criteria for determining remote sensing needs going into detail about how to determine if remote sensing is appropriate for response to a disaster. It will detail information on HDDS use including The National Map base layers, hazards layers, and overviews of the near-line and off-line archive capabilities.

10 11 ASPRS Committee Meetings Workshops Journal Policy Committee 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm 10:00 am to noon Room: Plaza Court 3

Evaluation for Certification Committee WS #7 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm Preparation for the ASPRS Technologist Room: Plaza Court 2 Certification Doug Fuller, AERO-METRIC, Inc. External Affairs Committee Room: Governor’s Square 9 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm The purpose of this workshop is to prepare an individual who is Room: Plaza Court 3 applying as an ASPRS Certified Technologist. The workshop begins Region Officers with explanation of the Technologist Certification Program reviewing 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm the criteria, application, and examination process. The exam Room: Plaza Court 5 content will be presented in detail, identifying topical areas, sample questions, and basic concepts. Resources and study materials will Electronic Communications Committee be discussed to assist applicants to prepare for the examination. 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm Room: Plaza Court 2 WS #8 By-Laws Committee 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm Remote Sensing 101 Room: Plaza Court 3 Kass , Alta Vista Room: Governor’s Square 16 Data Preservation and Archiving Committee The purpose of this course is to provide students with a basic 4:00 pm to 5:00 pm understanding of the fundamentals of using remotely sensed data. Room: Plaza Court 4 This introductory course focuses on expanding the knowledge of professionals and students who are interested in remote sensing, but have little or no exposure to the subject. Each course concept will be elaborated with topical case studies chosen from current real world applications rd

Job Fair

In conjunction with the brand new Career Development program offerings on Thursday, May 27, see page 57 of this program, we will have an expanded Job Fair area located in Booth 1024 of the Exhibit Hall, see map on page 68. This is a great opportunity for employers seeking qualified specialists in various fields to announce job openings. Likewise, for those attendees desiring a new position, you may post multiple copies of your resume. There is no charge for this service and is available to all conference registrants. Sunday, May 23 10 11 Monday, May 24th Time Event Room Attending 7:30 am to 8:30 am ASPRS Committee Meeting — Committee Chairs Directors Row I ASPRS Committee Meeting — Division Directors Directors Row J 8:30 am to 10:00 am ASPRS Committee Meeting — Education & Professional Development Directors Row F ASPRS Committee Meeting — Primary Data Acquisition Division (PDAD) Directors Row I 8:30 am to 12:30 noon ASPRS Committee Meeting — Photogrammetric Applications Division (PAD) Governor’s Square 15 Transportation Surveys Subcommittee 8:00 am to 5:00 pm WS #9 — Preparing For ASPRS Certification Governor’s Square 17 WS #10 — Intermediate Image Classification University of Denver WS #11 — Performance, Accuracy, and Economics of Imaging Sensors, LIDAR Governor’s Square 11 and IFSAR for Surface DEM Generation WS #12 — Hyperspectral Image Processing and Feature Extraction: Governor’s Square 14 Maximizing Geospatial Information Retrieval

8:00 am to 12:00 noon WS #14 — Remote Sensing of Vegetation Governor’s Square 16 8:30 am to 4:30 pm RSI User Group Plaza Court 4 8:30 am to 12:00 noon DigitalGlobe User Group Governor’s Square 9 ESRI User Group Plaza Court 3 8:30 am to 12:30 pm Z/I Imaging Corporation User Group Plaza Court 12 9:00 am to 12 noon ASPRS Committee Meeting — Professional Practice Division (PPD) Directors Row E Licensure Subcommittee, Standards Subcommittee 9:00 am to 5:00 pm PCI Geomatics User Group Plaza Court 2 10:00 am to 12 noon ASPRS Committee Meeting — Membership Committee Directors Row F 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm INPHO User Group Plaza Court 5 Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping User Group Plaza Court 3 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Convention Planning & Policy Committee Directors Row F ASPRS Committee Meeting — Remote Sensing Applications Division (RSAD) Directors Row J ASPRS Committee Meeting — Awards Committee Directors Row I 1:00 pm to 2:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Photogrammetric Applications Division (PAD) Directors Row E 2:00 pm to 3:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Photogrammetric Applications Division (PAD) Directors Row E Lidar Subcommittee 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Photogrammetric Applications Division (PAD) Directors Row E Softcopy Subcommittee 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Publications Committee Directors Row F ASPRS Committee Meeting — Geographic Information Systems Division (GISD) Directors Row I ASPRS Committee Meeting — New Board Orientation Directors Row J 5:00 pm to 6:00 pm ASPRS Committee Meeting — Division Directors Directors Row J 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm Exhibit Hall Open Plaza Ballroom A-C & Plaza Exhibit Area 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm WS #15 — Assessing the Accuracy of GIS Information Created from Remotely Governor’s Square 15 Sensed Data: Principles and Practices WS #16 — Grid-Based Map Analysis Techniques and Modeling Governor’s Square 16

5:30 pm to 7:00 pm Exhibitors’ Reception Plaza Ballroom A-C &

My Day-At-A-GlanceMy Plaza Exhibit Area 12 13 ASPRS Committee Meetings WS #10 Intermediate Image Classification Committee Chairs Randolph H. Wynne and James B. Campbell, Virginia Tech 7:30 am to 8:30 am This workshop will be held in the computer lab at the University of Room: Directors Row I Denver Division Directors This hands-on workshop will review basic concepts and methods 7:30 am to 8:30 am of image classification, to include hybrid classifiers, such as Guided Room: Directors Row J Clustering and Iterative Guided Spectral Class Rejection. The course will emphasize mastery of the critical steps required to select and Education & Professional Development Committee evaluate training data for supervised classification. Training data must 8:30 am to 10:00 am be assessed with respect to separability, effective partition of spectral Room: Directors Row F data space, and frequency distributions. Students will review these basic concepts through discuss-lectures, then apply them to practical Primary Data Acquisition Division (PDAD) problems through guided tutorials and exercises. This workshop is 8:30 am to 10:00 am intended for those who have a basic knowledge of supervised image Room: Directors Row I classification using ERDAS Imagine but require a more advanced level of experience in applications to natural resources data. Our materials Photogrammetric Applications Division (PAD) are presented at the intermediate level, as we expect students to Transportation Surveys Subcommittee have mastered basic principals of digital image classification, and to 8:30 am to 12:30 pm be prepared to apply ERDAS Imagine in class exercises. Room: Governor’s Square 15 This workshop will be held in the computer lab at the University of Denver. Transportation is included in the registration fee. The Professional Practice Division (PPD) bus will leave from the hotel lobby promptly at 6:45 am and Licensure Subcommittee, Standards Subcommittee will return to the hotel at approximately 5:00 pm. The bus will be 9:00 am to 12 noon making only one trip each way. Room: Directors Row E

Membership Committee 10:00 am to 12 noon Room: Directors Row F WS #11 Performance, Accuracy, and Economics of Imaging Sensors, LIDAR and IFSAR for Surface DEM Generation Workshops Mike Renslow, Spencer B. Gross, Inc. Bryan Mercer, Intermap Technologies Corp. 8:00 am to 5:00 pm Room: Governor’s Square 11

There are a number of existing imaging and remote sensing systems th that are specifically designed for surface data generation. These WS #9 include IFSAR (Interferometric SAR), Lidar, and aerial photography Preparing For ASPRS Certification as well as spaceborne optical and radar stereo options. This Robert Burtch, Ferris State workshop aims at providing a comprehensive understanding of Room: Governor’s Square 17 the technology, accuracy, and comparative performance of the The purpose of this workshop is to prepare individuals who are various alternatives available for surface generation with particular planning to sit for the ASPRS Certification exams. The workshop will emphasis on IFSAR and Lidar technologies. The economic viability begin by explaining the purpose and form of the exam. It will then and cost effectiveness of these systems will also be examined from identify key areas which an applicant should be aware of prior to taking a comparative point of view. the exam. Topics will begin with a review of the basic concepts and sample questions to show how these will be tested for on the exam. Finally, the workshop will identify resources that exam takers should be aware of and study from in their preparation for the examination. Monday, May 24 12 13 Continuedfrom Monday, May 24 th,8:00 am to 5:00 pm Workshops 8:00 am to 12:00 noon WS #12 Hyperspectral Image Processing and Feature Extraction: Maximizing Geospatial Information WS #14 Retrieval Remote Sensing of Vegetation William Farrand, Farr View Consulting Charles Olson, University of Michigan Stuart Blundell, Visual Learning Systems, Inc. Room: Governor’s Square 16 Room: Governor’s Square 14 The goal of this workshop is to provide an examination of morphologic Imaging spectrometry, commonly referred to as hyperspectral and physiologic factors affecting signals upwelling from vegetated remote sensing, provides high-resolution spectral information for areas and their influence on remotely sensed data in the visible, near- environmental and natural resource projects. Hyperspectral image IR, middle-IR, thermal and microwave spectral bands, with emphasis processing approaches can also be applied to broadband multispectral on the spectral bands of camera systems and the ETM+ sensor. imagery to enhance automated feature extraction techniques. In this workshop, we will provide students with an introduction to imaging spectrometry, hyperspectral image processing techniques, and automated feature extraction to demonstrate how digital imagery User Groups can add value to maintenance of geospatial databases. Hyperspectral data requires a substantially different processing approach from that RSI required for multispectral data; however, such an approach can add 8:30 am to 4:30 pm value to information extraction from broadband MSI data. We will Room: Plaza Court 4 emphasize that the added value in imaging spectrometry is on the spectrometry, the ability to identify materials based on their reflectance Please join RSI for an ENVI User’s Group Meeting. In the morning, signatures. We will briefly go into the phenomenology of reflectance meet other users, explore what is new in ENVI 4.0, and preview what spectrometry and explain why some materials are more amenable is coming in ENVI 4.1 and beyond. Then join our hyperspectral image to mapping than others. We will describe commercially available interpretation and analysis presentation in the afternoon. We will review processing systems that are available for processing hyperspectral and basic concepts and learn about analysis approaches including exciting multispectral data and discuss the processing techniques within those new options in ENVI 4.1. If you are just getting started with spectral packages. Certain processing techniques are better suited to certain imagery, or are simply curious about what is possible, this is for you. applications. We will explain why this is so. We will also discuss some of the advantages and shortcomings of current airborne and orbital DigitalGlobe hyperspectral systems as well as planned systems. 8:30 am to 12:00 noon Hyperspectral imagery provides users with discrete spectral, and Room: Governor’s Square 9 consequently compositional, information about Earth surface materials. The ability to integrate other types of geologic, geochemical, biologic, DigitalGlobe, an imagery and information company, is changing the or hydrologic data with information from hyperspectral data improves historical usage of Earth information through the commercialization the interpretation and mapping process. A GIS uses relational databases of high-resolution satellite imaging. DigitalGlobe’s QuickBird satellite of tabular information and spatial data (vector, CAD, grid, image) to features several technical advantages for providing clear and accurate spatially explore how disparate types of data are related to solve a imagery: highest available resolution, highest collection capacity, problem. The student will be introduced to the concepts of developing highest accuracy, and largest high-resolution swath width. This feature extraction models for automated feature extraction using workshop will discuss DigitalGlobe’s QuickBird imagery products, hyperspectral, Lidar, DEMs and multispectral data within a GIS. We will using QuickBird imagery products in COTS software, and real-world provide real-world examples of how hyperspectral and multispectral applications of high-resolution imagery. data processing end products, including resultant mineral and vegetation species maps, can be incorporated into the Feature Analyst ESRI for feature extraction in a GIS. The desired final result is a map that will 8:30 am to 12:00 noon be of immediate utility to the end user. Room: Plaza Court 3 We will provide a package of materials to the students that will include hard copies of the overhead transparencies and an extensive list This half-day event, open to all ESRI users, will feature two valuable presentations. “Using ArcGIS Image Analysis and Stereo Analyst,” we of references on the topics addressed. We will engage the class with an will cover how Image Analysis extends image processing and analysis in-class exercise and several “take-home” hands-on exercises. 14 15 capabilities for the ArcGIS desktop. Stereo Analyst, which allows users h What is the “Geospatial Imaging Chain”? to capture 3D information from 2D imagery on the ArcGIS Desktop, h Where do hardware and software products fit within the Chain? will also be covered. The second presentation, “What’s New at ArcGIS h How can Leica Geosystems products empower users across 9,” will look at enhancements for geoprocessing, scripting, advanced every of the Chain? labeling, and more. ArcGlobe, ArcGIS Server, and ArcGIS Engine will We will also highlight two specific software components, Leica also be discussed. Photogrammetry Suite and ERDAS IMAGINE and how each of these products help photogrammetric and GIS professionals realize the full Z/I Imaging Corporation potential of their imagery. 8:30 am to 12:30 pm Room: Governor’s Square 12 This live workshop will focus on our digital acquisition systems, enterprise production, and image management and distribution ASPRS Committee Meetings solutions and how these tools can directly impact the efficiency of your workflow, as well as provide a high return on investment. Convention Planning & Policy Committee 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm Room: Directors Row F PCI Geomatics 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Remote Sensing Applications Division (RSAD) Room: Plaza Court 2 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm Room: Directors Row J Don’t miss this great opportunity to attend our informative seminar and workshop. The seminar will consist of: Awards Committee h Geomatica 9 Product Presentations 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm h Geomatica 9 Demo Room: Directors Row I h eCognition - Object Oriented Image Processing h Digital Globe Photogrammetric Applications Division (PAD) 1:00 pm to 2:00 pm This introductory workshop is called “Integrating High Resolution Room: Directors Row E Imagery into Geospatial Projects.” The discussion will include an overview of new high-resolution sensors (such as IKONOS, QuickBird, Photogrammetric Applications Division (PAD) and more); where to get data, and how to use it – cost-effectively; and Lidar Subcommittee related data-processing concerns (accuracy, classification methods, 2:00 pm to 3:00 pm data quality, and data management). Room: Directors Row E

INPHO Photogrammetric Applications Division (PAD) 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm Softcopy Subcommittee Room: Plaza Court 5 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm Room: Directors Row E INPHO, leading supplier of digital photogrammetric systems, will th present the latest versions of its product line. Special emphasis will be Publications Committee placed on orthophoto production with OrthoMaster and OrthoVista, 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm and on automated aerial triangulation with MATCH-AT. There will Room: Directors Row F be demonstrations on how to increase productivity by using INPHO products, and general discussions on customer needs. The meeting is Geographic Information Systems Division (GISD) open to all users of INPHO products, as well as to potential new users 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm who want to learn more about the products. Room: Directors Row I

Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping New Board Orientation 1:00 pm – 5: 00 pm 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm Room: Plaza Court 3 Room: Directors Row J Leica Geosystems is “Powering Geospatial Imaging!” Come to our half Division Directors day seminar to learn: 5:00 pm to 6:00 pm h What is Geospatial Imaging? Room: Directors Row J Monday, May 24 14 15 16 17 th, Exhibit Hall Opens Continued from Monday, May 24 4:00 pm Concourse Level, Plaza Building Workshops 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm Social Event WS #15 Exhibitors’ Reception Assessing the Accuracy of GIS Information 5:30 pm to 7:00 pm Created from Remotely Sensed Data: Principles Exhibit Hall Plan now to take part in this great opportunity to meet fellow attendees and Practices and view the latest technologies of the industry. With worldwide Kass Green, Alta Vista suppliers participating in a huge exhibit hall displaying their products Room: Governor’s Square 15 and services, you can enjoy light refreshments and beverages. This course focuses on the principles, techniques, and practical aspects of assessing the accuracy of GIS information derived from remotely A special thank you to DigitalGlobe for their sponsorship of this sensed data. Participants will receive instruction in how to design event. accuracy assessment procedures, allocate accuracy assessment samples, collect both field and photo reference data, and analyze accuracy assessment results. Examples of accuracy assessment case studies based on actual project data will be presented and discussed. Each participant in this course will come away with a solid understanding of accuracy assessment procedures for spatial data, and the knowledge to properly interpret the results of such procedures. In order to maximize the benefits of completing this course, participants should have previous experience with GIS and remotely sensed data. In addition, a good understanding of statistical principles is also strongly suggested.

WS #16 Grid-Based Map Analysis Techniques and Modeling Joseph K. Berry, Berry and Associates Room: Governor’s Square 16 This intermediate level workshop discusses and demonstrates th several techniques for spatial analysis and data mining using numerous examples from precision agriculture, geo-business, and natural resources management. The discussions focus on concepts, NEW…EXCITING TRACK!!! procedures and practical considerations in successfully applying grid-based map analysis in GIS modeling. The material presented Career Development – encapsulates numerous “Beyond Mapping” columns published in This new track, offered in four sessions on Thursday, May 27, GeoWorld magazine and compiled into the online book Map Analysis page 57, addresses the latest trends in the industry through (www.innovativegis.com/basis/, select Map Analysis). panel sessions, resume preparation, skill promotion, interviewing techniques and mock interviews, as well as an opportunity to explore graduate study programs. These sessions are designed for the seasoned professional desiring a change, as well as the newcomer looking for a career in geospatial sciences. Details can be found under the Thursday listings. Monday, May 24 16 17 Tuesday, May 25th Time Event Room Attending 7:15 am to 8:15 am Past Presidents’ Breakfast Plaza Court 7 8:30 am to 10:15 am Plenary Session Plaza Ballroom D-F 10:00 am to 6:30 pm Exhibit Hall Open Plaza Ballroom A-C & Plaza Exhibit Area 10:30 am to 11:50 am Educational Sessions 1-11 Plaza Court 1-4 and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-17 11:30 am to 5:00 pm Applications Showcase Session 1 Governor’s Square Foyer 1:00 pm to 2:20 pm Educational Sessions 12-22 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-17 2:30 pm to 3:50 pm Educational Sessions 23-33 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-17 4:00 pm to 5:00 pm Educational Sessions 34-44 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-17 4:00 pm to 5:15 pm Memorial Address Plaza Court 7 5:30 pm to 6:30 pm 70th Anniversary of ASPRS — A Celebration Plaza Ballroom A-C & Plaza Exhibit Area My Day-At-A-GlanceMy

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 18 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 19 Plenary Session Ahmed K. Noor 8:30 am to 10:15 am Professor of Aerospace Engineering, Room: Plaza Ballroom D-F Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia This morning’s Keynote speaker is Dr. Dr. Ahmed K. Noor is an eminent scholar and William E. Lobeck Professor of Aerospace Ahmed K. Noor. Dr. Noor is a leading Engineering, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia. He is also the director of the thinker in advanced visualization and use Old Dominion University’s Center for Advanced Engineering Environments, funded of emerging technologies. His keynote by NASA in Hampton, Virginia, and adjunct professor of Mechanical and Aerospace address will include illustrations of how Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville, and the Florida Space Research Institute today’s technology facilitates collabora- Distinguished Scholar of Advanced Learning Systems. He previously taught at Stanford University, tion in our analysis of these mountains Cairo University (Egypt), University of Baghdad (Iraq), the University of New Wales (Australia), of data, and thought-provoking simula- George Washington University, and the University of Virginia before joining Old Dominion University. tions showing what may be possible in He is a Fellow of five professional societies: the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, American Society of Civil Engineers, the American Acad- the future. emy of Mechanics, and the U.S. Association for Computational Mechanics. He is a founding member Awards of both the International and U.S. Associations of Computational Mechanics, and is a past president of In addition to the Keynote Address, USACM. ASPRS will be presenting two of its most His current professional activities focus on intelligent design and synthesis environments, advanced prestigious awards. The Fairchild Photo- learning technologies, aerospace structures, structural and computational mechanics, multiscale mod- grammetric Award is being given to Dr. eling, simulation and visualization, and new computing systems. Chris McGlone and the SAIC Estes Memo- rial Teaching Award will be given to Dr. John Jensen. ASPRS Mortgage Retirement This morning ASPRS celebrates the retirement of its mortgage on the ASPRS Headquarters Office in Bethesda, Maryland. The Building Fund Drive, chaired by ASPRS Past President Roger Crystal, succeeded in raising funds to retire the mortgage four years earlier than predicted. We are proud to have the following participants with us to light a ceremonial match to symbolically burn the mortgage. Roger Crystal, chair of the Building Fund Drive; John Ray, contributed the most money over the course of the Building Fund Drive; Bill Mendenhall, Jr., and Starr contributed the most in the last period; Jon Dykstra, drawn at random from the most recent contributors; Representatives from the ASPRS Potomac and St. Louis Regions who have contributed the most over the life of the Drive; A representative from Eastman Kodak, the Sustaining Member that contributed the most over the life of the Drive

Past Presidents’ Breakfast 7:15 am to 8:15 am Education Sessions Plaza Court 7 10:30 am to 11:50 am -1-

Exhibit Hall Education in the Geospatial Sciences — Part 1 th 10:00 am to 6:30 pm Special session, organized by Allen Cook, Northrop Grumman Mission Systems Plaza Ballroom A-C & Plaza Exhibit Area Moderator: Allen Cook, Northrop Grumman Mission Systems Room: Plaza Court 3 Beverage Break The Global GIS Project: GIS Data and Lessons for the World 10:15 am to 10:30 am (Invited Presentation) Exhibit Areas Joseph J. Kerski, U.S. Geological Survey Geospatial Awareness: GIS in the Middle School Classroom (Invited Presentation) Julie Dintamin*, Morey Middle School Dan Buehler* and Leanne Cook Enhancing the Learning of GIS Through Multimedia Training Materials

Maribeth H. Price, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Tuesday, May 25 *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 18 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 19 th, Assessing Vegetation Response to Local Rainfall Events Continuedfrom Tuesday, May 25 10:30 am to 11:50 am Using NEXRAD Weather Radar and MODIS Imagery Richard P. Watson, Earth Data Analysis Center -2- Louis A. Scuderi, Theresa Runge Kuntz, and Karl K. Benedict Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 1: Cloud-Top Height Retrieval Over the Caribbean by Using Applications in Forestry MODIS and MISR Data Special Session: Sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Ana J. Picón, NOAA Coop. Remote Sensing Science & Technology Center (CREST) Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures Ramón Vasquez Moderator: David Evans, Mississippi State University Room: Governor’s Square 15 Weather Intelligent Management Database (WIMDB) A highlight of this year’s ASPRS Conference is the series of special sessions Miguel Cortés, University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez Campus on lidar sensors and applications. Ten years ago it was hard to find even one or two lidar-related presentations, whereas this year there are over 60 papers and 16 sessions. Lidar truly has become a mainstream tool for -4- high resolution elevation data capture and an integral part of the remote Multi-temporal Image Analysis and sensing toolbox. The ASPRS Lidar Committee encourages everyone to attend some of these special sessions and learn about this exciting Applications — Part 1: Multi-temporal Image technology and how it is being used by today’s mapping professionals. Analysis Methods Special Session organized by Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Lidar Applications in Forestry — An Overview Moderator: Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium (Invited Presentation) Room: Governor’s Square 16 Ward W. Carson, USDA Forest Service Hans-Erik Andersen, Robert J. McGaughey, and Stephen E. Reutebuch Change Detection and Trend Analysis Algorithms: State-of- the-art Geographic Variability in the Relationship Between Lidar (Invited Presentation) Remotely-sensed Canopy Structure and Field Measured Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Forest Stand Structure in the Pacific-Northwest Michael Lefsky, Colorado State University Optimal Re-measure Frequency for Sampling and Andrew Hudak, Warren Cohen, and Steve Acker Monitoring Vegetation Cover Using Multi-temporal TM Images Classification of Pine and Hardwood by the Density and George Z. Gertner, University of Illinois Intensity of Lidar Canopy Returns Guangxing Wang* and Alan B. Anderson Thomas E. Douglas, Mississippi State University David L. Evans, Keith L. Belli, and Scott D. Roberts A New Image Registration Technique in Urban Change Detection A Multiresolution Approach to Forest Segmentation as a Gang Hong, University of New Brunswick, Canada Precursor to Estimation of Volume and Biomass by Species Yun Zhang and David Fraser Jan A.N. van Aardt, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Randolph H. Wynne -5- National (& Global) Spatial Data Infrastructure and -3- its Activities with the National Map Program, the Meteorology and the Geospatial Sciences Moderator: Jennifer Whitacre, Spectrum Mapping President’s Management Program on E-Gov and Room: Governor’s Square 11 the Geospatial One-Stop Portal — Part 1: A Look at the Evolution of the National Infrastructure (NSDI) Estimation of Spatial-temporal Rainfall Frequency During Special session, sponsored by the Federal Geographic Data Committee and the New Mexico Monsoon Period Using Archived, High- organized by Alan R. Stevens, FGDC resolution NEXRAD Radar Products (Invited Presentations) Hongjie Xie, New Mexico Tech Moderator: Lynda Wayne, GeoMaxim — FGDC/GOS Jan Hendrickx, Enrique R. Vivoni, and Xiaobing Zhou Room: Governor’s Square 17 *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 20 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 21 Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) was instituted in the early 1990s to facilitate the building of a National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI) -7- by encouraging the use of common standards and interoperable Radar and Microwave Sensors and systems and techniques when organizations collect, process, archive, Applications — Part 1: Interferometric Synthetic and distribute digital data. Aperture Radar (IFSAR) The NSDI — Its Evolution, Accomplishments, and What’s Moderator: Jeff Leonard, EarthData International Next Room: Plaza Court 1 Ivan DeLoatch, Federal Geographic Data Committee Trends in IFSAR Sharon Shin and Alan Stevens* (Invited Presentation) Bryan Mercer, Intermap Technologies Corp. The National Map Strategy and its Relationship to the NSDI and the Geospatial One Stop IFSAR Applications for Land Management Issues Kari Craun, U.S. Geological Survey Lori Baer*, U.S. Geological Survey John Kosovich* The FGDC CAP Grant Program and How it Facilitates a National Spatial Data Infrastructure Quality Control and Assurance in an IFSAR Mapping David Painter, FGDC CAP Grant Program Manager Environment Xiaopeng Li, Intermap Technologies Corp. Garth Lawrence and Thomas Hutt -6- Intermap Technologies STAR-3i Accuracies and Evaluation The Art and Science of Photogrammetry — Part Strategies 1: Photogrammetric Orientation (General) Ian K. Isaacs, Intermap Technologies Corp. Moderator: Timothy E. LeSiege, Maine Department of Transportation Room: Governor’s Square 12

A Sensitivity Study of Ground Control Point (GCP) Location -8- Accuracy and Distribution on Photogrammetric Bundle State-wide Mapping Programs Adjustment and Direct Georeferencing of Synthetic Moderator: Robert Eadie, Spectrum Mapping, LLC Pushbroom Imagery Room: Governor’s Square 10 Paul Pope, Los Alamos National Laboratory The First Entirely Digital Statewide Mapping Program A Jackknife Analysis of Photogrammetric Models Fitting: A Raquel Charrois, EarthData International of Maryland Relative Orientation Example Near Real-time Internet Delivery of Processed MODIS Gamal Seedahmed, Pacific Northwest National Lab Imagery in Wisconsin University of Wisconsin-Madison On the Study of the Accuracy of a Motion Measurement Sam Batzli, th System Jon Chipman, Jeff Schmaltz, Paul Howe, Peter Weiler, and Tom Lillesand A.K. Chong, University of Otago, New Zealand

Photogrametric Alternative – 2nd Generation Orthos for The Wyomingview Program: Grassroots Approach for City Planning and Development Promoting Application of Remotely-sensed Data to Todd Twete, Positive Systems, Inc. Wyoming Issues Kenneth L. Driese, University of Wyoming Ramesh Sivanpillai

0.3-Meter Resolution Orthoimagery, Using Softcopy Photogrammetry Techniques Becomes a Component of The National Map, through Multi-agency Collaboration Rachel Trusty, U.S. Geological Survey Tuesday, May 25

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 20 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 21 th, Modeling the Relationship between Water Quality Continuedfrom Tuesday, May 25 10:30 am to 12:00 noon Measurements and Spectroradiometer Readings Made on a Range of Wisconsin Lake Types -9- Mark J. Nordheim, University of Wisconsin – Madison Remote Sensing and GIS Applications on the Thomas M. Lillesand U.S./Mexico Border Analysis of Ocean Color Algorithms for Lake Erie Special Session organized by Fabian Lozano-Garcia, Instituto Tecnologico y do Raghavendra S. Mupparthy, Ohio State University Estudios Superiores do Monterrey, Monterrey Carolyn J. Merry (Invited Presentations) Moderator: D. Fabián Lozano-García, Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, Mexico Room: Plaza Court 2 -11- Remote Sensing and GIS for Wildlife GIS infrastructure Along the U.S./Mexico Border: Progress Applications and Challenges Moderator: Duane B. Pool, Ducks Unlimited Inc. D. Fabián Lozano-García, Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores Room: Plaza Court 4 de Monterrey, Mexico Ma. del Consuelo Hori-Ochoa Habitat and Exposure Modeling of Raccoon for Ecological Risk Assessment: A Case Study in the Savannah River Site Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) T. Edwin Chow, University of South Carolina Monitoring of Ground Water Dynamics at the U.S./Mexico Border Using Remotely-sensed Data to Model Waterfowl Nesting Joo-Yup Han, University of Utah Probability Desmond Moser, Andrew Ford, and Richard Forster Duane B. Pool, Ducks Unlimited Inc. Robin Reich Colonia Boundary Analysis and Delineation Robert J. Czerniak, New Mexico State University Snail Abundance Prediction in an Agricultural Environment Matthew Rich Using IKONOS Multispectral Imagery Bing Xu, Texas State University – San Marcos Mapping Ecohydrological Regions with GIS and RS Peng Gong for Vulnerability Assessment in the Mexico-U.S. Transboundary Paso Del Norte Proposals for Estimating Approximate Migration Route Alfredo Granados-Olivas, Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez, Mexico Location and Patterns in Varying Climatic Conditions for Christopher Brown the East African Wildebeast Using GIS and Remote Sensing Sanga-Ngoie Kazadi, University, Japan Douglas E. Musiega* -10- Use of Remote Sensing for Water Resources Applications — Part 1: Measuring Water Quality of Lakes and Streams Moderator: Douglas C. Peters, Peters Geosciences Honoring Dr. Robert N. Colwell Room: Governor’s Square 14 In his 50-year career, Robert Colwell was a key figure in developing the geospatial sciences. Many of his colleagues Understanding the Big Picture of Lake Water Clarity via and former students from his days at UC Berkeley populate Multi-stage Remote Sensing the industry today and remember his integrity and dedication. Thomas M. Lillesand, University of Wisconsin-Madison Join us at noon, Tuesday May 25th, in Room 3355 at the Jonathan W. Chipman and Samuel A. Batzli Adam’s Mark Hotel to discuss an initiative honoring Dr. Colwell at Berkeley’s College of Natural Resources. ASPRS Physical Calibration Issues in Remote Imaging of President Donald Lauer (Berkeley ‘63, ‘65) and Dr. Maggi Clearwater Stream Habitats Kelly (Berkeley ‘88), CNR, will speak briefly. Mark A. Fonstad, Texas State University – San Marcos *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 22 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 23 Applications Showcase Session 1 Burn Severity Mapping with Satellite Data: Effectiveness Room: Governor’s Square Foyer and Variations Posters will be on display at 11:30 am and will be available for viewing Donald Ohlen, U.S. Geological Survey until 5:00 pm. The authors will be available for discussion of their Carl Key and Nate Benson poster papers from 4:00 to 5:00 pm. The Relationship of Field Burn Severity Measures to Moderator: Roger M. Hoffer, Colorado State University (retired) Satellite-derived Burned Area Reflectance Classification (BARC) Maps Andrew Hudak, USDA Forest Service Educational Sessions Penelope Morgan, Peter Robichaud, Paul Gessler, and Terrie Jain 1:00 pm to 2:20 pm Mapping Fuels in Sierra Nevada Forests Using AVIRIS Hyperspectral Data Jan van Wagtendonk, U.S. Geological Survey Dar A. Roberts and Jenny Rechel -12- Education in the Geospatial Sciences — Part 2 LANDFIRE — A National Fire Fuels and Risks Assessment Project Special session, organized by Allen Cook, Northrop Grumman Mission Systems James E. Vogelmann, SAIC/USGS EROS Data Center Moderator: Allen Cook, Northrop Grumman Mission Systems Matthew Rollins and Zhiliang Zhu Room: Plaza Court 3

Implementation of GIS within Denver Public Schools (Invited Presentation) -14- Barb Keiser*, Denver Public Schools Rob Menzies* Remote Sensing for Global Environmental Monitoring and Modeling — Part 1 Students Learning Earth Science: The DEVELOP Internship Moderator: Matthew E. Ramspott, University of Kansas Program at NASA Ames Research Center Room: Plaza Court 4 Cynthia , San Jose State University Jay W. Skiles, Michael Ruiz, and Janice Cawthorn A GEO Hyperspectral Mission for Continental-Scale Carbon Cycle Observations The Usage of VRML Language in Interactive 3D Dynamic Janette C. Gervin, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Learning Environment of Geospatial On-line Courses Jaime Esper, Charles R. McClain, Forrest G. Hall, Elizabeth M. Gang Wang, University of Mississippi Middleton, Watson W. Gregg, Antonio Mannino, Robert G. Knox, Pamela B. Lawhead Philip W. Dabney, and K. Fred

Place-Based Geospatial Science Learning and Applications Remote Estimation of CO2 Flux in Crops in Rural Alaska Anatoly A. Gitelson, University of Nebraska-Lincoln th Shashi B. Verma, Andres Vina*, Donald C. Rundquist, Galina Timothy P. Olsen, University of Wisconsin Jackie S. Fenno, Patricia A. Craw, De Anne S.P. Stevens, Thomas M. Keydan, Bryan Leavitt, Timothy J. Arkebauer, George G. Burba, Lillesand, and Samuel A. Batzli and Andrew E. Su Estimating Regional Air Temperature Using Remote -13- Sensing Data and Heat Mechanisms Yingjun Sun, Institute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resources Forestry Applications of Remote Sensing and Research, CAS, China GIS — Part 1: Geospatial Sciences for Wildland Jinfeng Wang* and Renhua Zhang Fire Management Improved Estimation of Land Surface Temperature Using Special Session, organized by Zhiiang Zhu, EROS Data Center, U.S. Geological Survey Landsat ETM+ Thermal Data and Surface Correction (Invited Presentations) Jiansheng Yang, University of Rhode Island Moderator: Zhillang Zhu, U.S. Geological Survey Room: Governor’s Square 11 Y. Q. Wang Tuesday, May 25

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 22 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 23 Continuedfrom Tuesday, May 25 th,1:00 pm to 2:20 pm -17- Multi-temporal Image Analysis and -15- Applications —Part 2: Comparative Studies on Evolution of the Digital Orthophoto Program Multi-temporal Image Analysis Methods and its Future — Part 1: Panel Discussion on Special Session organized by Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Moderator: François G.F. Smith, Earth Satellite Corporation Historic Perspective Room: Governor’s Square 16 Special Session organized by George Lee, U.S. Geological Survey (Invited Presentations) Robustness of Change Detection Algorithms in the Moderator: George Lee, U.S. Geological Survey Presence of Registration Errors Room: Governor’s Square 10 Pramod K. Varshney, Syracuse University Orthophotos have been available to the mapping community since the Ashok Sundaresan and Manoj K. Arora early 1970s and the technology used to generate them has evolved over the years. The National Orthophoto Program (NDOP) was a Mapping Forest Damage Caused by the Southern Pine program funded by federal and state cooperatives and administered Beetle in the Daniel Boone National Forest by the U.S. Geological Survey. Technical and programmatic issues John K Maingi, Miami University were coordinated and resolved jointly through the NDOP Steering Committee. This panel will bring together the early pioneers in the Application of Correspondence Analysis to Change NDOP to give their perspectives on how the digital orthophotos Detection evolved in their organizations and describe the impact. Halil I. Cakir, North Carolina State University Panel participants: Siamak Khorram Jim Plasker, ASPRS, U.S. Geological Survey (retired) TeSelle, USDA, (retired) Remote Sensing Techniques for Detecting Change in Coral Bryan Logan, EarthData Reef Environments: A Comparative Analysis Bill Burgess, Maryland DNR Robert Pitts, University of Edinburgh, Scotland

-16- -18- Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 2: National (& Global) Spatial Data Infrastructure Operational Mapping - Sensor Calibration and and its Activities with the National Map Data Validation Program, the President’s Management Program Special Session Sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric on E-Gov and the Geospatial One-Stop Portal Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures — Part 2: Spatial Data Infrastructure as it Moderator: Mushtaq Hussain, California State University Room: Governor’s Square 15 Evolves Domestically and Globally Special session sponsored by the Federal Geographic Data Committee and Calibration and Data Validation of a Lidar Fiber Scanner organized by Alan R. Stevens, FGDC Rolf Katzenbeisser, TopoSys GmbH (Invited Presentations) Moderator: Lynda Wayne, GeoMaxim — FGDC/GOS Calibration of the LiteMapper Lidar System — Procedures Room: Governor’s Square 17 and Results Christoph Hug, GeoLas Consulting A Case Study: The Role of Utilities in Contributing to Japan’s National Spatial Data Sharing Initiative J. Peter Gomez, Xcel Energy Robert Samborski

Facilitating A Dialog between the NSDI and the Utility Companies Robert Samborski, Geospatial Information and Technology Association (GITA) J. Peter Gomez *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 24 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 25 Global Spatial Data Infrastructure (GSDI): At The DEMEDITOR: A Virtual Reality System to Enhance the Crossroads, Moving Forward Precision of Digital Elevation Models Alan R. Stevens, Federal Geographic Data Committee Veronica Teichrieb, Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil Ian Masser, Harlan Onsrud, and Keith Thackrey Judith Kelner

-19- -21- The Art and Science of Photogrammetry — Part Vegetation Assessment Using the Geospatial 2: Photogrammetric Orientation: Rational Sciences — Part 1: Mapping Vegetation with Polynomial Coefficients (RPCs) High Spatial Resolution Imagery Moderator: James Lutes, Space Imaging Moderator: E. Raymond Hunt, Jr., USDA ARS Room: Governor’s Square 12 Room: Plaza Court 2

Satellite Image Block Adjustment Simulations with Physical Utilizing High Resolution Imagery and Feature Extraction and RPC Camera Models for Vegetation Mapping at the Whiskeytown National Gene Dial, Space Imaging Recreation Area, Redding California Jacek Grodecki Steven Steinberg*, Humboldt State University Larry Fox III, John Stuart, and Ian McGovern* Geometric Correction of QuickBird Data Using Rigorous Model and Rational Function Object-based Vegetation Mapping with High Spatial Philip Cheng, PCI Geomatics Resolution Imagery Thierry Toutin Qian Yu, University of California at Berkeley Peng Gong RFM: An Open Sensor Model for Cross Sensor Mapping Vincent Tao, York University, Canada Citrus Tree Counting Using Very High Resolution Yong Hu and Arie Croitoru Spaceborne Imagery Rick Mueller, USDA Error Propagation for RPC Models Claire Boryan Theiss, Integrity Applications Inc. Edward Mikhail and Rocco Corsetti Strategies for Land Cover Mapping in St. Vincent and the Grenadines Steven R. Schill, The Nature Conservancy -20- Radar and Microwave Sensors and Applications — Part 2: Applications and Beverage Break Analysis Techniques 2:15 pm to 2:30 pm th Moderator: Bryan Mercer, Intermap Technologies Corp. Exhibit Areas Room: Plaza Court 1

SAR and Optical Image Integration for Improved Land Cover Characterization Erwin J. Villiger, George Mason University

Seeing Beneath the Foliage: GeoSAR Embarks on First South American Mission Jeff Leonard, EarthData International

Error Analysis for Spotlight SAR Stereoscopic Intersection Ade K. Mulyana, Purdue University James S. Bethel Tuesday, May 25

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 24 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 25 th, Development of a Bachelor of Science Degree in Continuedfrom Tuesday, May 25 1:00 pm to 2:20 pm Geographic Information Science: a Case Study of Michigan State University -22- Joseph P. Messina, Michigan State University Use of Remote Sensing for Water Resources Ashton Shortridge Applications — Part 2: Measuring Water Quality A Model Curriculum for Remote Sensing - The IAEGS of Lakes and Streams (continued) Online Project Moderator: Katherine Born, Research Planning, Inc. (Invited Presentation) Room: Governor’s Square 14 Pamela B. Lawhead, The University of Mississippi Michelle Aten Spectral Characterization of an Eutrophic Lake-Reelfoot Lake, TN WETMAAP: Wetland Education Through Maps and Aerial Luoheng Han, University of Alabama Photography Hsiang-te Kung and Fugui Wang Lawrence R. Handley, U.S. Geological Survey Catherine Lockwood, Nathan Handley, and Jean May-Brett Hyperspectral Remote Sensing of Chlorophyll: A Distribution Along Depth for Beaver Reservoir Vijay Garg, University of Arkansas Indrajeet Chaubey -24- Forestry Applications of Remote Sensing and Evaluation of Airborne Multispectral Imagery and GIS — Part 2: Forest Fire Detection, Mapping Automated Methods for Mapping Submerged Aquatic and Management Vegetation Moderator: Mark D. Nelson, USDA Forest Service Bill Stevenson, Perot System Government Services (PSGS) Room: Governor’s Square 11 Mark Finkbeiner, Scott Hague, and Don Field The Role of Satellite Imagery in Fire Prevention and Hyperspectral Remote Sensing for Identification and Recovery Monitoring of Acid Rock Drainage in Central Colorado Jason San Souci, Native Communities Development Corporation Douglas C. Peters, Peters Geosciences William J. Whatley and George Greenwood Phoebe L. Hauff, David W. Coulter, Matthew A. Sares, Eric C. Prosh, David A. Bird, and Frederick B. Henderson III Evaluating ASTER Satellite Imagery and Gradient Modeling for Mapping and Characterizing Wildland Fire Michael Falkowski, University of Idaho Paul Gessler, Penny Morgan, and Andrew Hudak Educational Sessions Wildfire Mapping in California: A Comparison Between 2:30 pm to 3:50 pm Surveyed and NOAA/AVHRR-derived Data Peng Gong, University of California – Berkeley Nick Clinton and Ruiliang Pu -23- Education in the Geospatial Sciences — Part 3 Wildland Fire Management Using Thermal IR and GIS Todd M. Twete, Positive Systems, Inc. Special session organized by Allen Cook, Northrop Grumman Mission Systems Moderator: Cynthia Schmidt, San Jose State University Room: Plaza Court 3

Building Curriculum in the Geo-Information Sciences at a Mid-sized State College in New England: Challenges, Obstacles, and Getting it Done John Althausen, Salem State College William Hamilton

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 26 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 27 -25- -27- Remote Sensing for Global Environmental Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 3: Future Monitoring and Modeling — Part 2 Trends in Lidar Moderator: Janette C. Gervin, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Special Session Sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Room: Plaza Court 4 Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures Moderator: Vincent Tao, York University Using Airborne Multispectral Sensor Data to Assess Land- Room: Governor’s Square 15 use Impacts on Carbon Stocks in a Managed Grassland Ecosystem Future Trends in Lidar Matthew E. Ramspott, University of Kansas (Invited Presentation) Kevin P. Price, Bryan L. Foster, and Cheryl Murphy Charles Toth, Ohio State University

Analysis of Landsat ETM+ Imagery for Monitoring EAARL, A Waveform-based Topographic Mapping Lidar Management Practices that Influence Soil C Sequestration for: Vegetation, Bare Earth, and Submerged Topography C. Wayne , NASA in North Central Montana R.S. Bricklemyer, Montana State University Experiences with State-of-the-art Digital Data Collection R.L. Lawrence and P.R. Miller Robert Beckwith*, DeLorme Publishing Jim Peterson* On the use of GIS and Remote Sensing for Estimating CO2 Absorption by Forest Formations in Mie, Japan Lidar Data Mining to Enhance Aerial Image Classification Sanga-Ngoie Kazadi, Mie University, Japan Jason A. Tullis, University of South Carolina John R. Jensen and George T. Raber -26- Evolution of the Digital Orthophoto Program -28- and its Future — Part 2: Panel Discussion on the Multi-temporal Image Analysis and Future Perspective Applications — Part 3: Change Detection for Special Session organized by George Lee, U.S. Geological Survey Land Use/Land Cover Applications (Invited Presentations) Special Session organized by Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Moderator: George Lee, U.S. Geological Survey Moderator: John S. Iiames, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Room: Governor’s Square 10 Room: Governor’s Square 16 This panel is composed of current NDOP participants who will present Land Cover Change Detection in an Agricultural Setting: future directions for their respective agencies. The panel will also include a view of the future from the state perspective and seek Gray County, Kansas (1985-2001) John Harrington, Jr., Kansas State University community views of the future through the question-and-answer th Ryan Kroemer and Ryan Reker portion of the session. Panel participants: Automated Mapping of Argentina’s Zona Nucleo Using Glenn Bethel, USDA Multi-temporal Imagery Ted Koch, NSGIC (Invited Presentation) Bryan Logan, EarthData Robert Tetrault*, USDA John Coppel, Sanborn James Muckenhoupt* Upper Mississippi River Basin Development 10 Years After the Great Flood of 1993 James D. Hipple, Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota Barry Drazkowski and Patrick Thorsell Monitoring Land Use/Land Cover Change in the Piasa Creek Watershed, Illinois, Using Landsat Satellite Imagery Shunfu Hu, Southern Illinois University Tuesday, May 25 *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 26 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 27 Continuedfrom Tuesday, May 25 th,2:30 pm to 3:50 pm -30- The Art and Science of Photogrammetry — Part -29- 3: Photogrammetric Orientation: Rational National (and Global) Spatial Data Polynomial Coefficients (RPCs) (continued) Infrastructure and its Activities with the National Moderator: Paul Pope, Los Alamos National Laboratory Room: Governor’s Square 12 Map Program, the President’s Management Program on E-Gov and the Geospatial One- Bias-compensated RPCs for Sensor Orientation of High- Stop Portal — Part 3: The Federal Geographic Resolution Satellite Imagery Clive Fraser, University of Melbourne, Australia Data Committee (FGDC), Cooperative Harry Hanley Agreements Program (CAP), a Grants Assistance Program Mathematical Model for 3D Feature Extraction from Special session sponsored by the Federal Geographic Data Committee and Multiple Satellite Images Described by RPCs organized by Alan R. Stevens, FGDC Jacek Grodecki, Space Imaging (Invited Presentations) James Lutes and Gene Dial Moderator: David Painter, FGDC Room: Governor’s Square 17 The Rational Function Model: A Unified 2D and 3D Spatial Data Generation Scheme The Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC), an interagency Arie Croitoru, York University, Canada committee, sponsors the Cooperative Agreements Program (CAP) Vincent Tao, Yong Hu, Feng Wang, and Jeff Xu a grants assistance program, to support the implementation of the National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI). The CAP grants provide Propagation of RPC Rounding Error seed funds to engage organizations in building the components of David Dermody, DigitalGlobe the NSDI, which include metadata documentation, national standards Krista Dugar development and implementation, clearinghouse, web mapping, and Framework development. CAP has provided over $12M in assistance since 1994 to over 500 organizations nationwide to implement the NSDI. -31- Radar and Microwave Sensors and Earth Data Analysis Center – University of New Mexico Amelia Budge, University of New Mexico Applications — Part 3: Mapping and Characterizing Earth Surface Features Land Management Information Center Moderator: Xiaopeng Li, Intermap Technologies Corp. Chris Cialek, State of Minnesota Room: Plaza Court 1

USGS, National Biological Information Infrastructure Identifying Absolute Velocity Locations on Tributaries of Vivian Hutchison, U.S. Geological Survey Antarctic Ice Streams Elias J. Deeb, University of Utah Center for Advanced Spatial Technologies Richard R. Forster Shane Covington, University of Arkansas Mapping Arctic Snowmelt Progression with Microwave Remote Sensing Richard R. Forster, University of Utah

Land Cover-based Optimal Deconvolution of Microwave Brightness Temperatures for Improved Soil Moisture Retrieval Ashutosh S. Limaye, National Space Science and Technology Center William L. Crosson and Charles A. Laymon

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 28 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 29 Pavement Overlay Thickness Evaluation Using Ground Inventory of Dams Using Remotely-sensed Satellite Imagery Penetrating Radar (GPR) Brianna Mosiman, University of Kansas Dwayne Harris, Purdue University Stephen Egbert, Patrick Taylor, and Matt Scherer Samy Noureldin and Jie Shan* Flood Disaster Quick Transaction and Evaluation System Based on the SAR Images Jiantao BI, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, -32- China Vegetation Assessment Using the Geospatial Caiying Zhu, Jianbang He, and Tianhe Chi Sciences — Part 2: Evaluating Vegetation Characteristics with Remote Sensing and GIS Moderator: Matt Bobo Room: Plaza Court 2 Educational Sessions Remote Estimation of Vegetation Fraction, Leaf Area Index 4:00 pm to 5:00 pm and Biomass: Algorithms, Calibration, and Validation Anatoly A. Gitelson, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Andreas Vina* and Donald C. Rundquist -34- Forecasting Vegetation Greenness with Satellite and Accuracy Assessment Considerations Moderator: Stella Todd, Metropolitan State College of Denver Climate Data Room: Plaza Court 1 Lei Ji, U.S. Geological Survey Albert Peters The Creation of Standard Data Sets for the Evaluation of New Spatial Analysis Methods A Robust Technique for Remotely Estimating Foliar Gregg Petrie, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Nitrogen Concentrations Ian Anderson, Haans Fisk, Thomas Windholz, and Eileen Perry Zachary J. Bortolot, Morehead State University Randolph H. Wynne Effects of Different Accuracy Assessment Protocols on the Reported Accuracy of Land Cover Classifications Equivalent Water Thickness of Leaves Estimated Using the William Stiteler, IV, State University of New York Absorption Coefficient of Liquid Water Jason Cole E. Raymond Hunt, Jr., USDA Agricultural Research Service An Example For Ground Truthing Lidar Data Doug Jacoby, Merrick & Company -33- Greg Mauldin Use of Remote Sensing for Water Resources Applications — Part 3: Floods and Flood Hazard th Assessments Moderator: Don Wicks, Spectrum Mapping, LLC Room: Governor’s Square 14

An Investigation of Landsat Imagery and Aerial Photography for Flood Assessment Cynthia Berlin, University of Wisconsin – La Crosse

Inventory of Levee Slides Using Commercially Available Remotely-sensed Data A.K.M. Azad Hossain, University of Mississippi Greg Easson and Khaled Hasan Tuesday, May 25

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 28 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 29 Continuedfrom Tuesday, May 25 th,4:00 pm to 5:00 pm -37- GeoCover-Ortho: Three Epochs of Global -35- Landsat Spectral Mapping Forestry Applications of Remote Sensing and Special Session organized by Jon Dykstra, Earth Satellite Corporation (Invited Presentations) GIS — Part 3: Applications Using Various Sensor Moderator: Compton J. Tucker, NASA Systems Room: Governor’s Square 12 Moderator: Steven P. Lennartz, University of New Hampshire Room: Governor’s Square 11 GeoCover-Ortho: Three Epochs of Global Landsat-based Multispectral Controlled Image Base Conservation Planning in the Caribbean Basin Using GIS- Compton J. Tucker, NASA Based Modeling Steven R. Schill, The Nature Conservancy Landsat-7 Definitive Ephemeris: An Independent Verification of GeoCover-ortho 1990 Positional Accuracy Characterization of the Deforestation Effect in a Semi-arid Jon Dykstra, Earth Satellite Corporation Region by the Use of Satellite Images James Storey Khatir Benhanifia, National Centre of Spatial Technologies, Algeria D. Haddouche, Z. Smahi, A. Bensaid, and A. Hamimed GeoCover-Ortho: Geodetic Control GeoCover Control William H. Heidbreder, NGA Digital Aerial Sketchmapping – A Tool to Improve Mapping Jim Blodgett, John Chaikowski, and Bob Wilhelm Accuracy in Forest Health Monitoring Charlie Schrader-Patton, Redcastle Resources, Inc. Everett Hinkley -38- Remote Sensing for Geological Applications Moderator: J. Chris Echohawk, Los Alamos National Laboratory -36- Room: Plaza Court 3 Remote Sensing for Global Environmental Monitoring and Modeling — Part 3 Remote Sensing Methods Integrate Land Use and Moderator: Richard P. Watson, University of New Mexico Topographic Data to Map Surface Geology Room: Plaza Court 4 Stephen L. Ingram, Sr., University of Mississippi Greg Easson and Khaled Hasan Estimates of Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Biomass Burning in Africa Using GIS and Remote Sensing Where Sky Meets Ground: Lidar Surveying in Northern Sanga-Ngoie Kazadi, Mie University, Japan British Columbia in Support of Seismic Exploration Kristian Morin, North West Geomatics, Canada On the Relationship Between Land-cover, Topography and Rainfall Using GIS and Landsat Data Applications of Digital Image Processing for Detecting the Sanga-Ngoie Kazadi, Mie University, Japan Presence of Mineralizations Shoko Kobayashi* Emanuel Taufan, Indonesian Institute of Science

The Algorithm of ADEOS-II GLI Products for Global Land Monitoring -39- Hirokazu Yamamoto, NASDA/EORC, Japan Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 4: Lidar in Toshiaki Hashimoto, Yasushi Mitomi, Hiroki Yoshioka, and Tamotsu Igarashi Education Special Session Sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures Moderator: Martin Flood, 3 Sigma Ventures Room: Governor’s Square 15

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 30 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 31 Graduate Education and Curriculum in ALSM Geographic Information for Sustainable Development: A (Invited Presentation) Continuing Need Ramesh L. Shrestha, University of Florida John A. Kelmelis*, U.S. Department of State Bill Carter and Clint Slatton Fernando Echavarria*, Robert Ford, and Kate Lance

Introducing Lidar Capabilities into the National Geospatial- Geographic Information for the Redevelopment of Iraq Intelligence School’s Core Curriculum Analysis John A. Kelmelis*, U.S. Department of State Jared L. Ware, National Geospatial Intelligence School Dennis King*, Leslie Curtin, Kathleen Miner, William Wood, and Lee Schwartz Lidar Education in the Curriculum: An Example from the University of Calgary Geomatics Program Kristian Morin, North West Geomatics Andrew Hunter -42- Applications and Utilization of Orthophotos Moderator: Raquel Charrois, EarthData International of Maryland -40- Room: Governor’s Square 10 Multi-temporal Image Analysis and Development and Applications of Historical Digital Applications — Part 4: Fuzzy and Object Orthophoto Quadrangles Christian G. Raumann, U.S. Geological Survey Oriented Approaches in Change Detection Amy M. Mathie and Robert Vitales Special Session organized by Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Moderator: Robert Pitts, University of Edinburgh, Scotland Photogrammetric Alternatives — Second Generation Room: Governor’s Square 16 Orthos for City Planning and Development Bradley M. Stoltz, Positive Systems, Inc. Fuzzy Quality Assessment in Multiple Time-slice Image Analysis for Land Cover Change Detection Automatic Mosaic Smart Seam Generation (Invited Presentation) Roy McCleese, Z/I Imaging Corporation Kim Lowell, Centre de Recherche en Géomatique, Canada G. Richards, P. Woodgate, S. Jones, and L. Buxton

Mapping Shrub Encroachment from 1936-2003 in the -43- Jornada Basin of Southern New Mexico Vegetation Assessment Using the Geospatial Andrea S. Laliberte, USDA Agricultural Research Service Sciences — Part 3: Remote Sensing for Albert Rango Mapping Arid Lands Moderator: Rick Vincent, Spectrum Mapping, LLC Room: Plaza Court 2

-41- th National (& Global) Spatial Data Infrastructure Monitoring Rangelands with Multi-resolution Remotely- sensed Data and its Activities with the National Map Terrance Booth Program, the President’s Management Program Ramesh Sivanpillai, Sam E. Cox, and Kenneth L. Driese on E-Gov and the Geospatial One-Stop Portal Cover- and Density-Based Vegetation Classifications of — Part 4: International SDI Case Studies for the Sonoran Desert Using Landsat TM and ERS-1 Imagery Sustainable Development Scott M. Shupe, Space Imaging LLC Special session sponsored by the Federal Geographic Data Committee and Stuart E. Marsh organized by Alan R. Stevens, FGDC (Invited Presentations) Moderator: Alan R. Stevens, Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) Room: Governor’s Square 17 Tuesday, May 25

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 30 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 31 th, Comparing Spectral and Object-based Approaches for Continuedfrom Tuesday, May 25 4:00 pm to 5:00 pm Classification and Transportation Feature Extraction from High Resolution Multispectral Imagery -44- Sunil Reddy Repaka*, National Consortium on Remote Sensing in Use of Remote Sensing for Water Resources Transportation & Environmental Assessment Eric W. Kolstad*, Charles G. O’Hara, and Dennis D. Truax Applications — Part 4: Monitoring Coastal Ecosystems NASA GES DISC DAAC Satellite Data for GIS Moderator: Luoheng Han, University of Alabama Nathan , NASA Room: Governor’s Square 14 William Teng*, James Acker, Michael Morahan, and Andrey Savtchenko Assessing the Value of a Multispectral Sensor for Monitoring Coastal Ecosystem Health in North Inlet, SC ASTER-Derived Digital Terrain Models: Production and a Samuel P. Walker, University of South Carolina Geostatistical Approach to Accuracy Assessment Dwayne E. E. J. Neafsey, Cornell University Stephen D. DeGloria and Daniel L. Civco Using Ikonos Imagery for Mapping Coastal Habitats for Oil Spill Applications On The Symbolic Reconstruction of Image Blocks Katherine Born, Research Planning, Inc. Pany Zafiropoulos, Ohio State University Christopher Locke and DeWitt Braud Roland Daloiser

Visualization System for Dynamic Shore and Beach Monitoring Post-fire Vegetation Regeneration Using Topography Thematic Mapper Imagery and Multi-temporal Spectral Ming Xie, Old Dominion University Mixture Analysis Thomas Allen and Guoqing Zhou Kelley O’Neal, University of Arizona Stephen Yool

Conference on Remote Sensing Education (CORSE): -45- Teaching K-14 Teachers How to Use GIS in Classroom Applications Showcase Session 1 Curricula Posters will be on display at 11:30 am and will be available for viewing Karen Kwasnowski, Institute for the Application of Geospatial Technology (IAGT) until 5:00 pm. The authors will be available for discussion of their Dana Piwinski* poster papers from 4:00 to 5:00 pm. Moderator: Roger M. Hoffer, Colorado State University (retired) Geometric Analysis of Vein Fracture Networks from the Room: Governor’s Square Foyer Awibengkok Core, Indonesia Anjana Khatwa, University of Utah Measuring Urban Land Cover Change Through Multi- Ronald L. Bruhn and Stephen R. Brown Temporal Imperviousness Mapping in Tampa Bay, Florida Sheikh M N Hossain, SAIC/USGS EROS Data Center Implementation of Remote Sensing Technologies in Limin Yang and George Xian Irrigation Management on Golf Course Greens Kendall C. Hutto, Mississippi State University Object-Based Analysis of IKONOS Imagery for Forest David R. Shaw, John D. Byrd, Jr., George E. Coats, and Mary Love M. Inventory Mapping Tagert Michael S. Chubey, University of Calgary, Canada Steven E. Franklin The Processing and Analyzing of Lidar Data to Support Urban Land Use Planning Relative Orientation in the Structural Domain Geun-Sang Lee, Korea Institute of Water and Environment, Korea Pany Zafiropoulos, Ohio State University Yun-Woong Choi, Kang-Won Lee, and Gi-Sung Cho

Thermal Imaging from Agricultural Aircraft for Precision Atmospheric Correction for ADEOS-II GLI Land Reflectance Crop Management Product Steven J. Thomson, USDA-Agriculture Research Service Hiroki Yoshioka, Meijo University, Japan James E. Hanks Hirokazu Yamamoto and Yoshiya Yamamoto *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 32 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 33 GIS Smart Client: Sharing Spatial Data and Knowledge Hailstreak Identification and Persistence Using MODIS Through Internet by Standards Data: A Case Study of an Event in the Northern Great Genong Yu, Indiana State University Plains, July 2003 Ryan R. Jensen, Paul W. Mausel, Vijay Lulla, Eduardo S. Brondizio, Ian C. Ratcliffe, University of Nebraska – Lincoln and Emilio F. Moran Geoffrey M. Henebry and Matthew D. Parker

Spatial Information Editing Component Based on OGC Burn Severity Estimation Using Satellite Imagery: USGS InSung Jang, Electronic & Telecommunications Research BAER Team Support for DOI Managed Lands Institute (ETRI), Korea Randy McKinley, SAIC

Utilizing Hyperspectral Remote Sensing on the Winnebago Perceptual Inference and Belief Propagation for Building Reservation in Winnebago, Nebraska Extraction from Color Imagery Karisa Vlasek, University of Nebraska – Omaha Pany Zafiropoulos, Ohio State University

End Member Selection Through Neural Network and Factor An On-line Course for Teaching Aerial Photo Interpretation Analysis James B. Campbell, Virginia Tech Maria J. Garcia Quijano, University of South Carolina Using Geographic Information Systems and Remote The Old Stone Fort Archaeological Park Sensing for the Creation of a Wetland Prediction Model Sommer Landers, Old Stone Fort Archaeological State Park David Trible, Virginia Tech Chris Goodmaster James B. Campberll

IAGT’s Image Data Acquisition and Sharing Network: A Evaluation of Airborne Multispectral Imagery and Unique Data Distribution Tool Automated Methods for Mapping Submerged Aquatic Emily Constantine Mercurio, Institute for the Application of Geospatial Vegetation Technology (IAGT) Bill Stevenson, Perot System Government Services Fred Pieper, Michael , and Jeff Love Mark Finkbeiner, Scott Hague, and Don Field

Remote Monitoring of Post-fire Vegetation Dynamics in Algorithm for Remote Assessment of Chlorophyll-a Siberian Boreal Forests in Productive Turbid Waters: Development, Sensitivity Xuexia Chen, South Dakota School of Mines Analysis, and Experimental Results Lee Vierling and Alexis Conley Giorgio Dall’Olmo, University of Nebraska – Lincoln Imagery-related OpenGIS Specifications — Progress and Plans Anatoly A. Gitelson Carl Reed, Open GIS Consortium, Inc. Detection of Insect Host Plants Using the FieldSpec Pro Quantitative Inter-Channel Calibration of SHOALS Signals and GER 1500 Handheld Spectroradiometers for Consistent Bottom Segmentation and Characterization Jennifer L. Murray, Mississippi State University Michael A. Caprio th Semme J. Dijkstra*, University of New Hampshire Gareth R. Elston* Quality Metrics for Multispectral Image Processing Using Declassified Intelligence Satellite Photographs with Veeraraghavan Vijayaraj, Mississippi State University Nicolas H. Younan and Charles O’Hara QuickBird Imagery to Study Urban Land Cover Dynamics: A Case Study from Kazakhstan A Change Detection Methodology Sensitive to Subtle Ian C. Ratcliffe, University of Nebraska Variation in the Missouri Ozark Forests Geoffrey M. Henebry Clayton Blodgett, Missouri Resource Assessment Partnership Ronnie Lea, and Mike Schanta A Case Study of Accuracy Assessment of New York City and its Vicinity Area Classification Using High Spatial Data Fusion Approach to Improve Multi-source Image Resolution Imagery Classification Using Artificial Neural Networks Soojeong Myeong, State University of New York Cheng Zhu, State University of New York Stephen Stehman and David J. Nowak Tuesday, May 25

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 32 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 33 Memorial Address Presenter 4:00 pm to 5:15 pm Ronald J. Ondrejka Room: Plaza Court 7 Ron Ondrejka is an elected FELLOW and EMERITUS member of Mark your calendar for two addresses by recognized leaders in our ASPRS. During his more than 40 years of membership, he has served profession. They will help us relive memorable moments from the the Society as Director or Chairman of a spectrum of national and lives of two of our distinguished colleagues. Ronald J. Ondrejka will technical committees and contributed a number of chapters to ASPRS chronicle the life of Amrom H. Katz. James R. Plasker will present manuals and books. Although 20 years separated the start of careers memories of Tamsin G. Barnes. of Amrom Katz and Ron, they had the similar backgrounds of being raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and studying at the University of Wisconsin. They met for the first time at the ITC in Delft, Holland in Amrom H. Katz 1960 when Amrom recruited Ron for employment at Itek Corporation. Amrom Katz was the type of individual that, if you met him, worked After studying Civil Engineering at UW and Photogrammetric with him, or read his many writings, he impressed you with his Engineering at ITC (B.Sc. and M.Sc.), Ron joined Itek in 1960 and brilliance, insight, and applicable humor. Unfortunately, his audience in 1964 assumed management of the Photogrammetry Dept. and was limited in that his entire professional career, through World War Project Photogrammetrist for the camera payloads on the CORONA, II, Korea, Vietnam, and the Cold War was dedicated to matters LANYARD, and KH-9 Mapping Camera programs. Although 3000 involving the communication restrictions of national security. miles separated them, Amrom and Ron continued to work together. During his more than 50 years of contributions to the technologies Ron had similar responsibilities for NASA camera systems on Apollo, and application of aerospace reconnaissance, Amrom is credited Skylab, and the Space Shuttle. As a private consultant for the past with an impressive list of personal achievements. As a physics and 20 years, Ron has advised on and field tested airborne sensors for math graduate of the University of Wisconsin, he joined the R&D Special Projects of the USDA Forest Service, served on the Board of Division of the U. S. Army Air Corps as a civilian junior physicist Directors of GEONEX, did overseas project evaluations for the UNDP, in 1940. He immediately proceeded to redefine and redesign Air and served on the Advisory Council for the Boston University Center Corps aerial camera mechanics and electronics resulting in vastly for Remote Sensing. He has found the thoughts and advice of Amrom improved recon imagery during WW II. His Director, General George Katz valuable and relevant to this day. Goddard, claimed that, “The mind of ‘Slide-Rule Katz’ was so sharp that it emitted sparks.” In the late 1940s he was the principal civilian photo scientist for the successful documentation of the Bikini Atoll Tamsin Barnes atomic-weapons testing using oblique aerial photography. During Tamsin (Tammy) Barnes was a pioneer in the mapping field in the Korean Conflict, Amrom designed a unique photogrammetric numerous ways. As a key executive along side her husband Bill, she technique resulting in accurate tidal predictions permitting a was instrumental in building a strong business very early in the (then) successful surprise amphibious invasion at Inchon. Amrom joined emerging digital mapping field. As a sales leader and national sales the Rand Corporation in 1954 to develop advanced concepts for manager in a succession of computer aided mapping companies, global strategic reconnaissance which included aircraft, balloons, she broke ground for many other women to succeed, often facing and satellites. Amrom and coworker, Merton , created the an all-male work environment. As the exhibits director for the first concept for a film-return satellite in 1957 which is credited as being ASPRS/ACSM annual conference to be held in a large exhibition the origin of the CORONA Project. Both Katz and Davies were center, she proceeded to sell out the hall making the conference the recently acknowledged as being among the Founders of National most financially successful for the Societies ever to that time. In the Reconnaissance. During the 1960s, Amrom advocated the use of process, she demonstrated her vision and drive to change the way the the tools and techniques of military recon for the benefit of domestic Societies did business. civil mapping and scientific applications, but with his emphasis on Tammy was the first woman to serve as the president of the the needs and processes to expedite the analysis, extraction, and Rocky Mountain Region of ASPRS and then went on to represent documentation of the information acquired through aerospace the region on the Board of ASPRS, eventually becoming ASPRS’ first imaging. The results of his efforts are being realized decades later. female president in 1985. In every one of these endeavors, Tammy In 1973 President Richard Nixon appointed Amrom as Assistant succeeded beyond any expectation, and most certainly cleared the Director of the U. S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency where way for many others to follow in her footsteps, including many who he demonstrated that overhead “verification” was an essential she mentored directly. component in arms-control treaties. Among his many recognitions But more than a pioneer, Tammy was also a loving mother of five is the SPIE George W. Goddard Award for 1963. children a supportive wife of an active tinkerer and inventor, and a horsewoman. She lived a very full social life centered on her travels and

34 35 her home, which literally was a castle complete with fire-breathing Social Events dragon! Tammy was a warm and outgoing personality, and

obviously her chosen business specialty area of sales came naturally. th She shared in the development of the Auto-Trol Corporation along 70 Anniversary of ASPRS — A Celebration with her husband, and was viewed by many as the business “brains” 5:30 pm to 6:30 pm to complement the technical prowess of Bill. Exhibit Hall In later years Tammy was honored as one of the original Break out your party hats and join all conference attendees for a pioneering women in computer graphics by the Computer Graphics celebration to mark the founding of ASPRS in 1934. Anniversary magazine and for her contributions to numerous Design Automation cake and beverages for toasting will be served. Workshops sponsored by SHARE, an electronics industry trade ASPRS thanks EarthData and Space Imaging for their sponsorship association. Clearly she was a dynamic and influential force both of this event. within her industry and the community. Her passing as a result of the Egypt Air 990 disaster came far too soon!

Presenter James Plasker James R. (Jim) Plasker is the Executive Director of ASPRS. Jim joined the ASPRS staff after retiring after 26 years in surveying and mapping with the U.S. Geological Survey, where he served as the Associate Chief of the National Mapping Division (NMD) from 1994-1996 and as the Associate Chief Geologist from 1996-1998. From 1972-1985, Jim was assigned to the Rocky Mountain Mapping Center where he worked closely on numerous professional activities with Tammy Barnes, including the 1982 ACSM-ASPRS Annual Conference. Baseball Game While serving with USGS, Mr. Plasker was responsible for the Colorado Rockies vs. San Diego Padres development of the National Aerial Photography Program and 7:00 pm the National Digital Orthophotoquad Program, both collaborative Coor’s Field efforts with colleagues from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Join us for an evening of fun….the great American pastime! He was also responsible for the development of the USGS Digital A limited number of tickets are available for purchase at the Raster Graphic Program through close cooperation with the private Conference Registration Desk during Registration hours. Tickets are sector. $12.00 each. All sales are final. Jim is a registered professional engineer in Colorado and a Fellow Member of both the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) and Transportation to Coor’s Field is available by way of the th the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping (ACSM). He is complimentary 16 Street Shuttle Bus. Exit the Adam’s Mark Hotel Past-Chair of the Applied Science Accreditation Commission (ASAC) Main Entrance and board the Shuttle Bus going northwest. De- of the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET). board Market Street Station and walk one-half block further west

He was the recipient of the Department of the Interior’s Meritorious to Blake Street. Turn right on Blake four blocks to Coor’s Field. Enter th Service Award in 1984 and Distinguished Service Award in 1994 Main Gate and turn right for ASPRS seats. Return transportation to th and the ACSM Presidential Award in 1991. He served as President the Adam’s Mark is available by way of the 16 Street Shuttle Bus of ACSM from 1996-97, and chairs a multi-organizational task until 1:00 am. force advising the National Council of Examiners for Engineers and Surveyors (NCEES) on the Model Law for Surveying. Additional Awards Region of the Year Region Newsletter of the Year Region Website of the Year Presidential Citations Outstanding Service Awards ASPRS/IGIF Student Travel Grants Tuesday, May 25 34 35 Wednesday, May 26th Time Event Room Attending 7:00 am to 8:00 am Exhibitors’ Breakfast Directors Row E 8:00 am to 9:00 am ASPRS Committee Meeting — Sustaining Members Council Directors Row E 8:00 am to 9:15 am Plenary Session Plaza Ballroom D-F 9:30 am to 10:50 am Educational Sessions 46-56 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-17 10:00 am to 4:30 pm Exhibit Hall Open Plaza Ballroom A-C & Plaza Exhibit Area 11:00 am to 12:00 noon Educational Sessions 57-66 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-16 11:30 am to 5:30 pm Applications Showcase Session 2 Governor’s Square Foyer 12:00 noon to 1:30 pm 15th Annual Awards Luncheon & 70th Annual Installation of Officers Plaza Ballroom D 1:30 pm to 2:50 pm Educational Sessions 67-77 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12 and 14-17 3:00 pm to 4:20 pm Educational Sessions 78-88 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-17 4:30 pm to 5:30 pm Educational Sessions 89-98 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-16 6:30 pm to 10:30 pm Evening at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science The Denver Museum of Busses begin staggered services at 6:00 pm, departing from the main lobby of the Nature and Science Adam’s Mark Hotel

ASPRS Booth 300 Make sure to stop by the ASPRS Booth while you’re at the conference.

l We have the new Volume 4 of the ASPRS Manual of Remote Sensing edited by Susan Ustin. Dr. Ustin will be available to sign copies during the show.

l In addition, we have preview copies of the ASPRS 5th Edition of the Manual of Photogrammetry, which will be published this summer.

l Information is available on the NEW ASPRS Certified Technologist Program.

l ASPRS staff is on hand to answer your questions on membership, certification, conferences, and more. All books are at special show discounts. My Day-At-A-GlanceMy 36 37 Plenary Session Russell G. Congalton 8:00 am to 9:15 am Professor of Remote Sensing and GIS Room: Plaza Ballroom D-F Department of Natural Resources, University of New Hampshire ASPRS Incoming President Dr. Russell Con- Russell G. Congalton is a professor of remote sensing and GIS in the Department of galton will deliver his address entitled “Give Natural Resources at the University of New Hampshire. He teaches courses in pho- and Take.” Following Dr. Congalton will be togrammetry and photo interpretation, digital image processing, and Geographic Keith Lenard, vice president of Lands for the Information Systems. In addition, Dr. Congalton conducts basic research involving Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Lenard will spatial data uncertainty, accuracy assessment, and validation and applied research in using geo- speak on his organization’s use of imagery spatial information to solve natural resource issues including forest management, wildlife habitat and GIS in managing habitat for elk and other assessment, endangered species evaluation, change detection, and ecosystem analysis. wildlife and formulating land management Dr. Congalton joined the faculty at the University of New Hampshire in 1991 and became a and conservation strategies. full professor in 1999. Prior to joining the faculty at UNH, he was an assistant professor of remote sensing at the University of California, Berkeley from 1985-1991 and a post-doctorate research Awards scientist at the US Army Corps of Engineers Waterways Experiment Station in 1984. Also, Dr. Con- ASPRS is proud to recognize the following galton has served as chief scientist of Pacific Meridian Resources since its founding and continues individuals who have attained the status of in this role with Space Imaging Solutions. Fellows within the Society: Dr. Congalton joined ASPRS as a graduate student in 1979 and has been actively involved ever Amelia Budge since. He has attended every national meeting since 1980, frequently giving papers and partici- Clive Fraser pating in panel discussions. He has authored or coauthored more than 100 papers, conference proceedings, chapters and books. His papers have won awards including: 1998 ASPRS John I. Da- Paul Hopkins (posthumously) vidson Award for Practical Papers (1st Prize) and 1998 ESRI Award for Best Scientific Paper in Geo- Elias Johnson graphic Information Systems (2nd Prize). Dr. Congalton was the Conference Director for GIS’87 in San Francisco and was the first National GIS Division Director serving on the National Board of Directors from 1989-1991. He has served on the Northern California and New England Region Boards of Directors, and since 1997, he has been the ASPRS National Workshop Coordinator. Dr. Congalton has a bachelor of science degree (natural resource management) from Rutgers University and master’s and doctoral degrees (forest biometrics and remote sensing) from the Virginia Tech. He has been awarded four ASPRS Presidential Citations for Meritorious Service and an ASPRS Outstanding Service Award . Dr. Congalton lives with his wife, Jeanie, and their three children (Ashton, Emma, and Brandon) in Durham, NH. He is an avid hockey fan and coaches his son’s team along with playing goalie once a week. Keith Lenard Vice President of Lands th The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, Missoula, Montana Keith Lenard has 13 years of experience in land conservation and natural resource management that includes natural resources planning for a federal agency and national level advocacy work for recreational access. For the past eight years, he has specialized in permanent land protection and conservation fund development for a variety of organizations. Lenard holds a BS from Rutgers University in Environmental Science and a MS from the University of Washington in Land Use Planning and Natural Resource Policy. Throughout his career, he has utilized mapping technology to help determine and implement conservation priorities, first with the Bureau of Land Management, Coos Bay, Oregon and later as executive director of the Palos Verdes Peninsula Land Conservancy, Palos Verdes, California. Lenard is experienced in the 5S Framework of The Nature Conservancy in Lander, Wyoming where he served as director of Land Conservation, and has most recently applied his experience in this and related efforts to craft a blueprint for conservation as vice president of Lands for the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, Missoula, Montana, a national conservation organization that seeks to protect habitat for elk and

other wildlife. Wednesday,May26 36 37 Continued from Wednesday, May 26th, 7:00 am -47- GIS Division — Part 1: ISPRS Commission IV WG Exhibitors Breakfast 7:00 am to 8:00 am 6: Landscape Modeling and Visualization Room: Directors Row E Special session sponsored by the GIS Division of ASPRS, and organized by Marguerite Madden (Invited Presentations) Moderator: Marguerite Madden, The University of Georgia ASPRS Committee Meeting Room: Governor’s Square 10 Using Visualizations Created from Historical Aerial Sustaining Members Council Photography to Explore Forest Cover Change Within the 8:00 am to 9:00 am Room: Directors Row E Prairie Forest Ecotone Matt Dunbar, Kansas Applied Remote Sensing Program and Department of Geography Mark Jakubauskas

Educational Sessions Visualizing Large Wild Fire Spread via Temporal Interpolation and Spatial Resampling of MODIS Fire 9:30 am to 10:50 am Occurrence Data Marit Jentoft-Nilsen, NASA-GSFC (SSAI) Ned Gardiner -46- Agricultural Applications of Remote Sensing Implementation of a Knowledge-base System for and GIS — Part 1: Techniques Used in Countries Developing, Managing and Visualizing GIS Databases of Coastal Areas Throughout the World Thomas R. Jordan, The University of Georgia Special Session sponsored by the Remote Sensing Applications Division, ASPRS, E. Lynn Usery and organized by Jacqueline Luders, Earth Satellite Corporation (Invited Presentations) Historical Landscape Visualization of the Wilson’s Creek Moderator: Jacqueline Luders, Earth Satellite Corporation National Battlefield Based on Object Oriented Tree Room: Plaza Court 2 Detection Method from IKONOS Imagery L. Monika Moskal, Southwest Missouri State University Construction of an Infrastructure GIS for Soy Production in Brazil Andrew Ralowicz, Earth Satellite Corporation Greg Koeln -48- Forestry Applications of Remote Sensing and Predicting Gross Value of Agricultural Production in China GIS — Part 4: Inventory and Monitoring of Forest Using Geographic Factors Douglas S. Way, Ohio State University Resources with Satellite Data Moderator: Michael Lefsky, Colorado State University Imagery-based Area Frame Sampling for Assessing Post- Room: Governor’s Square 11 War Agricultural Activity in Iraq Classifying and Mapping Forest Cover Types Using IKONOS Rich Gardner, Earth Satellite Corporation David Derry, Eleanore Meredith, and Greg Koeln Imagery in the Northeastern U.S. Steven P. Lennartz, University of New Hampshire Considerations When Using Area Frame Sampling Tools to Russell G. Congalton Estimate Afghanistan’s Illicit Poppy Cultivation MODIS Imagery: a New Information Resource for the Forest Jacqueline Luders, Earth Satellite Corporation Wendy Wilson and Dave Cunningham Service Keith Lannom, USDA Forest Service Brad Quayle *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 38 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 39 Forest Species Extraction from Multi-sensor and Multi- Building Reconstruction from Lidar Data source Data Using Spectral and Spatial Statistic Techniques Ruijin Ma*, Ohio State University H. Larry Zhang, University of Calgary, Canada Raul Ramirez* Micheal Collins* and Rod Blais Building Segmentation and Regularization from Raw Lidar The Use of Landsat TM Data to Determine Areas of Data Eucalypt Stands Aparajithan Sampath, Purdue University Wellington Donizete Guimarães, Federal University of Viçosa, Brazil Jie Shan Vicente Paulo Soares*, Carlos Antonio Alvares Soares Ribeiro, and Antonio Simões Silva Automatic Extraction of Buildings from Airborne Laser Scanning Data Woosug Cho, Inha University, Korea -49- Yoon Seok Jwa Image Analysis Techniques — Part 1 Moderator: Nick Younan, Mississippi State University Room: Plaza Court 1 -51- Multi-temporal Image Analysis and Exploration of a Methodology to Determine the Amount of Applications — Part 5: GIS-driven Change Spectral Variability Captured by a Training Data Sample for Satellite Image Classification Detection Special Session organized by Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Christine E. Blinn, Virginia Tech Randolph H. Wynne Moderator: Kim Lowell, Université Laval, Canada Room: Governor’s Square 16 The Classification of Early-date Imagery Based on Late-date Using Aerial Photography and Geographic Information Training Data Systems for Spatio-temporal Change-detection Analyses François G. F. Smith, Earth Satellite Corporation Nate Herold, David Derry, and Chris Nichols of Historical Sites Theresa Runge Kuntz, University of New Mexico Improvement in Image Classification Accuracy in the Heather Richards, Judith van der Elst, and Veronica Arias Presence of Uncertainty in Data Hyperspectral Change Detection of Spartina alterniflora Pramod K. Varshney, Syracuse University Shuang Zou and Manoj K.Arora in Murrells Inlet, South Carolina David Vaughan, University of South Carolina Assessing Uncertainty in Hydrologic Modeling Resulting John Jensen, Dwayne Porter, Sam Walker, Brian , and Jason from Remote Sensing Misclassification Tullis

Scott N. Miller, University of Wyoming th Assessing the Impact of Land Cover Change in Kenya D.P. Guertin, D.C. Goodrich, S. Marsh, and D. Semmens Using Remote Sensing and Hydrologic Modeling Tracy J. Baldyga, University of Wyoming -50- Scott N. Miller Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 5: Urban Applications Special Session Sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures Moderator: Charles Toth, Ohio State University Room: Governor’s Square 15

Integration of Multisensor Data for Building Extraction Suyoung Seo, Mississippi State University Wednesday,May26

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 38 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 39 th, provide an overview of the key components of Geospatial One Stop, Continuedfrom Wednesday, May 26 9:30 am to 10:50 am and describe roles and responsibilities of participating organizations. -52- Geodata.gov: The Gateway to Geospatial Information Hank Garie, U.S. Geological Survey National Geospatial Information Agency (formerly NIMA) Academic Research Program Geospatial One-Stop Standards; Transportation Pilot — Part 1 Carol Brandt, Federal Department of Transportation Special session organized by Scott Loomer, NGA Data Stewardship and Harvesting (Invited Presentations) Lynda Wayne, FGDC/GOS Moderator: Scott A. Loomer, NGA (formerly NIMA) Douglas Nebert Room: Plaza Court 3

National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) Academic Research Program (NARP) -54- Scott A. Loomer, NGA The Art and Science of Photogrammetry — Part SOLDIER Image Data Mining and Applications 4: Photogrammetric Orientation: Rational Christopher F. Barnes, Georgia Institute of Technology Polynomial Coefficients (RPCs) (continued) Moderator: A. Stewart Walker, Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping, LLC Mobile Image Orientation Using 3-Dimensional Virtual Room: Governor’s Square 12 Models Charalampos Georgiadis, University of Maine A Comparison of Sensor Models for IKONOS Block Anthony Stefanidis and Peggy Agouris Adjustment Peter Aniello, Space Imaging Autostereoscopic Measurement: Principles and Jacek Grodecki and James Lutes Implementation Jie Shan, Purdue University Geometric Modeling and Processing of QuickBird Stereo C.S. Fu, B. Li, J. Bethel, J. Kretsch, and E.M. Mikhail Imagery Kaichang Di, Ohio State University Xutong Niu, Jue Wang, and Ron Li

-53- The Rational Function Model: A Unified 2D and 3D Spatial National (& Global) Spatial Data Infrastructure Data Generation Scheme and its Activities with the National Map Arie Croitoru, York University, Canada Program, the President’s Management Program Feng Wang, Yong Hu, Vincent Tao, and Martin Choi on E-Gov and the Geospatial One-Stop Portal Accuracy Analysis of Rational Polynomial Coefficients for — Part 5: Geospatial One-Stop : Implementing IKONOS Imagery the Vision James Lutes, Space Imaging Special session sponsored by the Federal Geographic Data Committee and organized by Alan R. Stevens, FGDC (Invited Presentations) -55- Moderator: Leslie Cone, Burean of Land Mangement Developing New Standards for a Changing Room: Governor’s Square 17 Geospatial World — Part 1: Panel on Digital Geospatial One-Stop is one of the 24 Presidential Management Objectives designed to make it easier, faster, cheaper for all levels of Sensor Calibration/Evaluation government and the public to access geospatial data and information. Special Session organized by George Lee, U.S. Geological Survey One milestone is to design and implement a portal to provide federal, (Invited Presentations) state, and local entities and the public a single point of access for data Moderator: George Lee, U.S. Geological Survey and information reducing/eliminating redundant data collections and Room: Plaza Court 4 archives. This first of the three sessions on Geospatial One-Stop will

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 40 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 41 The USGS has been working with NASA, private industry and academia to develop and implement methods of validating the use of Educational Sessions digital sensor technology for image acquisition. Three alternative test results will be described in the first session. 11:00 am to 12:00 noon Panel participants: Phil Rufe, U.S. Geological Survey Vicki Zanoni, NASA -57- Jon Christopherson, U.S. Geological Survey Agricultural Applications of Remote Sensing Dean Merchant, Ohio State University and GIS — Part 2: Mapping and Monitoring Corn Moderator: G.F. Sassenrath, USDA-ARS -56- Room: Plaza Court 2 Urban Applications of the Geospatial Sciences Using the U.S. Geological Survey 1992 National Land Cover —Part 1: Remote Sensing and Urban Sprawl Dataset to Map Corn in the Platte River Valley (Colorado Moderator: Lynn E. Johnson, University of Colorado at Denver and Nebraska) Room: Governor’s Square 14 S.K. Maxwell, SAIC/EROS Data Center/ U.S. Geological Survey An Urban Land-use Study of Population Growth and J.R. Nuckols Urban Sprawl in the Denver-metro Area Using Landsat TM Aerial Hyperspectral Image Processing for Corn Early Imagery Emergence Detection Jessica Noonan, University of Denver Haibo Yao, University Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Paul C. Sutton* Lei Tian

Effects of Urbanization on the Interactions between An Unattended Real-time Multispectral Image Acquisition Remotely-sensed Surface Temperature and Vegetation in and Management System Indianapolis Zhuohui Zhang, University Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Qihao Weng, Indiana State University

Calibration and Validation of Spatial Diffusion Model for Simulation of Suburban Sprawl -58- Yuming Wen, University of Rhode Island Forestry Applications of Remote Sensing and Y. Q. Wang GIS — Part 5: Assessing Forest Health Moderator: Tim Olsen, University of Wisconsin Room: Governor’s Square 11

Exhibitor Hall Open th 10:00 am to 4:30 pm Inland Northwest Regional Forest Status Assessment Plaza Ballroom A-C & Plaza Exhibit Area Using Landsat Time Series Russell Beck, University of Idaho Paul Gessler

Beverage Break An Early Warning System for Hemlock Woolly Adelgid 10:45 am to 11:00 am Exhibit Area (HWA) in the Southern Appalachians Frank Koch, North Carolina State University Heather Cheshire, Hugh Devine, Fred Hain, and George Hess

Detection of the Damaged Red Pine Trees by Pine Wilt Disease Using Scanned Aerial Photos and Ikonos Images S.H. Lee, Korea Forest Research Institute H.K. Cho and J.B. Kim Wednesday,May26

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 40 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 41 Continuedfrom Wednesday, May 26 th,11:00 am to 12:00 noon -61- GIS Division — Part 2: Bridging GIS and Spatial -59- Analysis GeoCover – Ortho — Part 1: Landsat Special session sponsored by the GIS Division of ASPRS, and organized by Marguerite Madden Applications on a Global Scale (Invited Presentations) Special Session organized by Jon Dykstra, Earth Satellite Corporation Moderator: Marguerite Madden, The University of Georgia (Invited Presentations) Room: Governor’s Square 10 Moderator: Compton J. Tucker Room: Governor’s Square 12 Bridging GIS and Map Analysis: Identifying and Utilizing Spatial Relationships Geopositional Accuracy Assessment of EarthSat GeoCover Joseph K. Berry, Geography Department – University of Denver Landsat Orthorectified Imagery Charles M. Smith Utilization of Logistic Regression to Identify and Analyze Mary Pagnutti and Vicki Zanoni Thematic Classification Error Jonathan H. Smith, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency GeoCover Access and Distribution as a Strategic Imperative James D. Wickham and Stephen V. Stehman for the Global Land Cover Facility Paul Davis, University of Maryland Modeling, Spatial Statistics, and GIS: Integrating in a New J.R.G. Townshend, Benjamin White*, and Mike McGann Environment Kevin M. Johnston, ESRI SRTM DTED-2 Production: Incorporating GeoCover Land Cover Chris Incardona, Boeing – Autometric, Inc. -62- Andrea Englert and others Image Analysis Techniques — Part 2 Moderator: Jim Jensen, Leica Geosystems Room: Plaza Court 1 -60- GPS Surveying Techniques An Image Classification Training Set Development Moderator: Aaron W. Braun, Integrity Applications Inc. Methodology Based on the Integration of Image Processing Room: Plaza Court 4 and GIS Capabilities Kenneth A. Stumpf, Geographic Resource Solutions When Perfection is a Problem! Douglas S. Ouren, U.S. Geological Survey, NRMSC Analyzing Time Series of Satellite Imagery Using Temporal Rick L. Lawrence and Raymond D. Watts Map Algebra Jeremy Mennis, University of Colorado Investigating the Use of Static GPS, RTK, and Differential Roland Viger Leveling for Measuring Orthometric Heights Michele Tranes, Dept. of Natural Resources Mgmt. and Engr., UCONN A Spatial Texture-driven Algorithm for Classification of Heterogeneous Multiple Layer Images (STICA) Thales Promark 2 GPS on Easter Island Henri Audirac, CartoData SA Peter R Boniface, California Polytechnic State University Pomona Alexander Beloiarov and Juan Villegas

-63- Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 6: Flood Plain Mapping Special Session Sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures Moderator: Bruce A. Davis, NASA Stennis Space Center Room: Governor’s Square 15 *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 42 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 43 Determining the Optimum Post Spacing of Lidar-derived Information from Commercial Imagery for Military Elevation Data in Varying Terrain for Flood Hazard Mapping Operations in Coastal Zones Purposes in North Carolina and Texas Steven D. Fleming, Center for Remote Sensing and Mapping Science Judith Berglund, NASA Stennis Space Center Roy A. Welch Lee Estep and Bruce A. Davis* Supporting GPS/INS Navigation with Precise DOV A Sensitivity Analysis Using Varied Nominal Posting Compensation Density Lidar Data for Hydraulic Modeling and Flood Zone Dorota A. Grejner-Brzezinska, Ohio State University Delineation Yudan Yi and Charles Toth George T. Raber, University of South Carolina Michael Hodgson, John Jensen, Jason Tullis, John Dorman, Bruce Dynamic Objects Modeling and 3D Visualization Davis, and Gary Thompson Ismail Oner Sebe Suya You* and Ulrich Neumann Parcel-Level Zoning Decisions and Lidar Collection Parameters Michael E. Hodgson, University of South Carolina John R. Jensen, George T. Raber, Jason A. Tullis, Bruce A. Davis, John -66- Dorman, and Gary Thompson Urban Applications of the Geospatial Sciences — Part 2: Analysis Techniques for Mapping -64- Urban Sprawl Moderator: Ramanathan Sugumaran, University of Northern Iowa Multi-temporal Image Analysis and Room: Governor’s Square 14 Applications — Part 6: Change Detection in Forestry High-resolution Satellite Imagery and Urban Applications: Special Session organized by Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Impervious Surface and Urban Greenspace Mapping at the Moderator: George Z. Gertner, University of Illinois City of Richmond, British Columbia Room: Governor’s Square 16 Parthiphan Krishnan*, City of Richmond, Canada Bert Tatham* Leaf Area Index (LAI) Change Detection on Loblolly Pine Forest Stands with Complete Understory Removal Dasymetric Mapping with Image Texture John S. Iiames, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency XiaoHang Liu, San Francisco State University Drew Pilant and Timothy Lewis Urban Business Spatial Analysis Model Based on Spatial Change Detection Techniques for Monitoring Plantation Database Forestry Operations Yingbiao Chen, Institute of Geographic Science and Natural Resources, Mark Norris-Rogers, University of Natal, South Africa China Ershun Zhong th Relationship Between Time-series Tasseled-cap Wetness and the Normalized Difference Moisture Index: Applications in Forest Change Detection Studies Applications Showcase Session 2 Suming Jin, University of Maine Room: Governor’s Square Foyer Steven A. Sader Posters will be on display at 11:30 am and will be available for viewing until 5:30 pm. The authors will be available for discussion of their poster papers from 4:30 to 5:30 pm. -65- Moderator: Roger M. Hoffer, Colorado State University (retired) National Geospatial Information Agency (formerly NIMA) Academic Research Program — Part 2 Special session organized by Scott Loomer, NGA (Invited Presentations) Moderator: Scott A. Loomer, NGA (formerly NIMA)

Room: Plaza Court 3 Wednesday,May26

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 42 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 43 Continued from Wednesday, May 26th, 12:30 pm Educational Sessions 1:30 pm to 2:50 pm Social Event 15th Annual Awards Luncheon & 70th Annual -67- Installation of Officers 12:00 noon to 1:30 pm Agricultural Applications of Remote Room: Plaza Ballroom D Sensing and GIS — Part 3: Effective Use of Join in the recognition of your colleagues and participate in a very the Geospatial Sciences for Agricultural special occasion marking the installation of the Society’s 70th slate of Applications officers. The recipients of this year’s prestigious awards will be given Sponsored by the Remote Sensing Applications Division, ASPRS, and organized by special honor and the business meeting will include installation of Jacqueline Luders, Earth Satellite Corporation ASPRS Officers and Directors. Don Lauer, retiring President, will give a Moderator: J. Alex Thomasson, Mississippi State University summation of the past year’s events. The Executive Director’s remarks Room: Plaza Court 2 will also include the annual report. Tickets for this event are required, and must be purchased at the Crop Insurance Fraud Detection Through Satellite Imaging: ASPRS Registration Desk on the Plaza Level no later than 12:00 noon Case Studies th Tuesday, May 25 . Cost is $40 per person for the luncheon. Limited John M. Brown, Agricultural Investigation & Research Corporation seating in the rear of the room is available at no cost for conference James D. Hipple* and Maria Brown registrants wishing to attend the ceremonies only. On-site luncheon ticket sales are limited to availability. GIS and Remote Sensing Applications for a Water Runoff Awards Model Boeing Autometric Award for Best Paper in Image Analysis and Interpretation Mary Love Tagert, Mississippi State University John I. Davidson President’s Award for Practical Papers David R. Shaw, Joseph H. Massey, Ronald L. Bingner, and Cody J. Gray Leica Geosystems Award for Best Scientific Paper in Remote Sensing ESRI Award for Best Scientific Paper in GIS Multi-resolution/Multi-temporal Remote Sensing for Talbert Abrams Award Agricultural Signal Detection William A. Fischer Memorial Scholarship Anthony M. Filippi, Texas A&M University Robert E. Altenhofen Memorial Scholarship Gregory J. Carbone Ta Liang Memorial Award Paul R. Wolf Memorial Scholarship Using Change Detection Between SPOT and Landsat Space Imaging Award for Application of High Resolution Digital Imagery to Quantify the Extent and Severity of Hail Damage Satellite Imagery John Ahlrichs, DigitalGlobe Leica Geosystems Internship Jack Paris, Sr., Bob Woodruff, and Chris Woodward Z/I Imaging Scholarship Kodak International Educational Literature Award -68- Environmental Assessment of Hazardous Sites Moderator: Kristian Morin, North West Geomatics Room: Governor’s Square 11

A Superfund Environmental Evaluation Using Historical Aerial Photography and Imagery Jesse L. Harris, The University of Mississippi Greg Easson

The Use and Needs of Remote Sensing and GIS in State- level Hazard Management (Survey Results) Jitka Kotelenska, University of South Carolina

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 44 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 45 Environmental Diagnostic of a Former Sulfur Mine in Improving Forest Inventories with Lidar Southern Mexico, Using High-resolution Imagery Lee Mitchell, Mississippi State University Maria del Consuelo Hori-Ochoa, Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Scott Roberts, Robert Parker, Tom Dean, and Quang Cao Superiores de Monterrey, Mexico D. F. Lozano-García, M. H. Bremer-Bremer, P. Caballero-Mata. M. Rodriguez, and S. Correa -71- Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 8: Unique Tools and Applications -69- Special Session sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the ASPRS Photogrammetric Image Analysis Techniques — Part 3 Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures Moderator: Scott N. Miller, University of Wyoming Moderator: Greg Mauldin, Tallahassee-Leon County GIS Room: Plaza Court 1 Room: Governor’s Square 10

Optical Processing for Geospatial Applications An Airborne Topographic Mapping Lidar Simulator: Laurie Gibson, Space Imaging Preliminary Results Mark Yager, Donna Haverkamp, and Rikk Crill Thomas H. Meyer, University of Connecticut

Automatic Contrast Enhancement of QuickBird Imagery Future Trends in Fish Lidar Chris Padwick, DigitalGlobe J. H. Churnside, NOAA Environmental Technology Laboratory Jack F. Paris E. D. Brown

Hyperspectral Turf Grass Biomass Predictions as a Function Local Government Application of Lidar: Measuring the of Atmospheric Correction Technique Chemical Composition/Concentration of Soil Pollutants Brian C. Hadley, University of South Carolina James R. Fox, Fluvanna County, Virginia John R. Jensen, Jason A. Tullis, and John B. Gladden Detecting Moving Targets in Laser Scanning Increasing Reliability of Automatic Aerial Triangulation by Tamas Lovas, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary Removing Shadow Points Arpad Barsi and Charles Toth Mostafa Madani, Z/I Imaging Corporation Yandong Wang -72- Multi-temporal Image Analysis and Applications -70- — Part 7: New Time Series Analysis Techniques Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 7: Special Session organized by Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium

Moderator: Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium th Applications in Forestry (continued) Room: Governor’s Square 16 Special Session Sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures. Temporal Mixture Analysis of Twenty-one Years of Moderator: Ikuko Fujisaki, Mississippi State University Northern Hemisphere Sea Ice Concentrations Room: Governor’s Square 15 Joe Piwowar, University of Regina, Canada

Determining Vegetation Canopy Characteristics Using a Eco-climatic Image Segmentation Based on Time Series Small-footprint Temporal Waveform-resolving Lidar Stefaan Lhermitte, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Amar Nayegandhi, ETI Professionals, Inc. Jan Verbesselt, Kris Nackaerts, Bart Muys, and Pol Coppin John C. Brock, C. Wayne Wright, and Tonya D. Clayton Harmonic Temporal Signatures of NDVI for Dominant Direct Measurement of Individual Tree Characteristics from Land Covers Within Alberta, Canada Lidar Data Mryka Hall-Beyer, University of Calgary, Canada Robert J. McGaughey, USDA Forest Service Ward W. Carson, Hans-Erik Andersen, and Stephen E. Reutebuch Physical Meaning of Multi-year Harmonic Cycles in

Temperate Continental Vegetation Wednesday,May26 Mryka Hall-Beyer, University of Calgary, Canada *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 44 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 45 th, The Economic Sense of Fully Digital Aerial Sensing Continuedfrom Wednesday, May 26 1:30 pm to 2:50 pm Franz Leberl, Vexcel Imaging, Austria -73- National (& Global) Spatial Data Infrastructure -75- and its Activities with the National Map Program, The Art and Science of Photogrammetry — Part the President’s Management Program on E-Gov 5: Stereo and the Geospatial One-Stop Portal — Part 6: Moderator: Clive Fraser, University of Melbourne, Australia Implementing Geodata.gov - Interoperability Room: Governor’s Square 12 Lessons Satellite Stereo Geometry Special session sponsored by the Federal Geographic Data Committee and David Dermody, DigitalGlobe organized by Alan R. Stevens, FGDC Krista Dugar (Invited Presentations) Moderator: Hank Garie, Geospatial One-Stop Epipolar Resampling of Linear Array Scanners Using Room: Governor’s Square 17 Parallel Projection This session will focus on the interoperable standards used in creating Michel Morgan, University of Calgary, Canada the Geospatial One Stop-portal, challenges encountered, and practical Ayman Habib guidance for data providers contributing to the Portal. Accuracy of QuickBird Stereo and DEMs Metadata Creation and Publication Standards Nancy Bohac, DigitalGlobe Lynda Wayne, FGDC/GOS Development of a Flexible Harvesting Strategy Anak Agung, ESRI -76- Developing New Standards for a Changing Implementing Interoperability Standards in the Geospatial One-Stop Map Viewer Geospatial World — Part 2: Panel on USGS Anak Agung, ESRI Progress on Remote Sensing Calibration and Pat Cummens Quality Assurance Special Session organized by George Lee, U.S. Geological Survey (Invited Presentations) -74- Moderator: George Lee, U.S. Geological Survey New and Emerging Sensor Systems — Part 1: Room: Plaza Court 4 New sensors and systems as well as methods of producing geospatial Fitting the Sensor to the Need data present further calibration issues. Plans for dealing with these Moderator: Karen Morley, LizardTech issues and the complexity of validating data for The National Map will Room: Plaza Court 3 be presented. Assessing the Comparative Capabilities of Aerial and Panel participants: Satellite Based Collection of Remotely-sensed Data Greg Stensaas, U.S. Geological Survey John C. Baker*, U.S. Geological Survey Vicki Zanoni, NASA Gregory I. Snyder and Beth E. Lachman* Mike Duncan, U.S. Geological Survey Considering Imagery Characteristics for Natural Resource Management: What do You Really Need? James L. Smith, Space Imaging LLC -77- Urban Applications of the Geospatial Sciences Photogrammetric Techniques for Fire Detection Using Airborne Direct Digital Imaging — Part 3: Estimating Population Densities with Don Light, Rochester Institute of Technology Remote Sensing and GIS Don McKeown Moderator: James D. Hurd, University of Connecticut Room: Governor’s Square 14

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 46 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 47 Validating Population Estimates Using Remote Sensing Changshan Wu, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee -79- Alan T. Murray Forestry Applications of Remote Sensing and GIS — Part 6: Applications Throughout the World Population Estimation Using Satellite Imagery Moderator: Dave Mohr, Sensor Systems, Inc. Tim Haithcoat, University of Missouri Room: Governor’s Square 11 Wenbo Song Contextual Classification of Landsat-TM Data in a Fractal Analysis of Transportation Networks as a Method of Mountainous Terrain in Northern Mexico Analyzing Human Population Patterns María del Consuelo Hori-Ochoa, Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Daniel Johnson, Indiana State University Superiores de Monterrey, Mexico Diego Fabián Lozano-García Designation of Settlement Structures in the Alpine Region Katja Maus, University of Bern, Switzerland Habitat Mapping in the Mbaracayu Forest Preserve, Stefan Wunderle Paraguay, Using Orthophotography and Landsat Thematic Mapper Imagery Beverage Break Ryan R. Reker, Kansas State University 2:45 pm to 3:00 pm Douglas G. Goodin and J.M. Shawn Hutchinson Exhibit Area Sustainable Tree Crop Monitoring, Certification, and Management in Africa Educational Sessions Eric C. Wood, SAIC/EROS Data Center Matthew Cushing and Michael Coan 3:00 pm to 4:20 pm Towards Improved Park Management Using ERS SAR and Landsat ETM Images: The Case Of Borgu Park In Nigeria -78- Appollonia A. Okhimamhe, Federal University of Technology, Nigeria Agricultural Applications of Remote Sensing and GIS — Part 4: Characterizing Crops and Croplands -80- Moderator: Andrew Ralowicz, Earth Satellite Corporation Image Analysis Techniques — Part 4 Room: Plaza Court 2 Moderator: Laurie Gibson, Space Imaging Room: Plaza Court 1 Modeling Sugar Beet Quality Variables from Satellite Images and Canopy Spectral Indices Applications of Machine Learning, Knowledge Discovery Subodh Kulkarni, University of Arkansas and Data Mining in the Analysis, Classification, and Daniel Humburg th Assessment of Remotely-sensed Geospatial Satellite Data Use of Landsat 5 and 7 Data to Predict Within-Field Sharath Tadepalli, Purdue University Variation of Corn Yield An Evaluation of Interpolation Methods for Increasing Alassane Touré, RESOURCE21, LLC DEM Resolution with Application to Fine-Scale Watershed Dave Major, Suling Zhao, and Richard Baumeister Characterization Applied Remote Sensing in Agriculture: Managing Grain Aditya Agrawal, NOAA Protein in Wheat Nonlinear Array Algebra — Follow-up to 1990 Denver Dennis L. Wright Jr., Utah State University V. Philip Rasmussen Jr., R. Douglas Ramsey Jr., and Doran J. Baker ASPRS Paper Urho A. Rauhala, BAE SYSTEMS Response of Genetic-modified Canola, Eggplant and Potato Varieties Reflectance Spectra to Engineering Exogenous Genes Stefania Pace, ENEA - Italian National Agency for New Technology Energy and Environment, Italy

Piero De Fazio Wednesday,May26 *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 46 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 47 th, Lidar EXPERT: A Toolkit for Information Extraction from Continuedfrom Wednesday, May 26 3:00 pm to 4:20 pm Airborne Lidar Data Yong Hu, York University, Canada -81- Vincent Tao* and Arie Croitoru Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 9: Operational Mapping - Sensor Calibration and -83- Data Validation (continued) Special Session sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Multi-temporal Image Analysis and Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures Applications — Part 8: Land Cover Trend Moderator: Kristian Morin, North West Geomatics Analysis Room: Governor’s Square 15 Special Session organized by Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Moderator: John Harrington, Jr., Kansas State University Influence of the Post-spacing Density of the Lidar-derived Room: Governor’s Square 16 DEM on Flood Modeling Pierre Gueudet, University of Texas at Austin MODIS Time Series Analysis of Climate and Land David Maidment, Gordon Wells, and Amy Neuenschwander Conversion Processes in Semiarid Regions (invited Presentation) An Investigation of the Potential Accuracy of Airborne Alfredo Huete, University of Arizona Lidar-derived Digital Terrain Model in an Intertidal Salt Kamel Didan, Derrick Lampkin, Ed Glenn, and Pamela Nagler Marsh Environment Yvette B. Greene, University of South Carolina Analyzing Land Cover Change in Kazakhstan: Land Surface Phenology, Climatic Variation, and Sensor Artifacts On Using Lidar Specific Ground Targets Kirsten M. de Beurs, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Nora Csanyi, Ohio State University Geoffrey M. Henebry Charles Toth Approach to Satellite Observation of Vegetation Dynamics Performance Comparison of Laser Scanners with Andrés Viña, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Oscillating and Rotating Mirrors Geoffrey M. Henebry and Anatoly A. Gitelson Damir Latypov, TerraPoint MODIS Vegetation Continuous Field Maps for Global Scale Dan Phillips, Stephanie Routh*, and John Zeigler Land Cover Monitoring (invited Presentation) Matthew C. Hansen, University of Maryland -82- Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 10: Data Processing -84- Special Session sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric National (& Global) Spatial Data Infrastructure Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures. and its Activities with the National Map Moderator: Michael E. Hodgson, University of South Carolina Room: Governor’s Square 10 Program, the President’s Management Program on E-Gov and the Geospatial One-Stop Portal A Feature-based Approach to Automatic Extraction of — Part 7: The Geospatial One-Stop Portal — Ground Points for DTM Generation from Lidar Data Impyeong Lee, University of Seoul, Korea Two Clicks to Content Special session sponsored by the Federal Geographic Data Committee and PYLI: A Python Toolkit for Processing Discrete Return Lidar Data organized by Alan R. Stevens, FGDC Michael Lefsky, Colorado State University (Invited Presentations) Gagan Tandon* Moderator: Hank Garie, Geospatial One-Stop Room: Governor’s Square 17 Voxels as a Representation of Multiple-return Lidar Data This session will present the principles that guided the design of the Jason M. Stoker, USGS EROS Data Center / SAIC Geospatial One-Stop Portal, usability considerations, and lessons Dean B. Gesch and Susan K. Greenlee learned over the past months of implementation. *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 48 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 49 Translating Functional Requirements into Intuitive Design Accuracy Considerations in DEM Fusion Rupert Essinger, ESRI Lewis Graham, NIIRS10

Lessons Learned: Technology, Policy, and Procedural Generation and Validation of High Resolution Space Image Implications DEMs Pat Cummens, ESRI Gurcan Buyuksalih, Karaelmas University, Turkey Karsten Jacobsen -85- New and Emerging Sensor Systems — Part 2: -87- New Sensor Systems Developing New Standards for a Changing Moderator: Don Light, Rochester Institute of Technology Geospatial World — Part 3: Panel on Digital Room: Plaza Court 3 Imagery Standard: Producer and User Perspectives An Advanced Suite of Airborne Hyperspectral Sensors and Special session organized by Ron Hunt, OSI Geomatics, Ltd., Canada Broad Band Imagers (Invited Presentations) C. Anger, ITRES Research Limited, Canada Moderator: Ron Hunt, OSI Geomatics Ltd., Canada S. Achal, T. Ivanco, and S. Mah Room: Plaza Court 4 Comparison of Quality Metrics and Methods to Implement This session will focus on where the industry is with regard to Full Color with Pan-sharpening for the 9K x 9K Ultra High standards and where we are headed with the advent of purely digital image technology. A key focus will be on the current issues facing Resolution Color Camera System the producers and users in achieving consistent and verifiable, quality Brian Gorin, BAE Systems North America levels for digital imagery. Performance Analysis of the DSS in Map Production Panel members: Josep Lluis Colomer I. Alberich, Institut Cartografic de Catalunya, Environment Barcelona, Spain Mohamed M. R. Mostafa, Applanix Corp. Patrick Bresnahan, Richmond County, South Carolina George Lee, U.S. Geological Survey Advancements in EROS A Tasking and Ground Processing Jeff Liedtke, Digital Globe Offer New Capabilities Roy Kampfer, ImageSat International N.V. Karen Gold Anisfield

-86- th The Art and Science of Photogrammetry — Part 6: Digital Elevation Model Generation Moderator: Roger Pacey, Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping, LLC Room: Governor’s Square 12

Automatic DEM Extraction Using QuickBird Stereo Pair and SPOT-5 Stereo Pair Philip Cheng, PCI Geomatics Thierry Toutin

High Precision Landing Site Mapping and Rover Localization for the 2003 Exploration Rover Ron Li, Ohio State University Kaichang Di, Fengliang Xu and Jue Wang Wednesday,May26

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 48 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 49 th, Determination of the Spatial Variability of Cotton Fiber Continuedfrom Wednesday, May 26 3:00 pm to 4:20 pm Quality and Yield G.F. Sassenrath, USDA-Agricultural Research Service APTRU -88- H.C. Pringle, E.R. , J.R. Williford, and F. To Urban Applications of the Geospatial Sciences Cotton Acreage Determination Using Vegetation Indexes — Part 4: Satellite Remote Sensing for Mapping Derived from Multi-temporal, Multi-sensor Data Sources Impervious Surfaces Chris Woodward, DigitalGlobe Moderator: David Gallaher, Jefferson County, Colorado Jack Paris, Sr., John Ahlrichs, and Bob Woodruff Room: Governor’s Square 14

Impervious Surface Mapping and Change Monitoring Using Landsat Remote Sensing -90- Marvin Bauer, University of Minnesota Forestry Applications of Remote Sensing and Nathan Heinert, Jean Doyle, and Fei Yuan GIS — Part 7: Characterizing Forest Canopies Developing Impervious Surface Maps for the Mid-Atlantic with Remote Sensing Moderator: Brian M. Holdt, University of Connecticut Region Using Landsat 7 Imagery Room: Governor’s Square 11 John M. Morgan, III, Towson University Center for Geographic Information Sciences Measurements of Tree Volume from Optical Dendrometer, Martin C. Roberge and Kent B. Barnes Stereo Photogrammetry, and Ground-based Lidar Impervious Surface Estimation Using SPOT-5 Satellite Melissa McHale, Colorado State University Michael A. Lefsky Imagery Kumar C. Navulur, Resource21, LLC Greenness Mapping in a Savanna Region of Nigeria Using Patrick Robinson and Jill Downing Multisensor Images Temporal Characterization of Impervious Surfaces for the Appollonia A. Okhimamhe, Federal University of Technology, Nigeria State of Connecticut James D. Hurd, University of Connecticut Daniel L. Civco -91- Image Analysis Techniques — Part 5: Neural Networks Moderator: Stefan Robila, Montclair State University Educational Sessions Room: Plaza Court 1

4:30 pm to 5:30 pm The Effect of Some Internal Neural Network Parameters on Thematic Classification Performance Hosni Ghedira, City University of New York -89- Agricultural Applications of Remote Sensing Multispectral Classification of Landsat Images: Comparison of Support Vector Machine and Neural Network Classifiers and GIS — Part 5: Geospatial Sciences Nivedita V. Candade, University of South Florida Applications for Cotton Barnali Dixon Moderator: Anthony M. Filippi, Texas A&M University Room: Plaza Court 2 Artificial Neural Network Training Using Inhibited Brain Learning and Pruning Methods Hybrid for an Efficient and Remotely-sensed Data Input for Cotton Growth Modeling Accurate Satellite Image Classification J. Alex Thomasson, Mississippi State University Joel Bandibas, Geological Survey of Japan Swapna Gogineni Kazunori Kohyama and Koji Wakita

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 50 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 51 -92- -94- Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 11: Lidar New and Emerging Sensor Systems — in Education (continued) Part 3: New Sensor Systems (continued) Special Session sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Moderator: Robert Beckwith, DeLorme Publishing Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures Room: Plaza Court 3 Moderator: Martin Flood Room: Governor’s Square 15 Photogrammetric Calibration of OLYMPUS C-5050 Digital Camera Developing Lidar Curriculum: Incorporating Industry Gamal Seedahmed, Pacfic Northwest National Lab Perspectives (invited Presentation) The Comparative Study of PKNU2 Image and Aerial Photo Sorin C. Popescu, Texas A&M University and Satellite Images Martin Flood Chang-hun Lee, Pukyong National University, Korea Ji-Yeon Yang, Hyun-jeong Hong, and Chul-Uong Choi* From Mission Planning to Data Integration: Developing a New Lidar Curriculum at the Applied Geomatics Research The Research About Aerial Photographing System (PKNU Group (NSCC) No.2) Development (Invited Presentation) Ho-Yong Kim, Pukyong National University, Korea Robert Maher, COGS, NSCC, Canada Nam-Chun Cho, Jeong-rim Ma, and Chul-Uong Choi* Chris Hopkinson Advancements in Lidar Post-Processing Software -95- Matt Bethel, Merrick & Company The Art and Science of Photogrammetry — Part 7: Digital Elevation Model Generation -93- (continued) Moderator: Klaus J. Neumann, Z/I Imaging GmbH Multi-temporal Image Analysis and Room: Governor’s Square 12 Applications — Part 9: Change Detection Using Time Series Satellite Data Terrain Fingerprints: Statistical Analysis of Digital Special Session organized by Pol Coppin, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium Elevation Models Moderator: James D. Hipple, Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota Peter L. Guth, U.S. Naval Academy Room: Governor’s Square 16 Triangulation-based Hierarchical Image Matching for A Review of Change Detection Techniques for Quantifying Mars DEM Generation Using MOC NA Stereo Images th Land Cover Land Use Changes in El Cielo Biosphere Jie Shan, Purdue University Reserve, Mexico Rajagopalan Rengarajan and Jong-suk Yoon Sharolyn Anderson, Texas State University Michael K. Steinberg and Matthew J. Taylor Toward Consistency in Coastal GIS Shorelines with VDatum Monitoring Changes in Fuel Moisture Conditions of G. Michael Espey, NOAA/National Geodetic Survey Southern California Chaparral Based on Time Series of MODIS-derived Indices Douglas Stow, San Diego State University John , Madhura Niphadkar, Lloyd Coulter, Elena Tarnavsky, and Pete Scully

Characterizing Land Cover Changes in a Rapidly Growing Metropolitan Area Using Long Term Satellite Imagery Matthias S. Moeller, Arizona State University

William L. Stefanov and Maik Netzband Wednesday,May26 *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 50 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 51 th, Modeling Wildfire Probability Using a GIS Continuedfrom Wednesday, May 26 4:30 pm to 5:30 pm Brett Davis, USFS/RMRS/Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute Carol Miller -96- Developing New Standards for a Changing Spatial Data and Models Used for Wild Land Fire Management Geospatial World — Part 4: Development of Mark A. Finney, USDA Forest Service, Fire Sciences Laboratory Digital Data Standards Moderator: Jeff Liedtke, DigitalGlobe Fire Fuel Modeling in National Parks of the Southeast Room: Plaza Court 4 Marguerite Madden, Center for Remote Sensing and Mapping Science (CRMS) Processes, Products and Standards for Ortho Mosaics Roy Welch Glenn Reese, Space Imaging Gene Dial

A Civil Image Interpretability Rating Scale (CIIRS) to -99- Address Civil Government Applications Applications Showcase Session 2 Jeff Liedtke, DigitalGlobe Posters will be on display by 11:30 am and will be available for David Nale and J. Edward Kunz viewing until 5:30 pm. The authors will be available for discussion of their poster papers from 4:30 pm to 5:30 pm. Map Projections and Global Image Database Accuracy Moderator: Roger M. Hoffer, Colorado State University (retired) Jeong Chang Seong, Northern Michigan University Room: Governor’s Square Foyer

Applications of Ground-based Radar to Mine Slope Monitoring -97- Edward L. McHugh, NIOSH, Spokane Research Laboratory Urban Applications of the Geospatial Sciences Charles Sabine and David Long — Part 5: Methods for Mapping Impervious Surfaces Orthophotos, Stereo Models and DTMs from IKONOS 1- Moderator: Qihao Weng, Indiana State University m Imagery for Cadastre and Base Mapping of Nakhcivan Room: Governor’s Square 14 Autonomous Republic Emil Bayramov, R.I.S.K. Company, Azerbaijan Classification of Impervious Land-Cover Using Fractals Rafael Bayramov Lindi J. Quackenbush, State University of New York Subpixel Analysis of Urban Land Cover from TM Imagery Development of a Population Density and Land Use-based Ming-Chih Hung, Northwest Missouri State University Regression Model to Calculate the Amount of Imperviousness Anna A. Chabaeva, University of Connecticut Species Differentiation Using Hyperspectral Remote Daniel L. Civco and Sandy Prisloe Sensing Darrin M. Dodds, Mississippi State University Extraction of Transportation Infrastructure from David R. Shaw, L. Thomas Barber, Jay W. Barnett, Nathan W. Buehring, Hyperspectral Remote Sensing Data Keith D. Burnell, Cody J. Gray, Kendall C. Hutto, Franklin S. Kelley, Ramanathan Sugumaran, University of Northern Iowa and Chris T. Le James Gerjevic Study on Visualization and Interactive Operation of Web- based 3D Scene Liqiang Zhang, Chjina -98- Chongjun Yang*, Donglin Liu, and Hongzhi Yang GIS Division – Part 3: GIS and Fire Science Special session, sponsored by the GIS Division of ASPRS, and organized by A GIS-based Habitat Suitability Model for Cumulative (Invited Presentations) Effects Assessment Moderator: Marguerite Madden, University of Georgia John W. Wyckoff, University of Colorado at Denver Room: Governor’s Square 10 Lynn E. Johnson, Vanchindorj Ulziisaikhan and Friedrich Nuszdorfer *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 52 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 53 A Comparison of Aerial Photo Interpretation and Spectral Using Data Exploration Techniques to Assess Error in Lidar Imaging for Gathering Fire Fuels and Vegetation Data Data Britton Wilson, National Park Service Stacy Schumacher, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation Scott O’Daniel and Dan Haug A Comparative Study of Change Detection Techniques David W. Gwynn, Rutgers University The Utilization of High Spatial Resolution Satellite Imagery: Richard G. Lathrop, Jr. Identifying Archeological Targets Kristy M. Capobianco, University of Florida Integration of Image Processing, GIS Resources and Michael Binford and Kathleen Deagan Auxiliary Data for Mapping Land Cover in Tropical Landscapes The Power of 3D Visualization and Immersive VR for Sebastián Martinuzzi, USDA Forest Service International Institute of Tropical Improving Lidar Processing Algorithms Forestry, Puerto Rico Peter Sforza*, Virginia Tech William Gould and Olga Ramos Sorin Popescu*, Zachary Bortolot, and Randy Wynne

The Effects of Landscape Pattern on American Marten Analyzing Spatial Patterns of Vegetation with Geostatistics (Martes americana) Distribution in Northeastern California from 1830-1840’s Within the Buffalo River Sub-Basin Using GIS and Remote Sensing Robert C. Weih, University of Arkansas at Monticello Thomas A. Kirk, Humboldt State University Aaron J. Dick Steven J. Steinberg, Lawrence Fox III, and William J. Zielinski Remote Sensing in the Monitoring and Detection for Integrating NASA Earth Science Enterprise (ESE) Data into Harmful Algal Blooms Global Agricultural Decision Support Systems Pauline P. Stephen, Syracuse University William Teng, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Distributed Active Archive Center (SSAI) Integrated Remote Sensing and Field Techniques for Steven Kempler, Long Chiu, Paul Doraiswamy, Zhong Liu, Lenard Predicting, Assessing, and Managing Phragmites australis Milich, and Robert Tetrault in South Carolina Estuaries Samuel P. Walker, University of South Carolina The Effect of Spatial Accuracy on Analysis of Range Dwayne E. Porter Management and Stream Macro Invertebrates Laura Johnson, Virginia Tech Multi-temporal Farm System Pathway Classification in the Stephen Prisley Amazon Basin Katherine A. Joseph, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Remote Sensing for Rice Nitrogen Estimation and Randolph H. Wynne, John O. Browder, and Percy Summers Management Ashish Mishra, University of Arkansas Analysis of Land Cover Changes and Landscape Sreekala Bajwa and Richard Norman Structure in Agrarian Landscapes in Transition th Maik Netzband, Arizona State University Assessing Land Cover Change in Watersheds of the Hydro- William L. Stefanov and Matthias Moeller Climatic Data Network: Application of the North American Landscape Characterization Project Reflectance of Bare Soils: Expected vs. Actual from Wendy Gordon, University of Texas at Austin Landsat 7 Kelley Crews-Meyer Chandrapalsinh Chavda, Mississippi State University J. Alex Thomasson Spectral Signature and Emissive Characteristics of Drought- stressed Vegetation – Implication for Remote Sensing of A New Method for Automatic Building Extraction using Drought Stress LIDAR Data with Aerial Imagery Xiaobing Zhou, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology Young Jin Lee, Spatial Information Technology Center Computer & Hongjie Xie*, Geoffrey Marshall, and Huade Guan Software Technology Laboratory – ETRI, Korea Woosug Cho, Jeong Soo, Kyung Ok Kim Wednesday,May26

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 52 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 53 *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 55 Application of Landsat Tasseled CAP Indices to the Analysis of Bird Habitats, Great Smokey Mountains National Park Social Event Andy P. Damalas, Old Dominion University 6:30 pm to 10:30 pm Thomas R. Allen

Comparison of Datasets of Watershed Delineation and its Evening at the Denver Museum of Nature and Effects on Scale Variability Changes Science Anoop Vishwanath Iyer, Purdue University The Denver Museum of Nature and Science (DMNS) is one of the Engel, Jon Harbor, and Jie Shan leading museums in the nation. But a little known fact is how the DMNS staff integrates the latest in remote sensing technology in their IFSAR Applications for Land Management Issues daily activities. Lori Baer*, US Geological Survey GPS equipment and imagery data is used routinely to plan fieldtrips, John Kosovich* locate specimens, inventory locations, and create general maps of both past and current events. “Prehistoric Journey” features bone- Atlas of Antarctic Research: Developing Distributed based reconstructions of the dinosaurs. More importantly (to us, at Databases least) is the geospatial data that ties together the location of specimen Cheryl A. Hallam, U.S. Geological Survey sites to recreate valid maps showing the prehistoric environments in which the dinosaurs lived. Supporting Earth Science Interdisciplinary Applications A 55 million year-old rainforest has been uncovered just 30 miles with TOVAS south of DMNS in Castle Rock. It has produced 300 new species of Zhong Liu, George Mason University vegetation. Satellite imagery is now being used to locate present H. Rui, W. Teng and L. Chiu day rainforest sites in Brazil and Bolivia to reconstruct the ancient rainforest’s geospatial setting and environment. Using InSAR from Multiple Crossing Orbits to Study the 3D Come spend the evening in a casual setting with delicious food, Flow of Ice Stream A, West Antarctica marvelous displays, interactive entertainment, and great people! A Andrew L.J. Ford, University of Utah limited number of tickets will be available for the IMAX Theater featuring Richard R. Forster the “Lewis & Clark: Great Journey West”. ASPRS and RSI are co-hosting two showings of the film. Cap the evening on the Sky Terrace with a view Describing the Phenological Landscape: Using Seasonal of a Rocky Mountain sunset over the Mile High Denver skyline. Landsat Imagery for Change Detection of Vegetation in a Buses will run on staggered departures between the main hotel Northern Mountain Environment entrance and the Museum from 6:00 pm until 10:30 pm. Please Note Roberta Lay, University of Northern British Columbia, Canada The Last Bus Will Leave the Museum Promptly at 10:30 pm. Roger Wheate

Implementation of Geological Functions by Integrating Tickets for Imax Theater… Distributed GIS Components on the Internet Full Registration envelopes included a special form that must Yoon-Seop Chang, Seoul National University, Korea be presented to the RSI Booth staff (Booth 310) in exchange th Hyeong-Dong Park for one IMAX theater ticket. There will be two showings of the movie, 7:15 pm and 8:15 pm during our Evening at the Integrated Management System of Ground Water Using the Museum. Tickets will have a specific time designation. Due GIS and 3D Contaminant Model to theater capacity, tickets are available on a first-come, first- Yoon-seop Chang served basis. Jinha Jung and Hyeong-Dong Park Wednesday,May26

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 55 Thursday, May 27th Time Event Room Attending 8:00 am to 9:15 am Plenary Session Plaza Ballroom D-F 8:30 am to 5:00 pm ASPRS Board of Directors Meeting Directors Row H 9:30 am to 10:50 am Educational Sessions 100-110 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-17 11:00 am to 12:00 noon Educational Sessions 111-121 Plaza Court 1-4, and Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-17 1:00 pm to 2:20 pm Educational Sessions 122-132 Plaza Court 1-4, Governor’s Square 10-12, 14-17 2:30 pm Technical Tour A — Spectrum Mapping. Meet in main lobby of the Adam’s Mark Hotel 2:30 pm to 3:50 pm Educational Sessions 133-138 Plaza Court 1-4, Grosvenor’s Square 10, 12, 14-15

Plenary Sessions Lynne Sherrod 8:00 am to 9:15 am Executive Director Room: Plaza Ballroom D-F Colorado Cattlemen’s Agricultural Land Trust, Arvada, Colorado This morning’s speaker is Lynne Sherrod Lynne Sherrod is a fifth generation rancher. She spent many years within the of the Colorado Cattlemen’s Agricultural beef industry involved in promotional and education efforts. Seeing the changes Land Trust. Sherrod will address the that have occurred in her lifetime and the challenges that growth pressures have use of geospatial technologies in brought to her way of life convinced her that for her heritage to remain viable and working with conflict in changing land for agriculture to survive; first and foremost the land must be kept whole. This led use, taxation policies and the effort her into her present position as executive director of the Colorado Cattlemen’s Agricultural Land to preserve and protect our nation’s Trust (CCALT) where she has worked since 1997. She received the 2002 Community Award from agricultural production and heritage. The the Wirth Chair at the University of Colorado at Denver. As of the end of 2003 CCALT has partnered title of her presentation is “Forever Is a with 80 landowners in the protection of over 152,000 productive agricultural acres. In addition Very Long Time.” to addressing state and national agricultural organizations, Sherrod has made presentations around the country to groups including the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, American What’s New on Mars? A Mars Bar Association’s Standing Committee on Environmental Law, the Colorado Bar Association, the Exploration Rover Mission Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute, the Resources Agency of California, The Nature Conservancy Update Annual Trustee Meeting, the Conference on World Affairs in Boulder, Colorado, the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, the U.S. Department of Interior’s 2002 Senior Executive Retreat, Ranching The twin Mars Exploration Rovers, Spirit West of the 100th Meridian Conference, and the National Conference of State Legislators’ Forum and Opportunity, successfully landed on for America’s Ideas. Mars in January 2004, and have been roaming Crater and Meridiani Steven W. Lee Planum looking for signs of past water. The technology enabling these “robotic Dr. Steve Lee is a Research Scientist at the University of Colorado’s Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP), and is Curator of Planetary Science and Chairman of the Department field geologists”, and the latest mission of Space Science at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science (DMNS). Since December 1990, results, will be discussed. he and a team of planetary scientists have been involved in a program of long-term monitoring Awards of the surface and atmosphere of Mars with the Hubble Space Telescope. He is a Co-Investigator Poster Awards on the Mars Color Imager (MARCI), the camera system to be launched to Mars aboard the Conference Management Awards Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter mission in 2005. Lee was the Science Content Coordinator for MarsQuest, a nationally touring museum exhibit developed by the Space Science Institute (Boulder, CO). He is a Curator and science advisor to the DMNS Space Odyssey exhibition and to the Gates Planetarium. My Day-At-A-GlanceMy

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 56 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 57 ASPRS Committee Meeting -102- Is Digital Aerial Photography Admissible? ASPRS Board of Directors Meeting Special Session organized by Charles E. Olson, Jr., University of Michigan 8:30 am to 5:00 pm (Invited Presentations) Room: Directors Row H Moderator: Charles E. Olson, Jr., University of Michigan Room: Plaza Court 2 Educational Sessions The use of digital photographs and associated computer enhancement technologies brings into question the adage: “photographs don’t lie.” If 9:30 am to 10:50 am photographs can lie, should they be admissible in court? When an “unaltered original” is required before a photograph is considered admissible in court, can digital aerial photographs meet this criterion? The answer appears to be “Not Always!” Panel members will explore the possible need for a protocol -100- that, if followed, should make digital photographs admissible. Airborne GPS — Part 1: Direct Georeferencing Special Session sponsored by the Primary Data Acquisition Division, ASPRS, and Are Digital Photographs Admissible? organized by Mohamed Mostafa, Applanix Corporation, Canada Charles E. Olson, Jr., University of Michigan (Invited Presentations) Operational Use of Digital Aerial Cameras Moderator: Mohamed M. R. Mostafa, Applanix Corporation Brian Huberty, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Room: Plaza Court 4 Detecting Alterations in Digital Images Data Flow and Performance Analysis of Airborne William H. Anderson, University of Minnesota Positioning and Orientation Systems For Map Production Joe , Applanix Corporation Archiving Requirements for Certifiability John L. Faundeen, EROS Data Center Direct Georeferencing Activities in Italy Vittorio Casella, DIET – Università di Pavia, Italy SWGIT and the Law Enforcement Perspective Riccardo Galetto Richard W. Vorder Bruegge, Federal Bureau of Investigation Mapping at a Grand Scale Mark Meade, Photo Science, Inc. -103- Practical Accuracy Test of Digital Camera Emerge DSS Analysis and Applications of Hyperspectral Kikuo Tachibana, PASCO Corporation Tadashi Sasagawa, Mohamed Mostafa, and Yuzo Tanahashi Data — Part 1 Moderator: Stefan A. Robila, Montclair State University Room: Governor’s Square 10 -101- Automating Data Processing for Hyperion Hyperspectral Data Career Development — Part 1: Current Srinivas Chappidi*, University of Mississippi th Michelle L. Aten* and Pamela Lawhead Employment Trends and Activity in Geospatial Technology Evaluation of Factors Affecting Support Vector Machines Special session sponsored and organized by the Education and Professional for Hyperspectral Classification Development Committee of ASPRS Pramod K. Varshney, Syracuse University (Invited Presentations) Manoj K. Arora and Pakorn Watanachaturaporn Moderator: Michael E. Hodgson, University of South Carolina Room: Plaza Court 3 The Classification of Hyperspectral Data Using the CART Classification Approach The panelists in this session will discuss new trends in the industry, the François G.F. Smith, Earth Satellite Corporation skills needed by potential employees, and the kinds of experience and Chris Jengo education that make a person a desirable candidate for employment. Panelists: Wavelet-Based Hyperspectral Soil Texture Classification Ann Johnson, ESRI Using Hidden Markov Models Richard Serby, GeoSearch, Inc. Xudong Zhang, Mississippi State University Jeff Young, Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping, LLC Nicolas H. Younan and Charles G. O’Hara Thursday, May 27 *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 56 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 57 th, Use of Regression Tree Classification and Forest Inventory Continuedfrom Thursday, May 27 9:30 am to 10:50 am Data to Predict Forest Types Russ Aicher, State University of New York -104- Bill Stiteler, Kerry Turek, and Jason Cole Analysis Techniques for Feature Extraction — Part 1: Effective and Efficient Techniques Moderator: Donna Haverkamp, Space Imaging -106- Room: Plaza Court 1 Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 12: Fully Automated Airfield Feature Extraction and Mapping Coastal and Bathymetric Mapping James H. Horne, Space Imaging Special Session sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures An Improved Method for Feature Extraction from Aerial Moderator: Thomas H. Meyer, University of Connecticut Photography Using Stereo Pairs Room: Governor’s Square 15 John M. Marks, University of Wisconsin Airborne Coastal Mapping and Charting Frank L. Scarpace (Invited Presentation) W. Jeff Lillycrop, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Linear Feature Extraction from Digital Remote Sensing Data Using Neural Network Analysis Combining Data from Different Lidar Surveys and Genong Yu, Indiana State University Photogrammetry to Quantify Short-term Topographic Ryan Jensen, Paul Mausel, and Xing Liu Change on the North Carolina Coast Smart Digitizer — A Software Tool for Making Feature Helena Mitasova, NCSU, MEAS Margery Overton and Russell S. Harmon Extraction Smarter and Faster Xiangyun Hu, York University, Canada Robust Characterization of SHOALS Lidar Signals for C. Vincent Tao Bottom Segmentation and Classification: A Combined Parameter-Estimation and Curve-Fitting Approach Gareth R. Elston, Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic -105- Center Forestry Applications of Remote Sensing and Semme J. Dijkstra GIS — Part 8: Analysis Techniques for Forest Bottom Segmentation and Classification Using Expectation- Inventories Maximization Clustering Methods on SHOALS Data Moderator: Dan Civco, University of Connecticut Semme J. Dijkstra, University of New Hampshire Room: Governor’s Square 11 Gareth R. Elston Effects of Spatial Resolution on Reducing Uncertainty of Forest Inventory Estimates Using Satellite Image-based Stratification Layers -107- Mark D. Nelson, USDA Forest Service National (& Global) Spatial Data Infrastructure Ronald E. McRoberts and its Activities with the National Map Program, Patterns of Covariance between Forest Stand and Canopy the President’s Management Program on E-Gov Structure and the Geospatial One-Stop Portal — Part 8: First Michael Lefsky, Colorado State University Steps Toward Implementing The National Map Andrew Hudak, Warren Cohen, and Steve Acker Special session sponsored by the Federal Geographic Data Committee, and organized by Kari Craun, U.S. Geological Survey Improving the Statistical Efficiency of FIA Phase I Estimates (Invited Presentations) Using Spatially-Explicit Measures of Classification Moderator: Kari Craun, U.S. Geological Survey Uncertainty Room: Governor’s Square 17 Randolph H. Wynne, Virginia Tech Christine E. Blinn, David C. Chojnacky, and John A. Scrivani *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 58 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 59 Implementation Strategy for The National Map Remote Sensing on the Study of Cultural Landscapes Kenneth J. Boyko, U.S. Geological Survey E. Patmios, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece M. Lazaridou Modeling the Costs and Benefits of the National Map David Halsing, U.S. Geological Survey Evaluating the Serviceability of Public Transportation Using GIS and the Genetic Algorithm The National Map — Not Just Another Pretty Face Chulmin Jun, University of Seoul, Korea Kari Craun, U.S. Geological Survey Rick Brown and Phyllis Altheide -110- -108- Web-based GIS — Part 1: Distributed Processing The Art and Science of Photogrammetry — Part Moderator: Jie Shan, Purdue University 8: Photogrammetric Project Implementation Room: Governor’s Square 16 Moderator: Timothy E. LeSiege, Maine Department of Transportation Room: Governor’s Square 12 Integrated 2D and 3D Web-based Geospatial Technology for Decision Support Product Generation Using ADS-40 Digital Imagery Frederick V. Pieper*, Institute for the Application of Geospatial Technology (IAGT) George R. Hoffman, EarthData Technologies Matthew F. Mercurio*

Changed Rules in Aerial Photogrammetry On Demand Spatial Data Provisioning Jolyon D. Thurgood, Vexcel Imaging Mark Hardy*, SANZ Corp. Michael Gruber Tom Groom*

Development of Analytical Photogrammetric Networks Web GIS Based CSCW System for SARS Preventing and Based on Russian Satellite Imagery Reporting Eugene Levin, Physical Optics Corporation Xiao-lin Lu, Zhejiang University of Finance & Economics, China P. H. Salamonowicz, G. Guienko, and V. Chekalind Suitability of the PKNU 2 System for Generating the Educational Sessions Orthophoto Map Eun-Khung Lee, Pukyong National University, Korea 11:00 am to 12:00 noon Young-Chan Seo, Yeon-Ju Choi, and Chul-Uong Choi -111-

-109- Agricultural Applications of Remote Sensing th Urban Applications of the Geospatial Sciences and GIS — Part 6: Remote Sensing for — Part 6: Applications in Remote Sensing and Assessing Weed Infestations GIS for Urban Environments Moderator: Mary Love Tagert, Mississippi State University Moderator: John M. Morgan, III, Towson University Room: Plaza Court 2 Room: Governor’s Square 14 Multispectral Imagery for Weed Species Identification Analyzing of Irrigated Urban Landscape Areas Using High Cody J. Gray, Mississippi State Univeristy Resolution Airborne Remote Sensing in a GIS Environment David R. Shaw and Darrin M. Dodds Fayek Farag, Utah State University Christopher Neale and Roger Kjelgren Texture Analysis of Remotely-sensed Images for Weed Patch Detection in Row-crops Asset Management Using High Resolution Imagery and GPS Wade Givens, Mississippi State University Jason Amadori*, Space Imaging, LLC Abhinav Mathur, Ken Hutto, Lori Mann Bruce, and David R. Shaw Allen Ibaugh* Thursday, May 27

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 58 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 59 th, Hyperspectral Data Used in the Assessment of the Powder Continuedfrom Thursday, May 27 11:00 am 12:00 noon River Basin, MT Joe Zamudio, Earth Search Sciences -112- Airborne GPS — Part 2: GPS for Aerial Surveys Special Session sponsored by the Primary Data Acquisition Division, ASPRS, and -115- organized by Mohamed Mostafa, Applanix Corporation, Canada Analysis Techniques for Feature Extraction (Invited Presentations) Moderator: Joe Hutton, Applanix Corporation — Part 2: Comparisons of Feature Extraction Room: Plaza Court 4 Techniques Moderator: Genong Yu, Indiana State University Continuously Operating Reference Stations: State-of-the- Room: Plaza Court 1 Art and New Trends Richard Snay, NOAA’s National Geodetic Survey Comparing Spectral and Object-based Approaches for Classification and Transportation Feature Extraction from Precision Airborne GPS Positioning Without Dedicated Base High Resolution Multispectral Imagery Stations Sunil Reddy Repaka*, National Consortium on Remote Sensing in Mohamed M. R. Mostafa, Applanix Corporation Transportation & Environmental Assessment Eric W. Kolstad*, Charles G. O’Hara, and Dennis D. Truax From Least Squares to Kalman Filtering Aaron W. Braun, Integrity Applications Inc. A Performance Analysis on Vehicle Detection from James S. Bethel Remotely Sensed Imagery Eva Paska, Ohio State University Charles Toth

-113- Semi-parametric FROC Analysis of Automated Target Career Development – Part 2: Steps to Recognition Systems in Satellite Imagery Employment — Resume, Interviews, and James H. Horne, Space Imaging Marketing Special session sponsored and organized by the Education and Professional Development Committee of ASPRS -116- (Invited Presentations) Forestry Applications of Remote Sensing and Moderator: Jaymes Pardue, VARGIS Room: Plaza Court 3 GIS — Part 9: Forest Cover Mapping Moderator: Randolph H. Wynne, Virginia Tech Panelists: Room: Governor’s Square 11 Tina Cary, Cary and Associates Bob Sturtevant, Colorado State Forest Service Forest Fragmentation Due to Land Parcelization and Ben Novy, Northrop Grumman Mission Systems Subdivision: A Remote Sensing and GIS Analysis Brian M. Holdt, University of Connecticut Daniel L. Civco and James D. Hurd -114- Analysis and Applications of Hyperspectral Southeastern Gap Analysis Project: A Regional Approach to Land Cover Mapping Data — Part 2 Alexa McKerrow, Biodiverisity and Spatial Analysis Center (BaSIC) Moderator: Michelle Aten, University of Mississippi Elizabeth Kramer and Amy Silvano Room: Governor’s Square 10

Distributed Processing of Hyperspectral Images Stefan A Robila, Montclair State University

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 60 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 61 -117- -119- GeoCover – Ortho — Part 2: Landsat National (& Global) Spatial Data Infrastructure Applications on a Global Scale (continued) and its Activities with the National Map Special Session organized by Jon Dykstra, Earth Satellite Corporation Program, the President’s Management Program (Invited Presentations) Moderator: Gregory T. Koeln, Earth Satellite Corporation on E-Gov and the Geospatial One-Stop Portal Room: Governor’s Square 12 — Part 9: First Steps Toward Implementing The National Map (continued) Deriving Products from GeoCover Ortho Imagery Special session sponsored by the Federal Geographic Data Committee, and David J. Cunningham, Earth Satellite Corporation organized by Kari Craun, U.S. Geological Survey Jeannine E. Melican, Eric Wemmelmann, and Gregory T. Koeln (Invited Presentations) Moderator: Kari Craun, U.S. Geological Survey Tropical Deforestation in Madagascar: Pre-human to the Room: Governor’s Square 17 Third Millenium Compton J. Tucker, NASA National Map Partnerships: Lessons Learned in the Pilots and Early Implementations Global, Regional and Local Applications of the GeoCover Vicki Lukas, U.S. Geological Survey Product Benjamin White, University of Maryland Graphic Product Generation Using The National Map Paul Davis, J.R.G. Townshend, and Sung-Hee Kim Mark Eaton, U.S. Geological Survey

Integration of The National Map: Data Layers and Features -118- Michael P. Finn, U. S. Geological Survey E. Lynn Usery, Bryan Weaver, Gregory M. Jaromack, and Michael Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 13: Starbuck Terrestrial Laser Scanning Special Session sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures. Moderator: Jan A.N. van Aardt, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State -120- University Urban Applications of the Geospatial Sciences Room: Governor’s Square 15 — Part 7: GIS Applications in Transportation Moderator: Lindi J. Quackenbush, SUNY The Role of Terrestrial Laser Scanning in Assessing Forest Room: Governor’s Square 14 Attributes P.J. Radtke, Virginia Tech RS/GIS Data Fusion Model for Infrastructure

J. G. Henning, S.C. Popescu, and R.H. Wynne Environmental Assessment th El-Gafy, Mohamed, Florida State University Building Modeling from Lidar and Aerial Imagery Yassir AbdelRazig Jinhui Hu Ulrich Neumann and Suya You Cumulative Effects Assessment Modeling Along Colorado’s Front Range Registration of Photogrammetric Imagery and Laser Lynn E. Johnson*, University of Colorado at Denver Scanner Point Clouds John Wyckoff*, Nguyet Thi Phan, Fred Nuzdorfer and Ulzii Eric Kwabena Forkuo, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, China Vanderchoi Bruce Anthony King Emerging Technologies for Transportation Infrastructure Management: Route Selection Example El-Gafy, Mohamed, Florida State University Yassir AbdelRazig Thursday, May 27

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 60 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 61 Continuedfrom Thursday, May 27 th,11:00 am to 12:00 noon -123- Analysis Techniques for Feature Extraction -121- — Part 3: Feature Extraction of Buildings and Web-based GIS — Part 2: Standards to Enable Urban Features Web-based GIS Moderator: James H. Horne, Space Imaging Moderator: Jeffrey M. Young, Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping, LLC Room: Plaza Court 1 Room: Governor’s Square 16 Automatic Building Extraction from IKONOS Imagery SQL Supported Spatial Analysis for Web-GIS Donna Haverkamp, Space Imaging Jun Wang, Purdue University Jie Shan Inferring Missing Road Segments by Context in Automatic Road Extraction Open Coverage Interface on the Web Service Architecture Yandong Wang, Z/I Imaging Corporation Eunkyu Lee, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI), Korea Mi-Jeong Kim, Minsoo Kim, and Byung-Tae Jang Using Context, Snake and Model as Guide for Building Extraction from Urban Aerial Images Web-based GML Service Using SOAP Jing Peng, Shanghai Jiaotong University, China Eunkyu Lee, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI), Korea Yuncai Liu Byoung-Woo Oh, Minsoo Kim, and Byung-Tae Jang -124- Educational Sessions GIS as a Decision Support System — Part 1: GIS for Environmental and Cultural Decision Making 1:00 pm to 2:20 pm Moderator: Glenn Reese, Space Imaging Room: Plaza Court 4

GIS Applications in Growth Management: The Case of -122- Central Mississippi Career Development – Part 3: Steps to Edmund C. Merem, Jackson State University Employment — Examples and Discussion Yaw A. Twumasi Special session sponsored and organized by the Education and Professional Development Committee of ASPRS Wind Farm Siting Using GIS in Western North Carolina (Invited Presentations) Xingong Li, University of Kansas Moderator: Jaymes Pardue, VARGIS Room: Plaza Court 3 The Prospect and Challenges of Implementing Geographic Information System (GIS) in Nigeria Panelists: David Udoma-Michaels, Ene Consulting, Nigeria Tina Cary, Cary and Associates Bob Sturtevant, Colorado State Forest Service Ben Novy, Northrop Grumman Mission Systems -125- Global and National Land Cover Data Bases: Status and Utilization Moderator: Roger M. Hoffer, Colorado State University, (retired) Room: Governor’s Square 11

Global Land Cover Mapping and Characterization: Present Situation and Future Research Chandra Prasad Giri, SAIC/EROS Data Center Zhiliang Zhu and Thomas Loveland

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 62 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 63 Status of the 2001 National Land Cover Database for the United States -127- Collin Homer, SAIC/EROS Data Center Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 15: Data Limin Yang, Mike Coan, Jon DeWitz, and Bruce Wylie Processing (continued) Special Session sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric Utility of the 2001 National Land Cover Database for Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures. Extrapolating Additional Local Land Cover Classes Moderator: Aparajithan Sampath, Purdue University Jon Dewitz, U.S. Geological Survey Room: Governor’s Square 10 Collin Homer, Limin Yang, Bruce Wylie, and Mike Coan Eliminating Data Redundancy in Lidar Elevation Data Strategy for Outsourced Land Cover Product Validation: An Greg Mauldin, Tallahassee-Leon County GIS Example from the NOAA Coastal Services John Marquez Marcia Ruble, NOAA Coastal Services Center Chris Robinson and Shan Burkhalter Semi-Automated Extraction and Visualization of Channel Morphology from Lidar and IFSAR Terrain Data Scott N. Miller, University of Wyoming -126- Sudhir Raj Shrestha* Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 14: Filtering “Bare Earth” Lidar Topographic Data Applications in Forestry (continued) Amar Nayegandhi, ETI Professionals, Inc. Special Session sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric John C. Brock, C. Wayne Wright, Tonya D. Clayton, and Lance A. Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures. Mosher Moderator: Bruce A. Davis, NASA Stennis Space Center Room: Governor’s Square 15 Hierarchical Recovery of Digital Terrain Models from Single and Multiple Returns Lidar Data Estimating Forest Crown Fuel Variables Using Lidar Data Yong Hu, York University, Canada Hans-Erik Andersen, University of Washington Vincent Tao* Ward Carson, Robert McGaughey, Stephen Reutebuch, and Gerard Schreuder

Using Multi-spectral Imagery and Multi-return Lidar -128- to Estimate Tree and Stand Attributes in a Southern The Art and Science of Photogrammetry — Part Bottomland Hardwood Forest 9: Airborne Sensor Workflow Curtis A. Collins, Mississippi State University Moderator: Lewis Graham, NIIRS10 Robert C. Parker, David L. Evans, and Keith L. Belli Room: Governor’s Square 12 Progress in Ground Processing Workflow for Leica Using Lidar to Evaluate Forest Characteristics in Louisiana th John C. Craig, 3001, Inc. ADS40 Imagery Peter Briere* Roger Pacey, Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping, LLC Peter Fricker and A. Stewart Walker Forest Stand Type Classification Using Airborne Lidar and Landsat Data: Comparison of Supervised Classification and From Raw Airborne Pushbroom Data to Fully Corrected Rule-based Classification Using Logistic Regression and Referenced Images: The Leica ADS40 Calibration Ikuko Fujisaki, Mississippi State University and Correction Chain David L. Evans A. Stewart Walker, Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping, LLC Peter Fricker, Udo Tempelmann, and Neil Woodhouse

Operational Aspects of Digital Mapping Camera DMC Klaus J. Neumann, Z/I Imaging GmbH, Germany

Remote Sensing Capabilities from Near Space Greg Palka, U.S. Army, Space and Missile Defense Battle Lab Thursday, May 27

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 62 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 63 Continuedfrom Thursday, May 27 th,1:00 pm to 2:20 pm -131- Web-Based GIS — Part 3: Web-Enabled -129- Distributed and Mobile Processing Sensor Quality Validation and Verification — Moderator: Douglas S. Ouren, U.S. Geological Survey Room: Governor’s Square 16 Part 1: Sensor Radiometric Calibration Moderator: Fei Ma, Digital Aerial Solutions, LLC Geometric Modelling and Processing of Quick Bird Stereo Room: Governor’s Square 14 Imagery Relative Radiometric Correction of QuickBird Imagery Xutong Niu, Ohio State University Ron Li Using the Side-Slither Technique On-orbit Brad Henderson, Los Alamos National Lab Design and Implementation of a Map Service System in Keith Krause Mobile Environment On-orbit Image Quality and Radiometric Accuracy JaeJun Yoo, ETRI (Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute), Korea Hea-Ok Choi and Jong-Hun Lee Characterization of the OrbView-3 High Resolution Imaging Satellite Kevin Kohm, ORBIMAGE Nour Tira -132- Remote Sensing and GIS for Mapping and On-orbit Spatial Image Quality Assessment of the Digital Assessing Wetlands Globe QuickBird Instrument-Panchromatic Band Moderator: Ming Xie, Old Dominion University Paul Scott, DigitalGlobe Room: Governor’s Square 17

Relative and Absolute Radiometric Performance of The New National Wetland Inventory QuickBird Brian Huberty, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Keith Krause, DigitalGlobe An Examination of Multi-Band Multi-Polarization Radar Data for Forested Wetland Identification in New Hampshire -130- Susan E. Campbell, University of New Hampshire Data Visualization — Tools, Techniques and Mark J. Ducey and William A. Salas Applications Mangrove Forest Dynamics Study with High Spatial Moderator: George R. Hoffman, EarthData Technologies Resolution Imagery Room: Plaza Court 2 Le Wang, University of California – Berkeley Wayne Sousa and Peng Gong Virtual 3D Urban: VR and Internet GIS for Urban Planning and Environmental Analysis Integrated Remote Sensing and Field Techniques for Guoqing Zhou, Old Dominion University Predicting, Assessing and Managing Phragmites australis in Zhenyu Tan, Ming Xie, and Jianfeng Tang South Carolina Estuaries Samuel P. Walker, University of South Carolina Automatic Image Fusion and Web-based Automatic Color Dwayne E. Porter 3D Visualization Yun Zhang, University of New Brunswick, Canada Pingping Xie

*Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 64 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 65 Improvement of Image Fusion Quality by Integrating Wavelet Technical Tour Transform into Band Substitution Fusion Techniques 2:30 pm Yun Zhang, University of New Brunswick, Canada Gang Hong

Tour A Merging Multi-resolution Satellite Data Sets for Seamless Spectrum Mapping Training Environments Janice Kinnin*, DigitalGlobe Spectrum Mapping, LLC offers a full spectrum of aerial mapping solutions. While the name is new in the industry, the companies that Tom Kubancik* now make up Spectrum Mapping bring over 25 years of successful and proven mapping, remote sensing, and software development Multisensor Aerial Remote Sensing Image Registration experience, allowing the company to offer a complete suite of solutions Hongya Tuo, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China in the following core mapping areas: Project consulting, custom remote Lin Zhang and Yuncai Liu* sensing and GIS application development, training, aerial photography, digital terrain models and contour mapping, planimetric feature mapping, digital orthophotography, LIDAR terrain mapping, hyperspectral image mapping, digital color and color-infrared image mapping, and land cover -135- mapping. Spectrum Mapping staff have successfully provided aerial Developing Application Tool Sets photography and mapping to commercial, municipal, county, state and Moderator: Alassane Toure, GeoSpatial Partners LLC federal agencies for over two decades. Room: Governor’s Square 12 Meet in main lobby of Adam’s Mark Hotel 2:30 pm. This facility is within walking distance from the Adams Mark Hotel. (No transportation A Toolkit For Quantifying Linear Feature Extraction will be provided.) Tour cost $10. Reservations must be made and tickets Performance purchased at ASPRS Registratin Desk, Plaza Level, no later than 10:00 Suyoung Seo, Mississippi State University am, Thursday, May 27th. CE90 Toolkit: A Horizontal Accuracy Assessment Tool Educational Sessions Anil Cheriyadat, Mississippi State University 2:30 pm to 3:50 pm L-FAT - Linear Feature Analysis Tool Anil Cheriyadat, Mississippi State University -133- Career Development — Part 4: University -136- Opportunities in the Geospatial Sciences GIS as a Decision Support System — Part Special session sponsored and organized by the Education and Professional 2: Data Analysis Techniques and Development Committee of ASPRS. Moderator: Michael E. Hodgson, University of South Carolina Implementation th Room: Plaza Court 3 Moderator: Kevin Hutchins Room: Plaza Court 4 University faculty members will be available to discuss their geospatial science programs and will have handout materials about their pro- grams. This session should be of special interest to current college stu- Basic GIS Coordinates Building a Coordinate System dents considering graduate studies in the geospatial sciences. Jan Van Sickle, V3 Consultants Map Mosaicking with Dissimilar Projections Spatial -134- Resolutions, Data Types & Number of Bands Multi-source Data Fusion Tyler Jefreey Alumbaugh, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Moderator: Gene Dial, Space Imaging Peter Bajcsy* Room: Plaza Court 1 Spatial Patterns of Place Names, Diffusion Processes and Precision Automatic Co-registration Procedures for the Relationship with Terrain Geometry Spacecraft Sensors Urbano Fra, University of Extremadura, Spain Nevin A. Bryant, NASA/JPL

Albert L. Zobrist and Thomas l. Logan Thursday, May 27 *Indicates multiple presenters, or a presenter other than the senior author. 64 No asterisk indicates that the presenter is the senior author. 65 Continuedfrom Thursday, May 27 th,2:30 pm to 3:50 pm -138- Sensor Quality Validation and Verification — -137- Part 2: Sensor Geometric Calibration Lidar Sensors and Applications — Part 16: Lidar Moderator: Jolyon D. Thurgood, Vexcel Imaging Room: Governor’s Square 14 Mapping - Project Examples Special session sponsored by the Lidar Committee of the Photogrammetric On-orbit Geometric Calibration of the OrbView-3 High Applications Division, and organized by Martin Flood, 3Sigma Ventures. Resolution Imaging Satellite Moderator: Andre Samberg, AVAPROedu David Mulawa, ORBIMAGE Room: Governor’s Square 15 QuickBird Geolocation Accuracy Lidar, Aerial Photography and GIS — Today’s Tools for Will Colwell, DigitalGlobe Resource Management for Klondike Gold Rush National Jerry Smith, Chris Comp, and Woodson Bercaw Historical Park in Alaska Meg Hahr, Aeromap U.S. Georeferencing the DMC Images - Data Flow and John N. Ellis and Steven Jones* Performance Analysis Mostafa Madani, Z/I Imaging Corporation Applications of Lidar Elevation Data in the Polar Desert Mohamed Mostafa Cheryl A. Hallam, U.S. Geological Survey A Comparison Study on SPOT-5 and ASTER Sensor Mapping on a Grand Scale, Validating Lidar Data in the Modeling Grand Canyon Fei Ma, Digital Aerial Solutions, LLC Morgan D. Reed, John Chance Land Surveys, Inc. Phil Davis and Blaine Thibodeaux

Planning/Managing/Executing A Statewide Lidar Program Robert A. Ryan, EarthData International of NC

Images to Decisions: Remote Sensing Foundations for GIS Applications September 12-16, 2004 Kansas City, Missouri

Images courtesy of Airborne 1 and Stockbyte. 66 67 Friday, May 28th Time Event Room Attending 6:30 am to 5:00 pm Classified Symposium -- Mountains of DataèPeak Decisions Northrop Grumman, Auditorium 8:30 am Technical Tours Tour C — DigitalGlobe Tour D — Jeppesen Meet in main lobby of the Adam’s Mark Hotel

Classified Symposium Tour D Mountains of DataèPeak Decisions Jeppesen Sponsored by National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) Jeppesen, now a Boeing subsidiary, is a world leader in publishing print 6:30 am to 5:00 pm and electronic navigation data for the aviation and marine industries. Northrop Grumman, El Capitan Auditorium Jeppessen provides aviation navigation and airport mapping charts for Buses transporting classified symposium attendees will begin loading 90% of the world’s airlines, and for many business aviation and private in front of the Adams Mark Hotel main entrance at 6:30 am and depart pilot customers. It annually publishes more than 2 billion aviation promptly at 6:45 am for the Northrup Grumman Facility, Aurora, charts. Jeppesen invested heavily during the past several years to Colorado. The facility is a 30-minute drive from the hotel. It is necessary convert its vast databases for electronic distribution via the Internet for all participants to arrive at Northrup Grumman by 7:15 am for and by satellite. The tour will examine how the company is applying processing and a security briefing. The classified symposium will begin GIS in support of several areas of the business. Jeppesen will discuss at 8:00 am and conclude at 5:00 pm. the development of synthetic vision products for use in the cockpit in conjunction with several NASA-funded research projects, and will also describe the use of satellite imagery in the development of geo- referenced airport mapping databases. These airport maps are being Technical Tours developed for 300 airports worldwide and will be used in the cockpit and in other airport GIS applications. 8:30 am Buses will depart the Adam’s Mark Hotel at 8:30 am and will return to the Adam’s Mark Hotel at approximately 12:30 pm. The tour

duration is approximately 2 hours plus travel time. Tickets for this th Tour C tour must be purchased no later than 10:00 am, Thursday, May 27th at the ASPRS Registration Desk on the Plaza Level. Tour cost DigitalGlobe is $25. Buses will depart the Adam’s Mark Hotel at 8:30 am and will return to the Adam’s Mark Hotel at approximately 12:30 pm. The tour duration is approximately 2 hours plus travel time. to Fri.28to th Thurs.,27 66 67 Exhibit Hall Floor Plan Floor HallExhibit 68 69 Exhibitor Booth # Exhibitor Booth # AGFA Corporation 421 LizardTech, Inc. 502 Airborne 1 Corporation 410 Merrick & Company 809 American City & County 925 Mosaic Mapping Systems Inc. 710 American Geological Institute 925 NASA Earth Science Enterprise 912 American Surveyor 925 National Geodetic Survey 718 AMPEX DATA SYSTEMS CORP. 516 National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) 500 Analytical Spectral Devices, Inc. 517 NavCom Technology, Inc. 408 Applanix 320 NIIRS10, Inc. 708 Association of American Geographers 619 North West Group 400 ASPRS 300 Optech Incorporated 416 BAE SYSTEMS Mission Solutions 316 ORBIMAGE Inc. 818 BOEING 420 PCI Geomatics 424 Cardinal Systems, LLC 807 Point of Beginning (POB) 925 CRC Press 814 Positive Systems, Inc. 529 DAT/EM Systems International 808 Precision Photo & Imaging Inc. 512 Definiens Imaging GmbH 510 Professional Surveyor 700 DigitalGlobe 513 Prompt/MAPS geosystems 509 DIMAC SYSTEMS 908 RADARSAT International 613 DVP Geomatic Systems Inc. 712 Richardson Electronics 506 Dynamic Aviation 324 RSI 310 Eagle Mapping Ltd. –An ISO 9001 Company 505 Rollei Fototechnic GmbH 518 EarthData International 404 Sanborn 519 Eastman Kodak Company 411 SANZ Inc. 714 Earth Observation Magazine (EOM) 700 Space Imaging 1002 Earth Satellite Corporation (EarthSat) 328 Space News 925 E. Coyote Enterprises, Inc. 719 Spectrum Mapping, LLC 525 ESRI 1006 TerraPoint USA, Inc. 710 ETRI 716 TerraSim Inc. 913 GEOGRAPHIC RESOURCE SOLUTIONS 617 Terrasolid Ltd. 706 Geospatial Solutions 520 The Military Engineer Magazine 925 GeoTango International Corp. 428 Titan Systems Geospatial 504 GeoTec Media 816 TopoSys Topographische Systemdaten GmbH 919 GeoVantage, Inc. 507 US Army Engineer Research and Development Center 406 GITC bv 700 US Geological Survey 821 HAS Images, Inc 412 Vexcel Corporation 715 HORIZONS, INC. 524 Visual Learning Systems Inc 326 INPHO 808 VXServices, LLC 906 Institute for Advanced Education in GeoSpatial Sciences 511 Wehrli & Associates Inc. 503 ISM International Systemap Corp. 1012 Western Air Maps, Inc. 427 ITRES Research Limited 429 Z Corporation 508 KLT Associates, Inc. 501 Z/I Imaging Corporation 902

Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping 804 Exhibitor Listing 68 69 AGFA Corporation American Geological Institute 100 Challenger Road 4220 King Street Ridgefield Park, N. J. 07660 Alexandria, VA 22302 (201) 440-2500; (201) 440-6794 Fax; www.agfa.com (703) 379-2480; (703) 379-7563 Fax; www.agiweb.org Booth 421 Booth 925 AGFA Corporation offers a complete assortment of aerial black and Global GIS - Global Coverage DVD. 1st edition P. Hearn, Jr., T. Hare, P. white and color films, papers, cartographic reproduction films, and Schruben, D. Sherrill, C.LaMar, P.Tsushima Chemistry. The unique characteristics of AGFA’s Aerial films provides This DVD-ROM contains a digital atlas of the entire planet. This optimum results with a variety of ground conditions. AGFA’s Aerial atlas is the flagship product of a global database compiled from the film assortment can provide superior results at all altitudes. AGFA USGS and other data sources at a nominal scale of 1:1 million. The offers a large assortment of Wide Format Sherpa Inkjet printers and atlas includes free GIS software or may by used with ESRI’s ArcView media for exceptional digital color reproduction. 3.x software. Customized ArcView tools are also included. Order at www.agiweb.org/pubs. Airborne 1 Corporation 300 N. Sepulveda Blvd., Suite 1060 American Surveyor El Segundo, CA 90245 905 W. 7th St., #331 (310) 414-7400; (310) 414-7409 Fax Frederick, MD 21701 www.airborne1.com; [email protected] (301) 668-8887; www.theamericansurveyor.com Booth 410 Booth 925 Airborne 1 Corporation provides advanced LiDAR technology and American Surveyor is the only national magazine for land surveyors asset management for the photogrammetry, surveying and mapping that is owned and operated by licensed surveyors. Editor Marc Cheves, sectors. From Turnkey Services, to Software/Training, to Rentals, to LS, leads a stellar team of nationally recognized industry professionals Fractional Ownership Plans, we enable professionals to effectively who share valuable expertise and insight on business, technology, enter the LiDAR market without incurring in the high costs of owning GPS, real property case law, current legislation, controversial issues, a sensor. Our digital mapping services include a dedicated team education, product reviews, fascinating history, and much more. of LiDAR experts; state-of-the-art Optech sensors; LiDAR survey coordination and project management; data processing analysis and application development. AMPEX DATA SYSTEMS CORP. 1228 Douglas Redwood City, CA 94063 American City & County (605) 367-2011; (605) 367-4669 Fax 6151 Powers Ferry Road NW www.ampexdata.com Atlanta, GA 30339-2941 Booth 516 (770) 618-0119; (770) 618-0349 Fax www.americancityandcounty.com High Performance Storage/Archival Systems, DCRsi Ruggedized Tape Recorders, Solid State Recording Systems, Instrumentation Disk and Booth 925 Tape Recording Solutions American City & County has served as the voice of local government since 1909. As the only publication dedicated to the $917 Billion Marketplace, AC&C embraces the issues and trends impacting Analytical Spectral Devices, Inc. 5335 Sterling Dr., Ste. A municipal government, including public works, technology, water, Boulder, CO 80301 infrastructure, solid waste, homeland security, and much more. (303) 444.6522; (303) 444.6825 Fax; www.asdi.com; [email protected] Booth 517 ASD manufactures the highest quality UV/Vis/NIR spectroradiometers, and the only self-powered, truly portable, full range field systems for remote sensing. Our instruments are rapid, sensitive, and incredibly rugged. Delivering the performance you would expect in a lab system, even in harsh environments, ASD¹s user friendly instrumentation and software are dramatically enhancing the quality, productivity and efficiency of applications requiring measurement of radiance, irradiance, reflectance, or transmission. 70 71 Applanix BAE SYSTEMS Mission Solutions 85 Leek Crescent 10920 Technology Place Richmond Hill, ON San Diego, CA 92127 L4B 3B3 Canada (800) 316-9643; www.socetset.com (905) 709-4600, (905)709-6027 Fax; www.applanix.com Booth 316 Booth 320 BAE Systems Mission Solutions is the forerunner in developing Applanix, established in 1991, a wholly owned subsidiary of Trimble high-quality image exploitation and archiving systems for stereo Navigation, develops, manufactures, sells and supports precision photogrammetry, photo interpretation, and mapping, charting and products that accurately and robustly measure the position and geodesy applications. Geospatial eXploitation Products™, a line orientation of vehicles in dynamic environments. Applanix Position of business within Mission Solutions, supplies SOCET SETÒ and and Orientation Systems (POST) are used in a variety of applications VITecÒ software, enabling imagery processing professionals to including road profiling, GIS data acquisition, aerial survey and create exploitable geospatial intelligence data by rapidly importing mapping, railroad track maintenance and seafloor mapping. Applanix and processing commercial and government imagery and exporting strives to support customers around the world with exceptional industry-standard data. Stop by our booth for information and product service - anywhere, at anytime. demonstrations.

Association of American Geographers BOEING 1710 16th Street NW 7700 Boston Blvd. Washington, DC 20009 Springfield, VA 22153 (202) 234-1450; (202) 234-2744 Fax; www.aag.org (703) 923-4000; (703) 932-4001 Fax; www.boeing.com Booth 619 Booth 420

The Association of American Geographers (AAG)is a scientific and Boeing is an industry leader in the digital photogrammetric products educational society founded in 1904, with 8,000+ members from 62 market, is demonstrating their suite of spatial data production software. countries, who share interests in the theory, methods, and practice Featured products include SoftPlotter™, an end-to-end softcopy system, of geography, which they cultivate through the Annual Meeting, two and KDMS, a robust vector collection package designed specifically for journals (Annals of the Association of American Geographers and photogrammetry. The Professional Geographer), and the monthly newsletter. For 100 years the AAG has contributed to the advancement of geography by Cardinal Systems, LLC conducting educational and research projects promoting geographic 609 Shearwood Drive understanding, literacy, and learning. Flagler Beach, FL 32136 (386) 439-2525; (386) 439-0259 Fax; www.vrone.com ASPRS Booth 807 5410 Grosvenor Lane With a long and successful history of developing photogrammetric Bethesda, MD 20814 and mapping solutions, Cardinal provides the most efficient, (301) 493-0290; (301) 493-0208 Fax; www.asprs.org pragmatic mapping tools available today. Now offering VrOne, Booth 300 VrTwo, VrOrtho, VrAirTrig and VrMosaic we are continually Visit the ASPRS Bookstore and browse through our variety of developing fresh new programs in the imagery area and Vr is fast publications. We will have the newly published Manual of Remote becoming the standard. Future products include a low-cost, entry- Sensing, Volume 4, Remote Sensing for Natural Resource Management level VrLite version of VrOne as well as continued enhancement and and Environmental Management available for purchase. Take development of our existing product line. Come see a demo now! advantage of discounts during the show. We hope you’ll stop by to learn more about upcoming ASPRS conferences, including our 2004 specialty conference in Kansas City, Missouri. ASPRS staff members are available to answer questions and to help you sign up for ASPRS membership. Make sure to pick up a free copy of PE&RS. Exhibitor Directory 70 71 CRC Press DigitalGlobe 2000 NW Corporate Drive 1900 Pike Road Boca Raton, FL 33431 Longmont, CO 80501 (561) 998-2525; (561) 998-0876 Fax; www.crcpress.com (303) 682-3800; (303) 682-3848 Fax; www.digitalglobe.com Booth 814 Booth 513 CRC Press, a Member of the Taylor & Francis Group is a premier DigitalGlobe, an imagery and information company located in publisher of Remote Sensing and GIS titles. Our new titles include: Longmont, Colorado, is building a constellation of high-resolution GIS, Environmental Modelling and Engineering; Thermal Remote earth imaging satellites and a comprehensive geo-information product Sensing in Land Surface Processes; Telegeoinformatics: Location- store. DigitalGlobe provides access to a wide variety of imagery based Computing and Services; Basic GIS Coordinates; and GIS: A and derivative information products, including our 60-centimeter Computing Perspective, Second Edition. For more information about panchromatic and 2.4-meter multispectral imagery--the highest these titles and more, please visit our website: www.crcpress.com. resolution satellite imagery available commercially. DigitalGlobe is establishing a market leadership position by providing the highest- resolution satellite imagery product offering the greatest collection DAT/EM Systems International capacity, and the largest image size commercially available. 8240 Sandlewood Place, Suite 101 Anchorage, AK 99507 (907) 522-3681; (907) 522-3688 Fax DIMAC SYSTEMS www.datem.com; [email protected] Luxembourg (Europe) (011) 352 2651 2166; (011) 352 2651 2165 Fax Booth 808 www.dimacsystems.com; [email protected] DAT/EM Systems International, an innovative leader in the development of software for digital mapping and photogrammetric Booth 908 applications, proudly serves and supports over 350 photogrammetric DIMAC Systems is finalizing the development of the DIMAC camera, firms, engineering firms, and government agencies in more than 60 a revolutionary large format Digital Modular Aerial Camera designed countries. DAT/EM’s Summit Evolution™ softcopy system and other to replace film-based aerial cameras, enabling small, medium or software titles are constantly evolving to meet our clients’ needs. We large scale mapping. Its modular design fits every image operator’s welcome suggestions and consider our clients to be an integral part of needs, allowing to combine 1, 2, 3 or 4 camera modules together the development process. Please stop by our booth and see what our (true-color and IR) and producing 1, 2, 3 or 4 juxtaposed images. innovative software is up to this year. Its very reasonable price makes this system affordable for any photogrammetric companies. Definiens Imaging GmbH Trappentreustrasse 1 80339 München DVP Geomatic Systems Inc. Germany 49 du Bel-Air, Suite. 203 (49) 89-231180-45; (49) 89-231180-80 Fax Québec, QC, Canada, G6V 6K9 www.definiens-imaging.com (418) 838-8880; (418) 838-4402 Fax; CAN/USA 1-800-363-9513 www.dvp-gs.com Booth 510 Definiens Imaging has provided solutions for the geomatics market Booth 712 for several years. Founded in 2001 in Munich, Germany, by Gerd DVP-GS is dedicated to providing photogrammetric software for the Binnig, Nobel-laureate for physics, Definiens Imaging is the world’s most demanding professionals. Our team of experts is focused on sole provider of object-oriented image classification software and delivering to mapping and GIS professionals a comprehensive and associated services. Our eCognition software offers a unique approach complete family of products, designed to attain the combined goals to image classification. It makes image classification more intelligent, of precision and productivity. Furthermore, since 1989, we have been more accurate, and more efficient. The eCognition product family recognized by the marketplace as a client-oriented organization: we currently comprises 4 distinct products: eCognition Professional, deliver free and efficient technical support and tailor-made training. If eCognition Elements, eCognition Enterprise, and eCognition Forester. you are looking for high accuracy, user-friendliness, productivity and compatibility, think DVP-GS.

72 73 Dynamic Aviation Eastman Kodak Company Post Office Box 7 343 State St. 1402 Airport Road Rochester, NY 14650-0505 Bridgewater, VA 22812 (585) 724-4688; (585) 724-4806 Fax (540) 828-6070; (540) 828-4031 Fax [email protected] ; www.kodak.com/go.aerial www.dynamicaviation.com/aerial.htm Booth 411 Booth 324 Eastman Kodak Company’s Aerial Imaging group’s solutions span Dynamic Aviation specializes in providing aircraft and aviation a portfolio of large format color, color infrared and black & white infrastructure to agencies and organizations with exacting data film, chemicals, precision ground handling equipment and technical needs, but lacking aviation assets and expertise. We do not own support services providing innovative imaging solutions to help aerial cameras or remote sensors. We offer versatile, superior aerial you take, use and get information from images. We’re continually platforms into which these technologies can be installed to acquire all developing new products and solutions and evolving our methods types of data. Our aerial platforms can be deployed to validate satellite of service and support. For more information on our Aerial imaging information, obtain LIDAR, multispectral and hyperspectral data. They offering, please visit www.kodak.com/go/aerial. may be used for aerial photography, magnetometry, and air sampling; as well as for aerial and maritime surveillance. Earth Observation Magazine (EOM) 100 Tuscanny Drive, Suite B-1 Eagle Mapping Ltd. –An ISO 9001 Company Frederick, MD 21702-5958 USA #201 (301) 682-6101; (301) 682-6105 Fax 2071 Kingsway Avenue [email protected]; www.eomonline.com Port Coquitlan Booth 700 B.C. Canada VBV 6N2 (604) 942-5551; (604) 942-5951 Fax; (877) 942-5551 Toll Free Earth Observation Magazine (EOM) is designed for practitioners www.eaglemapping.com in governmental, natural resources, and commercial enterprises. Monthly articles focus on tools and developments in remote sensing Booth 505 technology, satellite imagery, digital aerial photography, digital Eagle Mapping has been providing a complete range of mapping topographic datasets and more. EOM is published by GITC America, services since 1985. We provide aerial photography, satellite imagery, Inc. which also publishes Professional Surveyor Magazine and GIS survey control, digital topographic mapping and orthophotography. Monitor. Proud to be one of Canada’s only ISO9001:2000 registered mapping companies, we use the latest technology including softcopy. With offices in Canada, Chile and Peru, and affiliates worldwide, Eagle Earth Satellite Corporation (EarthSat) 6011 Executive Boulevard, Suite 400 Mapping has the experience to deliver top quality, we boast 97% Rockville, MD 20852 client satisfaction rating as determined by our on-line survey. (240) 833-8200; (240) 833-8201 Fax www.earthsat.com; www.goecover.com EarthData International Booth 328 7320 Executive Way Frederick, MD 21704 Earth Satellite Corporation (EarthSat), of Rockville, Maryland, is a (301) 948-8550; (301) 963-2064 Fax leading provider of remote sensing and GIS services to federal, state and local agencies, international organizations, and private Booth 404 companies. Established in 1969, EarthSat specializes in all-source EarthData has served private-sector, state, local, federal, and DoD satellite image processing (orthorectification, multi-resolution agencies and intelligence community clients worldwide since 1955. merging, mosaicking, and digital printing), advanced image Under the mandates of an ISO-certified quality system, EarthData interpretation, landcover mapping, change detection, GIS modeling, employs its own fleet of aircraft with state-of-the-art remote sensing weather forecasting, crop monitoring, geological interpretation, equipment, research and development teams, three geospatial data feature extraction, hyperspectral applications, and the continuous and intelligence production facilities, exclusive GeoSAR and ISTAR monitoring of the Earth¹s resources. mapping services, and international affiliations to support domestic and international programs for designing, planning, developing, and managing geospatial information and systems. Exhibitor Directory 72 73 E. Coyote Enterprises, Inc. Geospatial Solutions P. O. Box 1119 485 Route One South Mineral Wells, TX 76068 Building F - First Floor (940) 325-0757; (940) 325-0941 Fax; www.ecoyote.com Iselin, NJ 08830 (732) 346-3055 Booth 719 Booth 520 Geospatial Solutions is the most objective and authoritative resource ESRI for the community of professionals who develop and deploy GIS 380 New York Street and related spatial technologies. The magazine highlights practical Redlands, CA 92373-8100 applications of GIS, GPS, remote sensing, and mobile technologies (909) 793-2853; (909) 793-5953 Fax; www.esri.com in diverse application environments. Its editorial provides solutions- Booth 1006 based case studies; timely news about product launches, policy With annual sales of more than $469 million, ESRI remains the world initiatives, market developments, and technical innovations; and leader in the geographic information system (GIS) software industry. management and technology tutorials. Our business involves the development and support of GIS software for all types of organizations--from the one-person office to multinational GeoTango International Corp. corporations to innovative Internet GIS solutions. 4850 Keele Street Suite 200 Toronto, Ontario ETRI Canada M3J 3K1 Telematics Research Division (416) 665-5467; (416) 665.2032 Fax; www.geotango.com +82-42-860-1629 ; +82-42-860-4844 Fax Booth 428 Booth 716 GeoTango offers cutting edge geospatial software and services. We Established in 1976, ETRI is a non-profit government-funded research own unique and powerful technologies that support Internet-based organization of Korea. ETRI-telematics research division develops and distributed 2D/3D Spatial Visualization, Image-based Mapping solutions and technology for telematics and spatial-information. and 3D information extraction tools. GeoTango technologies bring the Recently, our research institute has successfully developed information benefits of imagery and spatial data to novice users while meeting technologies such as 4S (SIIS, GNSS, ITS, GIS)-Van and IRHIS (Integrated the needs of the most demanding professionals. Our flagship product Remote Sensing Software for High-resolution images). SilverEye is capable of using a single image to construct 3D urban models quickly and cost-effectively at sub-meter accuracy. GEOGRAPHIC RESOURCE SOLUTIONS 1125 16th Street, Suite 213 GeoTec Media Arcata California 95521 6666 Gunpark Drive, Suite 102 (707) 822-8005 Boulder, CO 80301 (303) 544-0594; (303) 544-0595 Fax; www.geoplace.com 700 West 41st Avenue, Suite 200 Anchorage, Alaska 99503 Booth 816 (907) 563-9511 GeoTec Media, a division of Adams Business Media, is the authoritative [email protected]; www.grsgis.com resource for spatial information. GeoTec Media has been providing guidance for practitioners and a voice for vendors for seventeen Booth 617 years as the publisher of GeoWorld magazine, the developer of the GRS is an industry leader in GIS and Remote Sensing services and GeoPlace.com Web portal, and the organizer for the GeoTec Event. consulting. GRS is internationally known for innovative techniques If you have a product or service that you are marketing to geospatial enabling us to perform highly detailed and accurate classifications technology professionals, we offer numerous opportunities that will of land-cover, fire-fuels, and habitat in projects ranging from a ensure your success. few hundred to millions of acres. GRS has developed state-of-the- art algorithms and processes for image classification, fire-hazard modeling, data-entry, and GIS data validation. GRS also provides customized training, system design, and data conversion services supporting all major GIS applications.

74 75 GeoVantage, Inc. HORIZONS, INC. P.O. Box 147 3600 Jet Drive 12 Pine Street Rapid City, SD 57703 Swampscott, MA 01907 (605) 343.0280; (605) 343.0305 Fax; www.horizonzinc.com (781) 599-4664; (781) 592-8232 Fax; www.geovantage.com Booth 524 Booth 507 Since 1968, Horizons has grown to a position of leadership in the field GeoVantage, Inc. is an information technology company specializing of photogrammetry and remote sensing. Service “from the ground in digital aerial imagery using GPS, Inertial Measurement Units and up” includes survey, aerial photography, LiDAR, thermal, Airborne a 4-band digital camera configuration. GeoVantage was founded in GPS, inertial technology, GIS development, topographic mapping 1998, by seasoned remote sensing executives. Their experience is and orthophotography. Horizons is equipped and experienced in reflected in the development and deployment of 22 state of-the-art providing service to meet the needs of a diverse client base including digital sensors located throughout the US, Canada and South Africa. environmental, land development, transportation, utilities, municipal Our extensive geographic coverage and timely delivery makes GIS, hydrology and mining. GeoVantage, Inc. an ideal solution for even the most complex remote sensing needs. INPHO Smaragdweg 1 GITC bv 70174 Stuttgart, Germany PO Box 112 +49-711-228810; +49-711-2288111 Fax 8530 AC Lemmer [email protected]; www.inpho.de The Netherlands Booth 808 [email protected]; www.gitc.nl INPHO is a leading photogrammetric systems provider with more than Booth 700 1000 users in 98 countries. All components are exhibited, featuring in GITC - Netherlands-based Geomatics Information Trading Center (GITC) particular automatic aerial triangulation (MATCH-AT), true orthoimage is the leading international geomatics publishing house. Its respected generation (OrthoMaster), color balancing and ortho mosaicking titles include GIM International, Hydro International, Geomatics World (OrthoVista), and a new product for interactive DTM/LIDAR editing. (UK), Geomedia (Italy), ISPRS Highlights, and others. GITC’s North Automatic DTM generation (MATCH-T) and stereo plotting (Summit American Division, GITC America, Inc., publishes Professional Surveyor Evolution) are on show as well. A new feature is the support of Magazine, Earth Observation Magazine (EOM), and GIS Monitor. imagery from various digital aerial cameras.

HAS Images, Inc Institute for Advanced Education in GeoSpatial 136 North Saint Clair St. Sciences Suite 300 University of Mississippi Dayton, OH 45402 370 Kinard Hall University, MS 38677 (937) 222-3856; (937) 222-2443 Fax (662) 915-3900; [email protected]; www.geoworkforce.Olemiss. [email protected]; www.hasimages.com edu Booth 412 Booth 511 HAS Images, Inc. is an aerial photo processing laboratory. Our IAEGS introduces an innovative approach to delivering Remote reproduction capabilities include the specialized equipment to make Sensing instructional materials, by exposing learners to a dynamic, the complete range of conventional products from aerial films. Our expert-led environment, with immediate response and feedback, digital services include image scanning with geometric precision not limited by space or time. By amplifying current learning models using a LH Systems DSW 600 and Vexcel VX 4000 image scanners, with virtual classrooms, equipped with advanced instructions and rectification, mosaicing, and color hard-copy output to 48” x 96” using course evaluations, institutions of any size, or budget, will be able the Cymbolic Sciences Light Jet 5000 RS large format digital printer. to offer a Remote Sensing curriculum to feed the demand of an increased academic and professional pool in the GeoSpatial arena. Exhibitor Directory 74 75 ISM International Systemap Corp. Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping 1188 West Georgia Street, Suite 1800 2801 Buford Highway NE Vancouver, British Columbia Atlanta, GA 30329 Canada V6E 4A2 (404) 248-9000; (404) 248-9400 Fax; gis.leica-geosystem.com (604) 684-3750; (877) 563-1955 Toll Free; (604)684-9750 Fax Booth 804 www.askism.com Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping provides a range of hardware and Booth 1012 software that power the Geospatial Imaging Chain -- the definitive ISM introduces myPurVIEW.com industry workflow of capturing, referencing, mapping, analyzing and presenting geospatial information. Leica Geosystems provides industry-leading software to GIS and photogrammetry professionals, ITRES Research Limited as well as hardware for the high-end, production-oriented #110, 3553-31st Street N.W. photogrammetrists. Calgary, AB Canada T2L 2K7 (403) 250-9944; (403) 250-9916 Fax; [email protected]; www.itres.com Booth 429 LizardTech, Inc. The National Building ITRES provides digital airborne hyperspectral sensor technologies Suite 200 and environmental airborne mapping services. Commercial sensor 1008 Western Avenue products include the VNIR CASI-550 and wide array CASI-1500, Seattle, WA 98104 USA Thermal IR TABI, and ShortWave IR SASI. All calibrated sensor data (206) 652-5211; (206) 652-0880 Fax; www.lizardtech.com may be orthorectified using Lidar or IFSAR input. ITRES also offers experienced end-to-end environmental mapping services. ITRES Booth 502 acquires high-resolution hyperspectral and thermal data worldwide LizardTech, a Celartem company, is a worldwide leader in software for applications including wetlands, coastlines, water quality mapping, solutions that make it significantly easier to manage, distribute, and forestry, mining, and landmine and UXO detection. access digital content such as aerial photography, satellite imagery and scanned color documents. LizardTech, founded in 1992 to build valuable business solutions from technologies created by KLT Associates, Inc. the world’s leading research organizations including Los Alamos 100 Corporate Place National Laboratory and AT&T Labs, has software installed on millions Peabody, MA 01960 of desktops and integrated into a wide variety of platforms and (978) 536-9100 (978) 536-9110 Fax applications. [email protected]; www.kltassoc.com Booth 501 Merrick & Company ATLAS provides a fully integrated system for collecting, editing, and 2450 South Peoria Street retrieving geographic information, softcopy stereo data collection, Aurora, CO 80014 manipulation of TINs (Triangular Irregular networks) and production 800-544-1714, ext. 4126; www.merrick.com ortho rectification of aerial, satellite and digital imagery. A fully integrated and automated AT (Aerial Triangulation) system is available Booth 809 for even the most difficult mapping projects. Committed to providing Merrick & Company provides comprehensive, client-focused land the best service, support, and products, ATLAS becomes the only information services, including image acquisition (aerial and satellite), logical choice. Ask any of our customers. GPS Surveying, photogrammetry, Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR), LIDAR software tools, digital orthophotography processing, GIS database design and application programming. Merrick has developed proprietary software, which provides clients with several significant advantages for managing enormous amounts of LIDAR information. The MARS™ software application comprises a Windows based modular suite of tools that are used to manage field collection, production, and client deliverable workflows.

76 77 Mosaic Mapping Systems Inc. NavCom Technology, Inc. 89 Auriga Drive A John Deere Company Ottawa, Ontario 20780 Madrona Avenue Canada K2E 7Z2 Torrance, CA 90503 (613) 820-4545; (613) 820-9772 Fax (310) 381-2000; (310) 381-2001 Fax [email protected]; www.mosaicmapping.com [email protected]; www.navcomtech.com Booth 710 Booth 408 NavCom Technology, Inc., a John Deere Company, is a leading NASA Earth Science Enterprise solution provider to the GIS, survey, offshore, agriculture, machine NASA Goddard Space Flight Center control, marine, and aerospace markets needing high performance Greenbelt, MD 20771 RTK systems, global decimeter-level DGPS corrections, geodetic (301)614-5560; (301)614-6530 Fax quality GPS receivers, wireless communication products and engineering consulting. Ideally suited for Aerial Survey applications, Booth 912 NavCom’s StarFire™ Network is the only DGPS system that delivers NASA’s mission is to understand and protect our planet, explore the seamless decimeter positioning accuracy on a worldwide basis (76°N universe and search for life, and inspire the next generation. The goal of to 76°S) completely independent of regional conditions. NASA’s Earth Science Enterprise is to use the unique view from space to study, understand and improve prediction of climate, weather and NIIRS10, Inc. natural hazards. NASA provides more than 1,800 science data products 132 Westchester Dr. and services for interdisciplinary Earth science studies. Management and Madison, AL 35758 distribution of these products is administered by the Earth Observing (256) 461-8289 System Data and Information System (EOSDIS) data centers. Booth 708 National Geodetic Survey NIIRS10 is a dynamic new company that will rapidly introduce Remote Sensing Division new management, production and distribution technologies for 1315 East West Highway, SSMC3 enterprise-level geospatial data producers. Our Mission is to supply Silver Spring, Maryland 20910 geospatial workflow integration products that incorporate the latest (301) 713-2663; (301) 713-4572 Fax; www.ngs.noaa.gov/RSD breakthroughs in algorithms and processing technologies to bring our customers new levels of solutions that improve their bottom line Booth 718 profitability. We intend to provide products that allow our customers The National Geodetic Survey (NGS) defines and manages the National to migrate their existing disparate technologies to integrated, Spatial Reference System, which determines position, height, distance, managed environments in a cost-effective manner. direction, gravity, and shoreline throughout the United States. The NGS Remote Sensing Division assists the national airspace system by providing airport geodetic control, runway, navigational aid, North West Group obstruction, and other aeronautical data. It also plans and acquires aerial Suite 212, 5438 - 11 St. NE photography and compiles shoreline data, mostly for nautical charts. Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2E 7E9 (403) 295-0694 National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) 4600 Sangamore Road, Booth 400 Bethesda, MD 20816-5003 North West Group is an industry leading geomatics company (301) 227-1045; (301) 227-0117 Fax providing specialized aerial photography, LiDAR, and digital Booth 500 orthophoto services to North American and international clients. North West utilizes Leica cameras including the ADS40 digital The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) provides timely, sensor, ALS40 LiDAR laser scanner, and the RC30. In addition to relevant, and accurate geospatial intelligence in support of national operating a complete color and panchromatic film laboratory with security objectives. NGA is a member of the U.S. Intelligence Community processing and reproduction capabilities, North West also utilizes a and a Department of Defense Combat Support Agency. Geospatial Leica DSW600 film scanner for digital conversion. intelligence is the exploitation and analysis of imagery and geospatial information to describe, assess and visually depict physical features and geographically referenced activities on the earth. Headquartered in

Bethesda, Md., with NGA support teams worldwide. Exhibitor Directory 76 77 Optech Incorporated Point of Beginning (POB) 100 Wildcat Road 755 West Big Beaver Rd., Suite 1000 Toronto, Ontario, M3J 2Z9, Canada Troy, MI 48084 (416) 661-5904; (416) 661-4168 Fax (248) 244-6400; (248)362-5103 Fax; www.pobonline.com [email protected]; www.optech.on.ca Booth 925 Booth 416 POB magazine is published to help the progressive surveying Optech Incorporated, the global leader in the development and and mapping professional succeed. We achieve this mission by: manufacture of laser-based survey instruments, is pleased to announce highlighting industry news milestones and product coverage for the launch of its ALTM 3100, the world’s first 100 kHz airborne better decision-making, reporting on new applications and continually laser terrain mapper. Optech is comprised of five major divisions: evolving technologies, including GPS, GIS and imaging, providing Laser Imaging, Space and Atmospheric, Marine Survey, Industrial practical solutions to the problems facing the geomatics industry, Products, Terrestrial Survey and Technology. Each division represents including professional business aspects, legal, legislative/educational a specialty, but all share a mission—to design and manufacture state- issues and more! Qualify for your FREE subscription online at of-the-art precision measurement instruments utilizing pulsed LIDAR www.pobonline.com. (LIght Detection and Ranging). Positive Systems, Inc. ORBIMAGE Inc. 223 Baker Ave. 21700 Atlantic Blvd. Whitefish, MT 59937 Dulles, Virginia 20166 (406) 862 - 7745 (703) 480-7500 Booth 529 [email protected]; www.orbimage.com Positive Systems, Inc., develops and markets DIME®, a mosaicking, Booth 818 georeferencing and color balancing software ideally suited for the production of second generation ortho photos. Characterized by a ORBIMAGE is a leading global provider of Earth imagery products and unique “pixel matching” technology, DIME provides an alternative services, with a constellation of digital remote sensing satellites and to traditional photogrammetry. In addition to commercially selling a worldwide integrated image receiving, processing and distribution DIME software, Positive Systems offers fourteen years of expertise network. The company currently operates the new OrbView-3 high- through their Image Processing Lab with services such as: nationwide resolution satellite launched on June 26, 2003 which offers one-meter image acquisition, mosaicking, georeferencing, digitizing, scanning, panchromatic (black and white) and four-meter multispectral (color) database alignment, and ortho photo production. digital imagery on a global basis and the OrbView-2 ocean and land multispectral imaging satellite that was launched in 1997. Precision Photo & Imaging Inc. PCI Geomatics 5758 Webster St. Dayton, OH 45414 50 West Wilmot St., Ste. 200 (937) 898-7450; (937) 890-8799 Fax; [email protected] Richmond Hill, ON Canada L4B 1M5 Booth 512 (905) 764-0614; (905) 764-9604 Fax As the premier aerial laboratory since 1975, PPL is ready to meet [email protected]; www.pcigeomatics.com all of your aerial film processing and reproduction needs. Now also Booth 424 providing a broad range of photogrammetric digital scanning on our two L-H DSW roll film scanners and the ability to write the data to any PCI Geomatics is a world leading developer of geomatics software tape, disc, DVD or hard drive we can help you to compete favorable solutions. Its flagship solution, Geomatica, meets the growing in any competitive situation. Camera films are scanned directly. Call us demands of the Remote Sensing, Spatial Analysis, Cartographic, and with your requirements. Photogrammetry worlds. PCI Geomatics is celebrating the beginning of its third decade as an industry-leading geomatics solution provider and has long been recognized for its premium yet affordable geomatics software solutions, advanced algorithms, excellent customer assistance, and product support in the industry.

78 79 Professional Surveyor Richardson Electronics 100 Tuscanny Drive, Suite B-1 40W267 Keslinger Road Frederick, MD 21702-5958 USA LaFox, IL 60147 (301) 682-6101; (301) 682-6105 Fax (630) 208-2681; (630) 208-2550 Fax [email protected]; www.profsurv.com Booth 506 Booth 700 Richardson Electronics is a provider and integrator of high resolution Professional Surveyor Magazine, is the premier U.S. resource for display systems. They specialize in grayscale and color display surveying, mapping, engineering, GPS, and GIS professionals. solutions for the GIS and imagery exploitation arena, as well as Monthly articles feature technology, product reviews, hands-on public information displays, grayscale and color CRTs, all size LCDs, solutions, business management, trade show recaps, and more. GITC touch screen integration, plasmas, ruggedization and/or custom America, Inc. also publishes Earth Observation Magazine (EOM), and packaging. GIS Monitor, a popular online newsletter that provides coverage and analysis of the GIS industry. RSI 4990 Pearl East Circle Prompt/MAPS geosystems Boulder, CO 80301 Truderinger Str. 13 (303) 786-9900; (303) 786-9909 Fax; www.RSInc.com 81677 Munich, Germany Booth 310 + 49 89 24448840; + 49 89 244488444 Fax [email protected]; www.promptgeo.com RSI provides software solutions that help scientists, engineers, researchers and medical professionals turn complex data into Booth 509 useful information. RSI’s customers use RSI technology to visualize Prompt provides systems for the efficient production and accessibility and analyze large, complex sets of data and develop and deploy of geographic data. PromptServer is the enterprise solution for the imaging applications. RSI’s solutions are used in diverse industries storage, management, processing and distribution of the huge including remote sensing, engineering, earth sciences, aerospace quantities of raw and processed imagery and DEMs data available. Most and defense, oil and gas exploration, medicine and biotechnology. CAD/GIS systems are supported directly or through a WebMapServer. Customized consulting, on-site training and technical support services Extensive on-the-fly processing of the imagery enables the generation complement RSI’s suite of software solutions. in real-time of multiple products directly from the raw images vs. the storage of multiple derived products. Rollei Fototechnic GmbH Salzdahlumer Str. 196 RADARSAT International Braunschweig 38126 13800 Commerce Parkway Germany MacDonald Dettwiler Building 0049 531 6800222; 0049 531 6800303 Fax Richmond, BC Canada V6V 2J3 [email protected]; www.rollei.de (604) 231-5000; (604) 231-4900 Fax; www.rsi.ca Booth 518 Booth 613 The company Rollei Fototechnic GmbH, manufacturer of professional RADARSAT International (RSI) is a world-leading provider of data medium format cameras, presents their aerial or terrestrial digital products, information services, geographic information solutions, metric system. This system can be equipped with a wide range of and training based on satellite imagery acquired the majority of measuring lenses for different applications. Further Rollei is able to commercially-available Earth-observation satellites: RADARSAT- offer CIR-sensors in their cameras to use the systems for CIR- as well 1, LANDSAT 4/5, LANDSAT 7, IKONOS, IRS, ERS, QuickBird and as for true coloured imaging flights. The aerial camera systems will ENVISAT. Our global markets range from natural resource management be shown with the own mounting and will be operated with the and environmental monitoring to defence, disaster management, and outstanding software solutions. mapping. Exhibitor Directory 78 79 Sanborn Space News 1935 Jamboree Drive, Suite 100 6883 Commercial Drive Colorado Springs, CO 80920 Springfield, VA. 22159 (719) 264-5587; (719) 264-5598 Fax; www.sanborn.com (703) 658 8400; (703) 750 8913 Fax; http://spacenews.com Booth 519 Booth 925 With a rich tradition of mapping dating back to 1866, Sanborn offers Space News is the first publication that space professionals throughout end-to-end spatial solutions to GIS and photogrammetric mapping the world turn to for the news. Whether for the latest trend in military customers. The company’s combined product and service offerings space capabilities, developments in satellite communications, or the include: consulting; off-the-shelf products; analog, digital and lidar current status of a budget or proposal for the next great space science data acquisition; photogrammetric mapping, and data conversion. mission, our readers count on Space News. Space News is the only Sanborn offers solutions for various industries, both government and weekly publication devoted to covering every aspect of the news that commercial. As a nationally recognized company, Sanborn has several affects military, civil and commercial space activity. offices within the United States. Spectrum Mapping, LLC SANZ Inc. 1999 Broadway, Suite 3200, 900 W. Castleton Road, Suite 100, Denver, CO 80202 Castle Rock, CO 80109 (303)298-9847; (303)292-9279 Fax; www.spectrummapping.com (800) 554-3880; (303) 814-0693 Fax; www.sanz.com Booth 525 Booth 714 Spectrum Mapping has 25 years experience in providing high- SANZ is the nation’s largest independent storage integrator who quality, innovative, and cost-effective aerial mapping solutions. Our provides storage solutions to manage, distribute and protect full service company offers you capabilities in LIDAR / digital image information assets. SANZ’ Geospatial Solutions Group has created acquisition, hyperspectral imaging, photogrammetric mapping, and the EarthWhere Spatial Data Provisioning application which catalogs, software development.Spectrum also sells medium-format, color provisions and disseminates geospatial datasets. Users can reproject, digital photogrammetric cameras for integration with LIDAR systems clip, mosaic and blend a wide variety of remote sensing data or stand-alone digital image acquisition. The 4K x 4K camera has been specifically for their application. EarthWhere also takes advantage of proven over the last six years of successful operations including stereo optimal configurations of software and storage technologies. editing and orthophoto production.

Space Imaging TerraPoint USA, Inc. 12076 Grant Street 25216 Grogans Park Drive Thornton, CO 80241 The Woodlands, Texas 77380 (303) 254-2000 Tollfree: (800) 232-9037; www.spaceimaging.com (281) 364-4080; (877) 999-7687 (Toll Free in North America) (281)-296-0869 Fax; [email protected]; www.terrapoint.com Booth 1002 Space Imaging is the premier provider of high-resolution satellite Booth 710 imagery. Based in Denver, Colorado, Space Imaging launched Mosaic and its subsidiaries (Airborne Lidar Solutions Inc., Calgary, IKONOS, the world’s first commercial high-resolution imaging satellite Alberta; and TerraPoint USA, Houston, Texas) provides services and in 1999. Using imagery captured from IKONOS and other sensors, technology solutions in the fields of airborne and ground-based LiDAR Space Imaging creates map-accurate, imagery products ranging from mapping, digital imaging, data acquisition and data processing for 1-meter to 180-meter resolution. The results are decision support engineering and GIS applications that include oil and gas exploration tools for national security and intelligence, transportation, forestry, and production, transportation, development, communications and telecommunications, facilities management, urban planning, and utility markets. Mosaic is a public company listed on the TSX Venture economical studies. Exchange (TSXV: DEM) with ownership of seven LiDAR systems.

80 81 TerraSim Inc. Titan Systems Geospatial 420 Ft. Duquesne Blvd. 4099 SE International Way, # 206 One Gateway Center, Suite 2050 Portland, OR 97222 Pittsburgh, PA 15222 (503) 794-1344; (503) 794-1350 Fax; www.titangiscom (412)232-3646; (412) 232-3649 Fax; www.terrasim.com Booth 504 Booth 913 Titan’s GIS professionals, operating throughout the U.S. and TerraSim, Inc. provides software solutions and services for advanced internationally, are supporting the integration of GIS with mainstream geospatial visualization using a wide variety of GIS data, DEMs, information systems by focusing a diverse set of capabilities on our imagery, and CAD data sources. TerraTools 2.0 employs innovative customers’ problems. Our teams of GIS technicians, analysts and automated construction techniques to seamlessly create complex developers provide innovative solutions allowing you to integrate urban simulations while preserving full geospatial accuracy. High- your data with geospatial Information or embed spatial technology in performance 3D visualizations are delivered through the freely your existing systems. Our experience over the last ten years has put redistributable TSGFly viewer, or through TerraTours, which enables 3D us solidly in the forefront of the Geospatial Information Technology GIS applications. Visit booth 913 to learn how TerraSim can meet your industry. geospatial visualization requirements. TopoSys Topographische Systemdaten GmbH Terrasolid Ltd. Obere Stegwiesen 26 Kanavaranta 7 B 28 D-88400 Biberach FIN 00160 Helsinki Germany Finland 49 (0)7351 / 47 40 2 – 0; 49 (0)7351 / 47 40 2 – 31 Fax (+358)400-648-391; (+358)14-645-002 Fax [email protected] [email protected]; www.terrasolid.com Booth 919 Booth 706 TopoSys has got a unique position worldwide as being a airborne Terrasolid is a leading software developer for processing airborne laser scanning system manufacturer and a Lidar service provider. scanned laser data and high-resolution images captured during the This combination secures TopoSys a broad base of expertise that is scanning mission. According to your tasks you can select the best unparalleled by any competitor. Since 1995, TopoSys operates its combination from the four different applications of the Terrasolid own its own developed ALS “Falcon II” and has covered thousands product family. The key-words: versatile functions to classify laser of square kilometres in area for high resolution digital terrain models point clouds; create and work with TINs; correct the position of laser and RGB/CIR images. Building on the long-standing know-how, points; support to multiple cameras and large film camera images; TopoSys decided at the end of 2003 to embark on the worldwide rectify true-orthophotos; create 3D visualization models. marketing of the Falcon II.

The Military Engineer US Army Engineer Research and Development The Society of American Military Engineers Center 607 Prince Street Topographic Engineering Center Alexandria, VA 22314-3117 7701 Telegraph Road (703) 548-3800 (703) 548-6153 (fax) Alexandria, VA 22315 [email protected]; www.same.org (703) 428-6635; (703) 428-6656 Fax; www.tec.army.mil Booth 925 Booth 406 The Military Engineer, published since 1920, is a bimonthly, 64-to- The U.S. Army Topographic Engineering Center (TEC) located in 80-page, four-color magazine covering news and feature articles Alexandria, Va. is one of seven laboratories, which make up the about professional development in all disciplines of engineering, Corps of Engineers’ Engineer Research and Development Center architecture, construction, engineering education, research and (ERDC). TEC’s mission is to provide the warfighter with superior development, business, and the manufacture of engineering materials, knowledge of the battlefield, and to support the nation’s civil and equipment and technologies. Each issue has two cover themes that environmental initiatives through research, development, and the focus on particular subject areas. Check SAME’s web site and click on, application of expertise in the topographic and related sciences. “Society Publications,” for the magazine’s marketing kit that highlights the editorial calendar and advertising opportunities. Exhibitor Directory 80 81 US Geological Survey VXServices, LLC Building 810 - Entrance W-5 - Room 3000 1230 Hunter Court Box 25046 - MS 507 Longmont, CO 80501 Denver, CO 80225-0046 (303) 651-6519; (303) 651-7693 Fax (303) 202-4315; (303) 202-4137 Fax [email protected]; www.vxservices.com http://rockyweb.cr.usgs.gov/public/outreach/ Booth 906 USGS: Science for a Changing World The primary mission of VXServices, LLC is to provide support and Booth 821 service to the large number of Vexcel scanners deployed around Discover US Geological Survey Landsat and other satellite imagery, the world. The growing demand for new scanners and ongoing Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) digital elevation data, maintenance support confirms the strong position the VX4000HT has historical and current aerial photography, hydrography data, and land earned in the high resolution, high accuracy scanning market. cover information, as well as technical expertise, guidelines, books, and digital data CDs at the USGS exhibit. The USGS is one of the world’s largest science organizations and provides a wealth of data for Wehrli & Associates Inc. 7 Upland Drive remote sensing research and applications. Valhalla, N. Y. 10595 USA 914-948-7941; 203-834-0213 Fax Vexcel Corporation [email protected]; www.wehrliassoc.com 1690 38th Street Booth 503 Boulder, CO 80301 (303) 583-0200; (303) 583-0246 Fax; www.vexcel.com We are demonstrating our ASP Airborne Stabilizer Platform and RM- 5 AutoScanner. The RM-5 offers low cost unattended scanning with Booth 715 high optical resolution, unmatched density scale capability as well as Founded in 1985 in Boulder, Colorado, Vexcel Corporation is an exceptional radiometric and geometric accuracies. The ASP features internationally recognized remote sensing company with offices highly accurate stabilization, forward motion compensation, interface in Colorado, Austria and the United Kingdom. The company offers to IMU and recording of roll, pitch and drift. Our goal - provide the following range of products and services to government and photogrammetric systems of the highest quality at the lowest cost. commercial markets: i) photogrammetry and mapping hardware and software, including the UltraCam large format digital aerial photogrammetry system; ii) GIS products and system solutions; iii) Western Air Maps, Inc. 9401 Reeds Road SAR research, exploitation software and services; and iv) remote Overland Park, KS 66207 sensing ground systems. (913) 652-9911; (913) 652-9933 Fax Visual Learning Systems Inc Booth 427 Box 8226 Western Air Maps, Inc. (WAM) offers a wide array of geo-spatial Missoula MT 59807 related services. Founded in 1960 and located in the “Heartland of (406) 829-1384; www.featureanalyst.com America”, WAM is recognized as a leading small business in the field. Our in-house services include aerial acquisition utilizing ABGPS & Booth 326 IMU, GPS control surveys, image scanning, aerotriangulation, digital Visual Learning Systems (VLS) provides innovative software and ortho photography, DTM, DEM, topographic mapping and GIS base solutions to the image processing and GIS markets. Using state of the mapping. Professional staff and integrating new technology are core art machine-learning technology, VLS has developed the best feature factors behind Western Air Maps success. extraction technology in the world. This award-winning flagship product, Feature Analyst 4.0, is currently in use at over 200 different domestic organizations and in many countries worldwide.

82 83 Z Corporation Z/I Imaging Corporation 20 North Ave. 230 Business Park Blvd. Burlington, MA 01803 Madison, AL 35757 (781) 852-5005; (781) 852-5100 Fax; www.zcorp.com (256) 730-1590; (256) 730-6708 Fax [email protected]; www.ziimaging.com Booth 508 Z Corporation develops, manufactures, and markets the world’s fastest Booth 902 3D Printers - machines that produce physical prototypes quickly, Z/I Imaging¹s solutions include aerial cameras, photogrammetric easily, and inexpensively from computer-aided design (“CAD”) and scanners and workstations, and image management, processing, other digital data, including satellite imagery. Z and distribution software. The imaging software includes enterprise Corp.’s 3D Printers are used by companies to make solutions that combine the power of a client/server image management prototypes ranging from toys for market feedback and distribution system with a high performance imaging engine to to fan blades for functional testing. quickly provide information needed. Our solutions are used globally by the world¹s leading imaging and photogrammetric production shops. Z/I Imaging is dedicated to providing world-class consulting, training, and support services.

Geospatial Goes Global: From Your Neighborhood to the Whole Planet ASPRS 2005 Annual Conference March 7-11, 2005 l Baltimore, Maryland Exhibitor Directory Images courtesy of the Baltimore Convention and Visitors Bureau, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, and RSI. Goddard Space Flight Center, Bureau, NASA Images courtesy of the Baltimore Convention and Visitors 82 83 Presenter Session ID Agrawal, Aditya 80 Bresnahan, Patrick 87 Croitoru, Arie 30, 54 Forster, Richard 31 Agung, Anak 73 Bricklemyer, R.S. 25 Csanyi, Nora 81 Foschi, Patricia 80 Ahlrichs, John 67 Briere, Peter 126 Cummens, Pat 84 Fox, James 71 Aicher, Russ 105 Bryant, Nevin 134 Cunningham, David 117 Fra, Urbano 136 Alberich, Josep 87 Budge, Amelia 29 Czerniak, Robert 9 Fraser, Prof. Clive 30 Althausen, John 23 Buehler, Dan 1 Dall, Giorgio 45 Fujisaki, Ikuko 126 Amadori, Jason 109 Burgess, Bill 15 Damalas, Andy 99 Gardner, Rich 46 Andersen, Hans-Erik 126 Buyuksalih, Gurcan 86 Davis, Brett 98 Garg, Vijay 22 Anderson, Sharolyn 93 Cakir, Halil 17 Davis, Bruce 63 Garie, Hank 53 Anderson, William 102 Campbell, James 45 de Beurs, Kirsten 83 Georgiadis, Charalampos 52 Anger, C. 85 Campbell, Susan 132 Deeb, Elias 31 Gervin, Janette 14 Aniello, Peter 54 Candade, Nivedita 91 DeLoatch, Ivan 5 Ghedira, Hosni 91 Aten, Michelle 103 Capobianco, Kristy 99 Dermody, David 30, 75 Giri, Chandra 125 Audirac, Henri 62 Carson, Ward 2 Dewitz, Jon 125 Givens, Wade 111 Baer, Lori 7, 99 Cary, Tina 113, 122 Di, Kaichang 54 Gomez, J Peter 18 Bajcsy, Peter 136 Casella, Vittorio 100 Dial, Gene 19 Gong, Peng 24 Baker, John 74 Chabaeva, Anna 97 Dijkstra, Semme 45, 106 Gordon, Wendy 99 Baldyga, Tracy 51 Chang, Yoon-Seop 99 Dintamin, Julie 1 Gorin, Brian 85 Bandibas, Joel 91 Chappidi, Srinivas 103 Dodds, Darrin 99 Graham, Lewis 86 Barnes, Christopher 52 Charrois, Raquel 8 Douglas, Thomas 2 Granados-Olivas, Alfredo 9 Batzli, Sam 8 Chavda, Chadrapalsinh 99 Driese, Kenneth 8 Gray, Cody 111 Bauer, Marvin 88 Chen, Xuexia 45 Dunbar, Matt 47 Greene, Yvette 81 Beck, Russell 58 Chen, Yingbiao 66 Duncan, Mick 76 Grejner-Brzezinska, Dorota 65 Beckwith, Robert 27 Cheng, Philip 19, 86 Dykstra, Jon 37 Grodecki, Jacek 30 Benhanifia, Khatir 35 Cheriyadat, Anil 135 Eaton, Mark 119 Groom, Tom 110 Berglund, Judith 63 Cho, Woosug 50 Echavarria, Fernando 41 Gueudet, Pierre 81 Berlin, Cynthia 33 Choi, Chul-Uong 94 El-Gafy, Mohamed 120 Guth, Peter 95 Berry, Joseph 61 Chong, A.K. 6 Elston, Gareth 45, 106 Gwynn, David 99 Bethel, Glenn 26 Chow, T. Edwin 11 Emil, Bayramov 99 Hadley, Brian 69 Bethel, Matt 92 Christopherson, Jon 55 Espey, G. Michael 95 Haithcoat, Tim 77 Bi, Jiantao 33 Chubey, Michael 45 Essinger, Rupert 84 Hallam, Cheryl 99, 137 Blinn, Christine 49 Churnside, J.H. 71 Falkowski, Michael 24 Hall-Beyer, Mryka 72 Blodgett, Clayton 45 Cialek, Chris 29 Farag, Fayek 109 Halsing, David 107 Bohac, Nancy 75 Collins, Curtis 126 Faundeen, John 102 Han, Joo-Yup 9 Boniface, Peter 60 Collins, Micheal 48 Filippi, Anthony 67 Han, Luoheng 22 Booth, Terrance 43 Colwell, Will 138 Finn, Michael 119 Handley, Lawrence 23 Born, Katherine 44 Coppel, John 26 Finney, Mark 98 Hansen, Matthew 83 Bortolot, Zachary 32 Coppin, Pol 4 Fleming, LTC Steven 65 Hardy, Mark 110 Boyko, Kenneth 107 Cortés, Miguel 3 Fonstad, Mark 10 Harrington, John 28 Brandt, Carol 53 Covington, Shane 29 Ford, Andrew 99 Harris, Jesse 68 Braun, Aaron 112 Craun, Kari 5, 107 Forkuo, Eric 118 Haverkamp, Donna 123 84 85 Presenter Session ID Heidbreder, William 37 Johnson, Laura 99 Leonard, Jeff 20 Meade, Mark 100 Henderson, Brad 129 Johnson, Lynn 120 Levin, Eugene 108 Mennis, Jeremy 62 Henry, Bradford 130 Johnston, Kevin 61 Lhermitte, Stefaan 72 Menzies, Robb 12 Hipple, James 28, 67 Jones, Steven 137 Li, Ron 86 Mercer, Bryan 7 Hodgson, Michael 63 Jordan, Thomas 47 Li, Xiaopeng 7 Merchant, Dean 55 Hoffman, George 108 Joseph, Katherine 99 Li, Xingong 124 Mercurio, Emily 45 Hogeweg, Marten 73 Kampfer, Roy 85 Liedtke, Jeff 87, 96 Mercurio, Matthew 110 Holdt, Brian 116 Katzenbeisser, Rolf 16 Light, Don 74 Merem, Edmund 124 Homer, Collin 125 Kazadi, Sanga-Ngoie 25, 36 Lillesand, Thomas 10 Messina, Joseph 23 Hong, Gang 4 Keiser, Barb 12 Lillycrop, W. Jeff 106 Meyer, Thomas 71 Hori-Ochoa, Maria 68 , 79 Kelmelis, John 41 Limaye, Ashutosh 31 Miller, S.N. 49 Horne, James 104, 115 Kerski, Joseph 1 Liu, XiaoHang 66 Mishra, Ashish 99 Hossain, A.K.M. Azad 33 Khatwa, Anjana 45 Liu, Yuncai 134 Mitasova, Helena 106 Hossain, Sheikh 45 Kinnin, Janice 134 Liu, Zhong 99 Mitchell, Lee 70 Hu, Jinhui 118 Kirk, Thomas 99 Logan, Bryan 15, 26 Moeller, Matthias 93 Hu, Shunfu 28 Kobayashi, Shoko 36 Loomer, Scott 52 Morgan, John 88 Hu, Xiangyun 104 Kolstad, Eric 45 Lovas, Tamas 71 Morgan, Michel 75 Huberty, Brian 102, 132 Koch, Frank 58 Lowell, Kim 40 Morin, Kristian 38, 39 Hudak, Andrew 13 Koch, Ted 26 Lozano-García, D. Fabian 9 Mosiman, Brianna 33 Huete, Alfredo 83 Kohm, Kevin 129 Lu, Xiaolin 110 Moskal, L. Monika 47 Hug, Dr. Christoph 16 Kolstad, Eric 115 Luders, Jacqueline 46 Mostafa, Mohamed 85, 112 Hung, Ming-Chih 99 Kosovich, John 7, 99 Lukas, Vicki 119 Muckenhoupt, James 28 Hunt, E. Raymond 32 Kotelenska, Jitka 68 Lutes, James 54 Mueller, Rick 21 Hurd, James 88 Krause, Keith 129 Ma, Fei 138 Mulawa, David 138 Hutchison, Vivian 29 Krishnan, Parthiphan 66 Ma, Ruijin 50 Mulyana, Ade 20 Hutto, Kendall 45 Kulkarni, Subodh 78 Madani, Mostafa 69, 138 Mupparthy, Raghavendra 10 Hutton, Joe 100 Kuntz, Theresa 51 Madden, Marguerite 98 Murray, Jennifer 45 Ibaugh, Allen 109 Lachman, Beth 74 Maher, Robert 92 Musiega, Douglas 11 Iiames, John 64 Laliberte, Andrea 40 Maingi, John 17 Myeong, Soojeong 45 Incardona, Chris 59 Landers, Sommer 45 Marks, John 104 Navulur, Kumar 88 Ingram, Stephen 38 Lawhead, Pamela 23 Martinuzzi, Sebastián 99 Nayegandhi, Amar 70, 127 Isaacs, Ian 7 Lay, Roberta 99 Mauldin, Greg 127 Neafsey, E.J. 45 Iyer, Anoop 99 Leberl, Franz 74 Maus, Katja 77 Nelson, Mark 105 Jacoby, Doug 34 Lee, Eun-Khung 108 Maxwell, S.K. 57 Netzband, Maik 99 Jang, InSung 45 Lee, Eunkyu 121 McCleese, Roy 42 Neumann, Klaus 128 Jentoft-Nilsen, Marit 47 Lee, George 87 McGaughey, Robert 70 Niu, Xutong 131 Ji, Lei 32 Lee, Geun-Sang 45 McGovern, Ian 21 Nordheim, Mark 10 Jin, Lee 99 Lee, Impyeong 82 McHale, Melissa 90 Norris-Rogers, Mark 64 Jin, Suming 64 Lee, S.H. 58 McHugh, Edward 99 Novy, Ben 113, 122 Johnson, Ann 101 Lefsky, Michael 2, 105 McKerrow, Alexa 116 Ohlen, Donald 13

Johnson, Daniel 77 Lennartz, Steven 48 McKinley, Randy 45 Okhimamhe, Appollonia 79, 90 Presenter Index 84 85 Presenter Session ID Olsen, Timothy 12 Routh, Stephanie 81 Tachibana, Kikuo 100 Ware, Jared 39 Olson, Charles 102 Ruble, Marcia 125 Tadepalli, Sharath 80 Watson, Richard 3 O’Neal, Kelley 45 Rufe, Phil 55 Tagert, Mary 67 Way, Douglas 46 Ouren, Douglas 60 Ryan, Robert 137 Tandon, Gagan 82 Wayne, Lynda 53, 73 Pace, Stefania 78 Samborski, Robert 18 Tao, Vincent 19, 82 , 127 Weih, Robert 99 Pacey, Roger 128 Sampath, Aparajithan 50 Tatham, Bert 66 Wen, Yuming 56 Padwick, Chris 69 San Souci, Jason 24 Taufan, Emanuel 38 Weng, Qihao 56 Painter, David 5 Sassenrath, G.F. 89 Teichrieb, Veronica 20 White, Benjamin 59, 117 Paska, Eva 115 Schill, Steven 21, 116 Teng, William 45, 99 Wilson, Britton 99 Patmios, E. 109 Schmidt, Cynthia 12 TeSelle, Gale 15 Woodward, Chris 89 Peng, Jing 123 Schumacher, Stacy 99 Tetrault, Robert 28 Wright, C. Wayne 27 Peters, Douglas 22 Scott, Paul 129 Theiss, Henry 19 Wright, Dennis 78 Peterson, Jim 27 Seedahmed, Gamal 6, 94 Thomasson, J. Alex 89 Wu, Changshan 77 Petrie, Gregg 34 Seo, Suyoung 50 , 135 Thurgood, Jolyon 108 Wyckoff, John 99 Picón, Ana 3 Seong, Jeong 96 Toth, Charles 27 Wynne, Randolph 105 Pieper, Frederick 110 Serby, Richard 101 Touré, Alassane 78 Xie, Hongjie 3, 99 Piwinski, Dana 45 Sforza, Peter 99 Tranes, Michele 60 Xu, Bing 11 Pitts, Robert 17 Shan, Jie 31, 52 , 95 Trible, David 45 Yamamoto, Hirokazu 36 Piwowar, Joe 72 Shrestha, Ramesh 39 Trusty, Rachel 8 Yang, Chongjun 99 Plasker, Jim 15 Shrestha, Sudhir 127 Tucker, Compton J. 37, 117 Yang, Jiansheng 14 Pool, Duane 11 Shupe, Scott 43 Tullis, Jason 27 Yao, Haibo 57 Pope, Paul 6 Smith, Charles 59 Twete, Todd 6 , 24 Yoo, JaeJun 131 Popescu, Sorin 92, 99 Smith, François 49, 103 van Aardt, Jan 2, 136 Yoshioka, Hiroki 45 Price, Maribeth 1 Smith, James 74 Varshney, Pramod 17, 49, 103 You, Suya 65 Quackenbush, Lindi 97 Smith, Jonathan 61 Vaughan, David 51 Young, Jeff 101 Quijano, Maria 45 Snay, Richard 112 Vijayaraj, Veeraraghavan 45 Yu, Genong 45, 104 Raber, George 63 Soares, Vicente 48 Villiger, Erwin 20 Yu, Qian 21 Radtke, P.J. 118 Steinberg, Steven 21 Viña, Andrés 14, 32, 83 Zafiropoulos, Pany 45 Ralowicz, Andrew 46 Stensaas, Greg 76 Vlasek, Karisa 45 Zamudio, Joe 114 Ramirez, Raul 50 Stephen, Pauline 99 Vogelmann, James 13 Zanoni, Vicki 55, 76 Ramspott, Matthew 25 Stevens, Alan 5, 18 Vorder Bruegge, Richard W. 102 Zhang, Xudong 103 Ratcliffe, Ian 45 Stevenson, Bill 22 , 45 Wagtendonk, Jan 13 Zhang, Yun 130, 134 Rauhala, Urho 80 Stiteler, William 34 Walker, A. Stewart 128 Zhang, Zhuohui 57 Raumann, Christian 42 Stoker, Jason 82 Walker, Samuel 44, 99, 132 Zhou, Guoqing 130 Reed, Carl 45 Stoltz, Bradley 42 Wang, Gang 12 Zhu, Cheng 45 Reed, Morgan 137 Stow, Douglas 93 Wang, Guangxing 4 Reese, Glenn 96 Stumpf, Kenneth 62 Wang, Jinfeng 14 Reker, Ryan 79 Sturtevant, Bob 113, 122 Wang, Jun 121 Repaka, Sunil 45, 115 Sugumaran, Ramanathan 97 Wang, Le 132 Robila, Stefan 114 Sutton, Paul 56 Wang, Yandong 123 Presenter Index 86 87 Hotel Floor Plan 86 87 Place Your Conference Proceeding Here for Easy Reference

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