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Research Seminar: Crowdsourcing Geospatial Data in Urban Sciences: Progress and Challenges

20220923

Speaker

Dr Xiao HUANG

Enquiry

Ms Anna Choi 3400 8158 anna.choi@polyu.edu.hk

Summary

For decades, studies in urban sciences were dominated by authoritative data sources. In recent years, we have seen new players entering the game—citizens themselves started to contribute to mapping, monitoring, analyzing, and evaluating urban environments. This novel way of data collection, powered by regular citizens worldwide, potentially allows the obtainment of data that would not be otherwise available. In this presentation, I want to introduce our team’s efforts in harnessing the potential of crowdsourcing geospatial data to address urban challenges and understand urban environments. I believe the growing popularity of crowdsourcing geospatial data is likely to reshape the conceptual, applicable, and analytical paradigms of urban sciences. This presentation serves as a review of what our team has contributed to this domain and encourages a series of systematic investigations on the potentials crowdsourcing geospatial data.

Poster

Keynote Speaker

Dr Xiao HUANG

Assistant Professor

University of Arkansas, US

Xiao Huang is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geosciences at the University of Arkansas. Before he joined University of Arkansas, he obtained his Ph.D. degree in Geography from University of South Carolina and Master’s degree in GISscience from Georgia Institute of Technology. His research primarily focuses on geospatial analysis, geovisualization, environmental modeling, computer and data science, and Big Data analytics. Dr. Huang has authored/co-authored more than 110 peer-reviewed publications across various disciplines. Professionally, he sits the Editorial Board for Big Earth Data, Computational Urban Science, PLOS One, International Journal of Digital Earth, Current Social Sciences, and Frontiers Remote Sensing. He also serves as a reviewer for 48 international/national journals. His research has been funded by National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and NASA.

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