8 research outputs found
IMPLEMENTATION OF ACTIVE TEACHING METHODS AND EMERGING TOPICS IN PHOTOGRAMMETRY AND REMOTE SENSING SUBJECTS
Fast technological developments in photogrammetry and remote sensing areas demand quick and steady changes in the education programme and its realization. The university teachers and assistants are faced with ensuring the learning materials, data and software for practical lessons, as well as project proposals for student’s team work and bachelor or master thesis. In this paper the emerging topics that already have a considerable impact in the practice are treated mostly from the educational aspect. These relatively new topics that are considered in this paper are unmanned aerial systems for spatial data collection, terrestrial and aerial laser scanning, mobile mapping systems, and novelties in satellite remote sensing. The focus is given to practical implementation of these topics into the teaching and learning programme of Geodesy and Geoinformation at the University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Civil and Geodetic Engineering, and experiences gained by the authors so far. Together with the technological advances, the teaching approaches must be modernized as well. Classical approaches of teaching, where a lecturer gives lecture ex cathedra and students are only listeners, are not effective enough. The didactics science of teaching has developed and proved in the practice many useful approaches that can better motivate students for more active learning. We can use different methods of team work like pro et contra debate, buzzing groups, press conference, moderated discussion etc. An experimental study on active teaching methods in the class of students of the Master programme of Geodesy and Geoinformation has been made and the results are presented. After using some new teaching methods in the class, the students were asked to answer two types of a questionnaire. First questionnaire was the standard form developed by Noel Entwistle, an educational psychologist who developed the Approaches to Studying Inventory (ASI) for identifying deep and surface approaches to learning. The second questionnaire was developed for our purpose to get the feedback from students on active teaching and learning methods. Although this investigation has been done only for one class of master programme students, the results are encouraging and we could extract some recommendations for the future
Theoretical lidar point density for topographic mapping in the largest scales
When ordering LiDAR data, LiDAR point density per surface unit is important information with decisive influence on the price of the LiDAR survey. The paper first deals with the theoretical calculation of the minimum LiDAR point density, necessary for the acquisition of topographic data of the largest scales. For this purpose the sampling theorem is used. However, since topographic objects (roads, water bodies, etc.) and phenomena represented on topographic maps and in topographic bases are in many cases located under vegetation, also the rate of laser beam penetration through vegetation for the area where the topographic data are to be gathered has to be known. In a research on a test case conducted in the area of the town Nova Gorica we calculated the rate of laser beam penetration for four different vegetation types: scarce Mediterranean vegetation, thick thermophilic deciduous forest, mixed vegetation (meadows, orchards and forest) and built-up area. By connecting the theoretic minimum LiDAR point density with the rate of penetration, we defined the minimum LiDAR point density for the needs of data acquisition on topographic maps of the largest scales or in topographic bases of comparable detail (from 1 : 1000 to 1 : 10,000)
A simplified analytical model for a priori Lidar point positioning error estimation and a review of Lidar error sources
Although various rigorous lidar error models already exist and examples of a-posteriori studies of lidar data accuracies verified with field-work can be found in the literature, a simple measure to define a-priori error sizes is not available. In this paper, the lidar error contributions are described in detail: the basic systematic error Sources, the flight-mission-related error sources, and the target-characteristic-related error sources. A review of the different error-source sizes is drawn from the literature in order to define the boundary conditions for each error size. Schenk's geolocation equation is used as a basis for deriving a simplified error model. This model enables a quick calculation and gives a-priori plausible values for the average and maximum error size, independent of the scan and heading angles as well as being independent of any specific lidar system's characteristics. Additionally, some notes are provided for assistance when ordering lidar data, to enable easier a-posteriori quality control
ASSESSMENT OF THE QUALITY OF DIGITAL TERRAIN MODEL PRODUCED FROM UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEM IMAGERY
Production of digital terrain model (DTM) is one of the most usual tasks when processing photogrammetric point cloud generated from Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) imagery. The quality of the DTM produced in this way depends on different factors: the quality of imagery, image orientation and camera calibration, point cloud filtering, interpolation methods etc. However, the assessment of the real quality of DTM is very important for its further use and applications. In this paper we first describe the main steps of UAS imagery acquisition and processing based on practical test field survey and data. The main focus of this paper is to present the approach to DTM quality assessment and to give a practical example on the test field data. For data processing and DTM quality assessment presented in this paper mainly the in-house developed computer programs have been used. The quality of DTM comprises its accuracy, density, and completeness. Different accuracy measures like RMSE, median, normalized median absolute deviation and their confidence interval, quantiles are computed. The completeness of the DTM is very often overlooked quality parameter, but when DTM is produced from the point cloud this should not be neglected as some areas might be very sparsely covered by points. The original density is presented with density plot or map. The completeness is presented by the map of point density and the map of distances between grid points and terrain points. The results in the test area show great potential of the DTM produced from UAS imagery, in the sense of detailed representation of the terrain as well as good height accuracy
Analysis of the impact of interior orientation parameters in different UAV-based image-block compositions on positional accuracy
Understanding the factors that influence the quality of
unmanned aerial vehicle
(UAV)-based products is
a scientifically ongoing and relevant topic. Our research focused on the impact of the
interior orientation
parameters
(IOPs) on the positional accuracy of points in a calibration field, identified and measured in an
orthophoto and a point cloud. We established a calibration field consisting of 20 materialized points and
10 detailed points measured with high accuracy. Surveying missions with a fixed-wing UAV were carried
out in three series. Several image blocks that differed in flight direction (along, across), flight altitude
(70 m, 120 m), and IOPs (known or unknown values in the image-block adjustment) were composed. The
analysis of the various scenarios indicated that fixed IOPs, computed from a good geometric composition,
can especially improve vertical accuracy in comparison with self-calibration; an image block composed
from two perpendicular flight directions can yield better results than an image block composed from a single
flight direction
Educational Experiences for Geomatics Scientific Dissemination
The present work aims to illustrate the experience in geomatic dissemination, gained by actively participating and contributing to seminars, lectures and educational workshops, applying both traditional and innovative teaching methods. The main focus is on two educational workshops: one on altitude, its measurement techniques, issues and the evolution of the instrumentation employed; the second on photogrammetry applied to various environments and scenarios, such as securing buildings and ruins in emergencies or underwater analyses, mapping and surveying of coral reefs. In both workshops, the authors begin by capturing the attention with simple examples of every-day experiences related to the workshop\u2019s main theme, then give explanations using posters, videos, simple games and practical experiences that can improve understanding. The authors scientific dissemination highlights the concrete application of Geomatics in every-day life and enhances the audience emotional involvement. The workshops\u2019 main goal is to stimulate the audience curiosity to understand the basic concepts, starting from intuitive considerations and questions from the audience itself. This allows the introduction of the main concepts of Geomatics and highlights its full potential