1,571 research outputs found

    Yellowstone National Park mapping from ERTS-1 computer compatible tapes

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    Terrain classification maps of Yellowstone National Park

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    A cooperative ERTS-1 investigation involving U. S. Geological Survey, National Park Service, and Environmental Research Institure of Michigan (ERIM) personnel has as its goal the preparation of terrain classification maps for the entire Yellowstone National Park. Excellent coverage of the park was obtained on 6 August 1972 (frame 1015-17404). Preliminary terrain classification maps have been prepared at ERIM by applying multispectral pattern recognition techniques to ERTS-MSS digital taped data. The color coded terrain maps are presented and discussed. The discussion includes qualitative and quantitative accuracy estimates and discussion of processing techniques

    Financial Viability of Implementing Home-Based Primary Care Programs in Federally-Qualified Health Centers in the United States: An Empirical Assessment

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    Home-based primary care (HBPC) has been shown to be an effective method of delivering primary care services to high-risk, high-utilizing patients. Federally-Qualified health centers (FQHCs) have historically provided, and continue to provide, comprehensive primary care for a majority of the medically underserved patients across the United States. Often times, the patients that access primary care from FQHCs may experience socioeconomic, behavioral, or physical factors that would make an elderly or home-bound patient eligible for a HBPC program. With increased focus on population health management and a much anticipated transition from fee-for-service to value-based payments, the implementation of this delivery model would seem to be an innovative method of removing barriers for medically underserved populations. The purpose of this research is to analyze the financial viability of implementing this model of primary care delivery in FQHC settings to help improve access to care and improve outcomes in a cost-effective manner

    Analysis of recreational land and open space using ERTS-1 data

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    Analysis of recreational land using Skylab data

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    The author has identified the following significant results. S192 data collected on 5 August 1973 were processed by computer to produce a classification map of a part of the Gratiot-Saginaw State Game Area in south central Michigan. A 10-category map was prepared of an area consisting of diverse terrain types, including forests, wetlands, brush, and herbaceous vegetation. An accuracy check indicated that 54% of the pixels were correctly recognized. When these ten scene classes were consolidated to a 5-category map, the accuracy increased to 72%. S190 A, S190 B, and S192 data can be used for regional surveys of existing and potential recreation sites, for delineation of open space, and for preliminary evaluation of geographically extensive sites

    Remote sensing in Michigan for land resource management

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    An extensive program was conducted to establish practical uses of NASA earth resource survey technology in meeting resource management problems throughout Michigan. As a result, a broad interest in and understanding of the usefulness of remote sensing methods was developed and a wide variety of applications was undertaken to provide information needed for informed decision making and effective action

    Inferring the Origin Locations of Tweets with Quantitative Confidence

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    Social Internet content plays an increasingly critical role in many domains, including public health, disaster management, and politics. However, its utility is limited by missing geographic information; for example, fewer than 1.6% of Twitter messages (tweets) contain a geotag. We propose a scalable, content-based approach to estimate the location of tweets using a novel yet simple variant of gaussian mixture models. Further, because real-world applications depend on quantified uncertainty for such estimates, we propose novel metrics of accuracy, precision, and calibration, and we evaluate our approach accordingly. Experiments on 13 million global, comprehensively multi-lingual tweets show that our approach yields reliable, well-calibrated results competitive with previous computationally intensive methods. We also show that a relatively small number of training data are required for good estimates (roughly 30,000 tweets) and models are quite time-invariant (effective on tweets many weeks newer than the training set). Finally, we show that toponyms and languages with small geographic footprint provide the most useful location signals.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures. Version 2: Move mathematics to appendix, 2 new references, various other presentation improvements. Version 3: Various presentation improvements, accepted at ACM CSCW 201

    CTMC calculations of electron capture and ionization in collisions of multiply charged ions with elliptical Rydberg atoms

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    We have performed classical trajectory Monte Carlo (CTMC) studies of electron capture and ionization in multiply charged (Q=8) ion-Rydberg atom collisions at intermediate impact velocities. Impact parallel to the minor and to the major axis, respectively, of the initial Kepler electron ellipse has been investigated. The important role of the initial electron momentum distribution found for singly charged ion impact is strongly disminished for higher projectile charge, while the initial spatial distribution remains important for all values of Q studied.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figure
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