Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Student Poster Competition at AAG!



2011 Student Illustrated Paper Competition
Sponsored by the Remote Sensing/GIS/Cartography Specialty Groups

Call for Papers

AAG Annual Meeting, April 12-16 2011, Seattle, Washington

The Remote Sensing Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers is pleased to announce the 2010-2011 Illustrated Paper Competition for Students. Students at all academic levels are invited to submit illustrated papers that advance any aspect of remote sensing, GIS, or cartography.

Research must have been completed within the past academic year, during the author's undergraduate or graduate studies, and can include thesis and dissertation topics. Illustrated papers must be comp leted entirely by the applicant; however, thesis or dissertation advisers can be co-authors. Students selected as finalists will be placed in a special illustrated paper session at the Annual Meeting to be held April 12-16 2011 in Seattle, Washington.

Illustrated Paper Information

An illustrated paper is a poster accompanied by a short (3- to 5-minute) oral summary of the research problem, data, methods, and findings, followed by a one-on-one or small group discussion at individual posters. All oral summaries will be given at the beginning of each illustrated paper session before participants disperse to the poster boards around the room. Each presenter will be provided a microphone; however, oral summaries must be given without the use of additional AV equipment (e.g., laptops and projectors). Each presenter will be provided a 4' tall x 8' wide board on which to display their poster and materials.

Submission Requirements

Students who are interested should submit electronically (1) an abstract, (2) the advisers form, and (3) a copy of the email receipt received from the AAG online abstract submission process. The adviser's form is posted at the RSSG web page (http://www.aagrssg.org). The deadline for abstract submission to this competition is October 13, 2010, approximately one week prior to the final AAG Abstracts Submission date as posted at the AAG website (www.aag.org) to allow non-finalists to be placed in other sessions of their choice. Up to 15 finalists will be chosen.

Awards

First, second, and third place awards will be determined immediately following the competition sessions and awarded at the Awards Luncheon. The prizes are: $500 for the first place illustrated paper, $250 for second place, and $150 for third place. An undergraduate award may also be made to an outstanding undergraduate researcher. The Annual Banquet fee will be covered for all winners. The committee reserves the right to not offer such prizes if the papers are not of appropriate quality.

Judging

Posters and oral summaries will b e judged on potential contribution to any of the sponsoring fields, originality, appropriate use of methodology, organization and composition, clarity, and appropriate use of graphics. Evaluation will take into account the academic level of the entrants.

Instructions for Submission of Abstracts and Adviser's Form
Submit all materials by email to the RSSG Student Director Benjamin Tuttle. Please use "2011 AAG Student Illustrated Paper Competition" as the subject of your email message(s). The adviser's form may be submitted separately. You will not be considered for the competition without submitting this
information to the RSSG Student Director by the deadline above.

Contact Person:

Lindsay Deel
Email: ldeel@mix.wvu.edu

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

From left (Franklin, Doug, Marla, Lindsay)

GeoTech 2010 - On Sunday and Monday (Sept. 26-27), a group of five drove two rental cars (including one bright red Impala) down to Fairfax, Virginia for the ASPRS Potomac Region GeoTech conference. The conference was actually a two-day event, but our group decided to attend only the first day. We attended workshops on Lidar, image classification, and hyperspectral imagery.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Can anyone guess what the squares are?


Hi all,
I wanted to share this with you all... already showed Dr. Warner. This is a google map's satellite image of Crucible, PA. Can anyone guess what the square features are all over the image?
KO

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Posting images

If you want to post an image to the blog, you must first be an author. You then have to sign in to your account and create a new post. From the new post, you should be able to add an image.

The image uploader will allow you to post via a URL or upload your own image. I would recommend uploading your own image. If you find an image online, save it first and then upload, but include a link or citation for it in your post. Also, try to keep images 'small' or 'medium' in size so the blog doesn't get all clogged up with huge images.

Let me know if you have any questions about posting images!

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Welcome to the WVU ASPRS Student Forum Blog!

As discussed in our meeting on 9/8/2010, the purpose of this blog is to set up a forum for our forum :). Please feel free to update the blog with anything you feel might be relevant or interesting to the group. This may include articles, website, events, announcements, projects, requests for information, etc.

If you are a new member of the forum and would like to be listed as an author to the blog, contact one of the WVU ASPRS Student Forum officers or Dr. Warner, the forum sponsor.

WVU ASPRS Student Forum Officers:

President: Lindsay Deel (ldeel@mix.wvu.edu)
Treasurer: Jessica Randall (jrandal4@mix.wvu.edu)
Communications: Marla Yates (myates2@mix.wvu.edu)