Author:
van Niel T. G.,McVicar T. R.
Abstract
If management decisions are based on geospatial data that have not been
assessed for spatial accuracy, then debate about both the measurements and the
decisions themselves can occur. This debate, in part, can be avoided by
evaluating the spatial accuracy of geospatial data, leading to heightened
confidence in both the data and the decisions made from the data. To increase
the effectiveness of environmental compliance monitoring, the spatial
accuracies of 2 Geographic Information System datasets were estimated at the
Coleambally Irrigation Area, New South Wales. The first, high-resolution
digital aerial photography acquired in January 2000, is the Geographic
Information System baseline data for Coleambally Irrigation Area. The second,
Digital Topographic Data Base roads data, although not a reference dataset at
Coleambally Irrigation Area, is often used as a baseline dataset across
Australia. Neither dataset met the National Mapping Council of
Australia’s standard of map accuracy, so a new version of the digital
aerial photography was created that did. The positional accuracy of the
improved dataset was over 4 times more accurate than the Digital Topographic
Data Base roads dataset and over 2.5 times more accurate than the original
digital aerial photography. It was also found that the overall areal error of
paddocks measured from the improved dataset decreased as more paddock areas
were added together; a finding that has a direct impact on management
decisions at Coleambally Irrigation Area. This study both provides a
demonstration of how to assess and improve spatial accuracy and shows that
this process is not unduly complicated.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献