This article investigates how people process information from aerial photographs to categorize locations. Three cog-nitive experiments were conducted with human subjects viewing a series of aerial photographs and categorizing the land use for target locations. Reaction time, accuracy, and confidence were considered as dependent variables re-lated to the success of the categorization process. The first experiment considered two categories of land use, the rel-ative size of the visual field, and two rounds of unsupervised learning. Subjects were more successful categorizing higher-order land-use classes than they were lower-order categories. Subjects were significantly more accurate and confident with larger photographs, but not significantly...
The article presents the results of research focused on the speed and success rate of reading aerial...
The idea that closer things are more related than distant things, known as ‘Tobler’s first law of ge...
In this article, we use eye-tracking methods to analyze the differences in spatial ability between g...
This article investigates how people process information from aerial photographs to categorize locat...
Numerous studies in the last decade have used ground-based views of scenes to investigate the proces...
Human scene understanding is remarkable because, with only a brief glance at an image, an abundance ...
Geospatial images, such as maps and aerial photographs, are important sources of spatial knowledge t...
A study was conducted to investigate whether images of natural scenes can be categorized with respec...
Image retrieval is becoming increasingly relevant as the size of image collections, and amount of im...
This report describes six studies investigating the cognitive organization of roadway scenes. These ...
The European Landscape Convention states the need for public participation in landscape planning and...
Organic studies inspire cues for modelling logic in image processing and become a basis for the deve...
Human scene understanding is remarkable because, with only a brief glance at an image, an abundance ...
With the ubiquity of visual data being recorded, we now have the ability to view vast amounts of vis...
The European Landscape Convention states the need for public participation in landscape planning and...
The article presents the results of research focused on the speed and success rate of reading aerial...
The idea that closer things are more related than distant things, known as ‘Tobler’s first law of ge...
In this article, we use eye-tracking methods to analyze the differences in spatial ability between g...
This article investigates how people process information from aerial photographs to categorize locat...
Numerous studies in the last decade have used ground-based views of scenes to investigate the proces...
Human scene understanding is remarkable because, with only a brief glance at an image, an abundance ...
Geospatial images, such as maps and aerial photographs, are important sources of spatial knowledge t...
A study was conducted to investigate whether images of natural scenes can be categorized with respec...
Image retrieval is becoming increasingly relevant as the size of image collections, and amount of im...
This report describes six studies investigating the cognitive organization of roadway scenes. These ...
The European Landscape Convention states the need for public participation in landscape planning and...
Organic studies inspire cues for modelling logic in image processing and become a basis for the deve...
Human scene understanding is remarkable because, with only a brief glance at an image, an abundance ...
With the ubiquity of visual data being recorded, we now have the ability to view vast amounts of vis...
The European Landscape Convention states the need for public participation in landscape planning and...
The article presents the results of research focused on the speed and success rate of reading aerial...
The idea that closer things are more related than distant things, known as ‘Tobler’s first law of ge...
In this article, we use eye-tracking methods to analyze the differences in spatial ability between g...