2017 Poster Competition
UCGIS thanks all of the students who presented their research during our 2017 Symposium!
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Winner, Best Reflection of Summer School Theme:
A CyberGIS Multi-Criteria Assessment Framework
Dinuke Munasinghe, University of Alabama; Josphat Mutunga, University of Redlands; Patricia Carbajales-Dale, Clemson University; Shaun Fontanella, Ohio State University
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Winner, Best Reflection of Symposium Theme:
Social Media and Diffusion: Understanding the impact of geography on the diffusion of information via social media
Jayakrishnan Ajayakumar, Kent State University; Christopher Franklin, University of Texas at Dallas; T. Y. Lee, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Bryan Runck, University of Minnesota; Pranab Roy Chowdhury, University of Tennessee
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Winner, People's Choice Award:
Food, Water, & Energy Nexus: The impact of climate change on agricultural productivity
Chunyuan Diao, University at Buffalo; Jessica Hedgepeth Balkin,University of Colorado, Boulder; Vova Migunov, Louisiana State University; Yiqun Xie, University of Minnesota
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A Bayesian Network Approach to Support Decision Making in Building Disaster Resilience
Heng Cai, Louisiana State University; Nina Lam, Louisiana State University; Lei Zou, Louisiana State University; Yi Qiang, University of Hawaii at Manoa
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A Framework for Facilitating Data Discovery: Leveraging Web Mapping and Geosemantics
Dylan Perkins, University of Wyoming
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An Interactive Spatial Decision Support Tool for Emergency Management: Vulnerability Analysis of Flooding in Travis County, Texas
Heng Cai, Louisiana State University; Shakil Kashem, University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana; Dylan Perkins, University of Wyoming; Ruopu Li, Southern Illinois University – Carbondale.
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Discovering Qualitative Trajectory Relations from Unstructured Data
Jeon-Young Kang, University at Buffalo; Chengxi Zhu, University at Buffalo; Thomas Bittner, University at Buffalo.
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Exploring Traffic Patterns Using Twitter Data: A Case Study in Chicago
Ziqi Liu, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Chunzhu Wei, University of Salzburg; Weixing Zhang, University of Connecticut; Tianqi Zou, Cornell University; Zhenlong Li, University of South Carolina
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High-resolution Flood Inundation Mapping Using National Water Model Forecasts for Emergency Management
Irene Garousi-Nejad, Utah State University; Xiao Li, Texas A&M University; Anna Petrasova, North Carolina State University; Haowen Xu, University of Iowa.
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Integrating Spatiotemporal Data Analysis and Stochastic Programming for Supply Chain Optimization
Hao Hu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Tao Lin, Zhejiang University, China; Shaowen Wang, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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LiDAR Uncertainty and Classification on ROGER
Jim Coll, University of Kansas; Lee Hathcock, Mississippi State University; Jason Matney, North Carolina State University; Vaclav Petras, North Carolina State University; Yi Qi, Brown University.
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Mining Temporal Associations in Location-Centric Networks for Influenza
Shiran Zhong, The State University of New York at Buffalo and Ling Bian, The State University of New York at Buffalo
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Optimal Hydrogen Station Location for Central Connecticut by Using Trip-Based Modeling at the Regional Scale
Qunshan Zhao, Arizona State University; Michael J. Kuby, Arizona State University; Fan Xiao, National Marine Environmental Forecasting Center, China
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Smart and Connected Cities: Mining GPS Data for Actionable Transportation Insights
Nick Robison, University of Washington, Nicole Helgeson, University of Minnesota; Mehdi Heris, University of Colorado; Maya Scott, University of Illinois.
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Workload-Award Distributed Spatiotemporal Data Analysis
Kiumars Soltani, University of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign; Shaowen Wang, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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The 2017 Program Committee welcomes and encourages students to share their scholarship during our Symposium. A formal poster session will take place on Tuesday May 23rd during our opening evening reception, and the posters will remain on display throughout the remainder of the Symposium.
Theme and Awards: The theme of our Symposium is CyberGIS and Diverse Partnerships for Geospatial Workforce Development. Posters may describe any GIScience-related research that has been recently completed or is underway. Symposium participants will be asked to vote on the posters whose topic is the strongest representation of the theme in action. Up to 3 eligible students will be selected to receive a $500 scholarship award.
Student Eligibility: All students are eligible to present their poster and share their research at our Symposium, but only students currently enrolled in a UCGIS member institution are eligible to be considered for an award.
Design specifics: Posters should be no more than 32" by 40" in size (may read vertically or horizontally). Addition instructions on how the posters will be displayed is forthcoming.
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