NEHRP Clearinghouse
displaying 1 - 6 results in total 6
['McMillan, A.', 'Adams, B. J.', 'Reynolds, A.', 'Brown, T.', 'Liang, D.', 'Womble, J. A.']
MCEER Response: Advanced Technology for Rapid Tornado Damage Assessment Following The 'Super Tuesday' Tornado Outbreak of February 2008.
Texas Tech Univ., Lubbock. Wind Engineering Research Center.; Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research, Buffalo, NY.; National Science Foundation, Washington, DC., April 18, 2008, 22 p.
Identifying Number(s): MCEER-08-SP01
Keywords: Damage assessment; Ground surveys; Meteorological data; Data collection; VIEWS (Visualizing Impacts of Earthquakes with Satellites); Buildings; Tornadoes; Remote sensing; Satellite imagery['McMillan, A.', 'Adams, B. J.', 'Ghosh, S.', 'Huyck, C. K.']
MCEER Response: Collection and Preliminary Analysis of Aerial and In-Field Building Damage Information in the Aftermath of the 2007 California Wildfires.
Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research, Buffalo, NY.; National Science Foundation, Washington, DC., April 30, 2008, 30 p.
Identifying Number(s): MCEER-08-SP03
Keywords: Damage assessment; Ground surveys; Wildfires; California; Data collection; VIEWS (Visualizing Impacts of Earthquakes with Satellites); Buildings; Aerial surveys['Huyck, C. K.', 'Adams, B. J.', 'Cho, S.', 'Eguchi, R. T.', 'Mansouri, B.', 'Houshmand, B.']
Methodologies for Post-Earthquake Building Damage Detection Using SAR and Optical Remote Sensing: Application to the August 17, 1999 Marmara, Turkey Earthquake.
National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA. Earthquake Engineering Research Centers Program., June 15, 2004, 192 p.
Identifying Number(s): TR-MCEER-04-0004
Keywords: Damage assessment; Synthetic aperture radar; Algorithms; Location; Severity; Qualitative data; Buildings; High resolution; Quantitative data; Remote sensing; Optical sensors; Detection; Imagery; Marmara Turkey Earthquake; Earthquakes['Adams, B. J.', 'Womble, J. A.', 'Mio, M. Z.', 'Turner, J. B.', 'Mehta, K. C.', 'Ghosh, S.']
Collection of Satellite-References Building Damage Information in the Aftermath of Hurricane Charley.
Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research, Buffalo, NY.; Colorado Univ. at Boulder. Natural Hazards Research and Applications Information Center.; National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA., January 2005, 20 p.
Keywords: Damage assessment; Port Charlotte (Florida); Hurricanes; Punta Gorda (Florida); Remote sensing; Florida; Aerial photographs; Hurricane Charley['Gusella, L.', 'Huyck, C. K.', 'Adams, B. J.']
Remote Sensing for Resilient Multi-Hazard Disaster Response. Volume II: Counting the Number of Collapsed Buildings Using an Object-Oriented Analysis: Case Study of the 2003 Bam Earthquake.
Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research, Buffalo, NY.; Federal Highway Administration, Washington, DC.; National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA. Earthquake Engineering Research Centers Program., November 17, 2008, 86 p.
Identifying Number(s): MCEER-08-0021
Keywords: Collapsed buildings; Object-oriented analyses; Middle East; Remote sensing; Iran; Damage assessments; Image processing techniques; Building inventory development; 2003 Bam Earthquake; Foreign countries; Earthquakes['Adams, B. J.', 'McMillan, A.']
Remote Sensing for Resilient Multi-Hazard Disaster Response. Volume III: Multi-Sensor Image Fusion Techniques for Robust Neighborhood-Scale Urban Damage Assessment.
Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research, Buffalo, NY.; Federal Highway Administration, Washington, DC.; National Science Foundation, Arlington, VA. Earthquake Engineering Research Centers Program., November 17, 2008, 166 p.
Identifying Number(s): MCEER-08-0022
Keywords: Debris mapping; Remote sensing imagery; Urban damage assessments; Resilient multi-hazard disaster response; 2003 Bam earthquake; Quickbird; Spctral comparison; Optical satellites; Damage assessments; Image fusion; Iran; Multi-sensor pixel-based image fusion; Aerial photographs; Texture-based comparison; Case studies; Edge detection; IKONOS