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This book brings together a collection of invited interdisciplinary
persp- tives on the recent topic of Object-based Image Analysis
(OBIA). Its c- st tent is based on select papers from the 1 OBIA
International Conference held in Salzburg in July 2006, and is
enriched by several invited chapters. All submissions have passed
through a blind peer-review process resulting in what we believe is
a timely volume of the highest scientific, theoretical and
technical standards. The concept of OBIA first gained widespread
interest within the GIScience (Geographic Information Science)
community circa 2000, with the advent of the first commercial
software for what was then termed ‘obje- oriented image
analysis’. However, it is widely agreed that OBIA builds on older
segmentation, edge-detection and classification concepts that have
been used in remote sensing image analysis for several decades.
Nevert- less, its emergence has provided a new critical bridge to
spatial concepts applied in multiscale landscape analysis,
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and the synergy between
image-objects and their radiometric char- teristics and analyses in
Earth Observation data (EO).
This book brings together a collection of invited interdisciplinary
persp- tives on the recent topic of Object-based Image Analysis
(OBIA). Its c- st tent is based on select papers from the 1 OBIA
International Conference held in Salzburg in July 2006, and is
enriched by several invited chapters. All submissions have passed
through a blind peer-review process resulting in what we believe is
a timely volume of the highest scientific, theoretical and
technical standards. The concept of OBIA first gained widespread
interest within the GIScience (Geographic Information Science)
community circa 2000, with the advent of the first commercial
software for what was then termed 'obje- oriented image analysis'.
However, it is widely agreed that OBIA builds on older
segmentation, edge-detection and classification concepts that have
been used in remote sensing image analysis for several decades.
Nevert- less, its emergence has provided a new critical bridge to
spatial concepts applied in multiscale landscape analysis,
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and the synergy between
image-objects and their radiometric char- teristics and analyses in
Earth Observation data (EO).
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