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PRODID:IEEE vTools.Events//EN
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DTSTART:20200308T030000
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DTSTART:20191103T010000
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DTSTAMP:20200129T054625Z
UID:BE903D1C-9FBA-4327-9B2D-F8F775680482
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191113T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191113T163000
DESCRIPTION:The increasing reliance on optical remote sensing data to provi
 de essential data for management and modelling of our planet has opened up
  many opportunities for research in remote sensing. It has also drawn atte
 ntion to the complexity of that these data represent. In this talk\, Profe
 ssor Coburn will address past research into the effects and impacts of spe
 ctral reflectance variability with respect to view and illumination angles
 . Research into the complex nature of a surface’s spectral reflectance f
 ield has always been hampered by lack of available instruments to conduct 
 the measurements – it has also been restricted due to larger and more pr
 essing questions in the science. Has the time come to begin re-writing the
 se basic constructs?\n\nSpeaker(s): Dr. Craig Colbourn\, \n\nRoom: 1125\, 
 Bldg: 76\, 54 Lomb Memorial Drive\, Rochester\, New York\, United States\,
  14623
LOCATION:Room: 1125\, Bldg: 76\, 54 Lomb Memorial Drive\, Rochester\, New Y
 ork\, United States\, 14623
ORGANIZER:emmett@cis.rit.edu
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:How you Look at it Matters: Investigations in Hyperspectral BRDF an
 d the Role of Serendipity in Research
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/220139
X-ALT-DESC:Description: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;p&gt;The increasing reliance on optical remote 
 sensing data to provide essential data for management and modelling of our
  planet has opened up many opportunities for research in remote sensing.&amp;n
 bsp\; It has also drawn attention to the complexity of that these data rep
 resent.&amp;nbsp\; In this talk\, Professor Coburn will address past research 
 into the effects and impacts of spectral reflectance variability with resp
 ect to view and illumination angles.&amp;nbsp\; Research into the complex natu
 re of a surface&amp;rsquo\;s spectral reflectance field has always been hamper
 ed by lack of available instruments to conduct the measurements &amp;ndash\; i
 t has also been restricted due to larger and more pressing questions in th
 e science.&amp;nbsp\; Has the time come to begin re-writing these basic constr
 ucts?&lt;/p&gt;
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