Welcome to the Lab News Page!

I'll post stuff on occasion about the lab members here.

Lab Meetings are scheduled here. Lab guidelines.

Tuesday
Feb182014

New visitor: Pengfeng Xiao

Pengfeng XiaoDr. Pengfeng Xiao will join us this April for one year to work on remote sensing projects. He is currently an Associate Professor with the Department of Geographic Information Science, Nanjing University, China. He received the Ph.D. degree in Cartography and Geographical Information System from Nanjing University in 2007. His research interests include remote sensing image segmentation and object-oriented analysis, land use and land cover change, and remote sensing of snow cover. He is the author of more than 10 articles published in international journals, and the recipient of the CPGIS Best Paper Award in 2007 and the ISPRS Prize for Best Paper by Young Author in 2008.

Monday
Oct142013

New Visitor: Huang Rui

Huang RuiDr. Huang Rui will be visiting us this fall to work on remote sensing projects.  She is currently in the Communication & Information Engineering Department at Shanghai University. 

Her work mainly focuses on:

  • multi-/hyper-spectral data analysis: classification and recognition of interesting objects, band extraction, band selection;
  • data mining and machine learning: high-dimensional data preprocessing, classification, feature extraction, feature selection; and
  • neural networks, evolution computing and image processing.

She will be here begining in November.

Tuesday
Aug272013

Fall 2013 Lab Meetings scheduled

Fall 2013 Lab Meetings have been scheduled for Mondays, 10-11am.

See here for schedule: http://kellylab.berkeley.edu/lab-meetings/.

Monday
Aug192013

New Visiting Graduate Student: Paulina Wong

Paulina Wong, a graduate student from Hong Kong, will be joining us for 6 months on a Fulbright Scholarship in September 2013. Here is a little bit about her:

Paulina WongI am a third year PhD candidate of the Department of Geography at the University of Hong Kong. My areas of specialization are in GIS, urban climate and public health. I have received the Lee Hysan-Fulbright junior research scholarship which enables me to spend six months at UC Berkeley to conduct research leading to completion of my PhD work. My current research interests concern environmental impacts and their effects on health-related problems in Hong Kong.

She will be working with us on the Our Space project. Welcome Paulina!

Monday
Aug122013

Sarah Lewis Phinishes!

Sarah LewisSarah Lewis has finished her PhD dissertation: Geospatial strategies to optimize placement of advanced bioenergy crops in marginal landscapes.

As energy policies around the world progressively mandate increases in bioenergy production, the amount of land required to meet these demands might come at the cost of food production or environmental protection. To ensure sustainable practices, planting energy crops on marginal land is frequently proposed as a solution to this land use dilemma in order to meet mandates while avoiding negative externalities. Yet even though the term “marginal land” has become so entwined with discussions surrounding bioenergy, its definition is in fact malleable – easily shaped to fit research needs. This research investigates how marginal lands are commonly viewed in a Geographic Information Systems (GIS) framework and presents an innovative and flexible model that optimizes the placement of drought-tolerant bioenergy crops in marginal landscapes in the United States. In my first chapter, I present the first work that evaluates a suite of studies that use GIS to map marginal lands available for bioenergy production. In my second two chapters, I focus on the development of a site suitability model for several types of drought-tolerant bioenergy crops, which are of particular interest in the US because of their ability to grow on land not suitable for conventional agricultural production. In this work I demonstrate that incorporating fuzzy logic into the suitability model provides a more progressive suitability index that best synthesizes tradeoffs between multiple criteria. Using this model I present the first evidence to demonstrate that the area suitable for growing Agave as a bioenergy feedstock in the Southwestern US is sufficient to contribute to domestic renewable energy needs. I conclude that Agave would not be a major competitor to other energy feedstocks, but rather serve a parallel benefit as a renewable energy crop on lands unsuitable for conventional bioenergy production.

Congratulations to Sarah!