4.2 Article

People and Pixels 20 years later: the current data landscape and research trends blending population and environmental data

Journal

POPULATION AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 41, Issue 2, Pages 209-234

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11111-019-00326-5

Keywords

Remote sensing; Population data; Human dimensions of global change; Data integration; Mobile device data

Funding

  1. NASA [NNG13HQ04C]
  2. Minnesota Population Center through Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute for Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) [P2C HD041023]
  3. Office of Naval Research (ONR) [N00014-16-1-2543, 171570]
  4. US Army Corps of Engineers ERDC-GRL award [W9126G-18-2-0037, 209549]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In 1998, the National Research Council published People and Pixels: Linking Remote Sensing and Social Science. The volume focused on emerging research linking changes in human populations and land use/land cover to shed light on issues of sustainability, human livelihoods, and conservation, and led to practical innovations in agricultural planning, hazard impact analysis, and drought monitoring. Since then, new research opportunities have emerged thanks to the growing variety of remotely sensed data sources, an increasing array of georeferenced social science data, including data from mobile devices, and access to powerful computation cyberinfrastructure. In this article, we outline the key extensions of the People and Pixels foundation since 1998 and highlight several breakthroughs in research on human-environment interactions. We also identify pressing research problems-disaster, famine, drought, war, poverty, climate change-and explore how interdisciplinary approaches integrating people and pixels are being used to address them.

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