GIS Certificate Fall 2020 New Student Orientation Live Session
NC, United StatesVirtual Coffee Q&A live session on Zoom
Virtual Coffee Q&A live session on Zoom
In this forum, Dr. Wentz shares the goals and outcomes from Arizona State University’s Knowledge Exchange for Resilience (KER). KER is a boundary organization with the intent to build community resilience in Maricopa County, Arizona. Here, community resilience is defined as the capacity of a community to withstand and respond to long term stresses and…
The world is getting hotter and in many cases wetter. Impacts on coastal carbon cycling are becoming realized yet our ability to model these processes remain in their early stages. Knowledge gained from specific case studies will form a basis for considering pulses of extreme events occurring amongst the presses of land use change and…
As sensors are getting smaller, cheaper and more efficient, data collection is no longer limited to high-end users. It can now be done from a variety of commodity platforms such as commercial drones, consumer automobiles and even the phones in our pockets. We are now collecting more data than humans can interpret manually, and we…
A community-engaged information-gathering effort is being conducted to inform air quality sampling strategy in Colfax, Louisiana, a low income, majority-Black community which hosts a hazardous materials thermal treatment (TT) facility. Our mixed-methods approach combines mapping with qualitative analysis to synthesize information on exposures within Colfax and the nearby community of The Rock, which are proximal…
The field of neighborhoods and health (sometimes referred to as spatial epidemiology) has grown exponentially in the fifteen years since the publication of the first edition of Neighborhoods and Health edited by Ichiro Kawachi and Lisa Berkman in 2003. The field continues to grow since the revamped second edition of Neighborhoods and Health (Oxford University…
The Center for Geospatial Analytics is holding a virtual poster competition highlighting our graduating MGIST students' capstone projects. Members of the Center community can view and vote on their favorite poster anytime during the two-day event.
The College of Natural Resources celebrates its Spring, Summer and Fall 2020 graduates. Welcome and congratulatory remarks from Dean Myron Floyd Recognition of academic honors, explanation of the significance of the Ph.D. Recognition of 18 Ph.D. students Recognition of master's and undergraduate students
Immediately following the CNR virtual graduation ceremony, join us for a brief virtual reception to recognize each of our graduating students and to announce our MGIST Digital Symposium poster winner.
Students will access online materials to review before the live Virtual Coffee Q&A sessions on January 15, 2021.