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line, racetrack, highway bridge, buildings and edge of
forest. All features were digitized in point mode. Roads
were digitized along the centre line.
The newly digitized features were then combined with the
original map and the position of the features in the original
map were used as the reference to ascertain the accuracy of
the revision process. Point features were tested by forming
the coordinate differences. Line features were subdivided
into sections at well defined breakpoints. Thereafter, X, Y
coordinates were generated at equal intervals along the
original and newly digitized path of the features. The
deviations at corresponding point pairs were then computed.
A total of 977 points of well defined features were tested in
the 1: 50 000 scale map. The root mean square error
(RMSE) of the position of the newly digitized features was
1.5 m. At none of the points did the difference exceed 25 m,
which was the limit set by the map accuracy standards at the
9096 confidence level. The REMSE of the 1369 feature
points tested in the 1:10 000 orthoimage was 0.8 m and only
396 of the points exceeded the 5 m limit set for the 9096
error.
The above results are most satisfactory. The map accuracy
standards are satisfied and the RMSE of digitization in both
orthoimages has a subpixel accuracy. At the scale of the
aerial photographs used to form the orthoimages the RMSEs
correspond to 0.037 mm and 0.023 mm respectively. The
magnitude of these values is in the range of the measuring
accuracy attainable in second order photogrammetric
plotters.
4. CONCLUSIONS
All phases of the digital orthoimage generation developed at
UNB are performed in a GIS environment, which has been
equipped with both vector graphics and raster image
handling capability. This scheme is especially attractive for
resource mapping and map revision since the orthoimages
can be formed on as needed bases. GCPs, needed for the
geometric transformation, can be selected interactively in the
same environment, in a symultaneous dispay of a map and
image. In the map revision experiment conducted with digital
orthoimages, a low cost document scanner was employed to
digitize the photographs. Nevertheless, the map accuracy
standards were fully satisfied, which indicates, that the low-
cost digital orthoimage production schem presented here has
a definite merit. More experiments are, however, needed to
evaluate the full potential of this scheme and to refine the
methodology.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This development work was funded under the Canada/New
Brunswick Subsidiary Agreement on Industrial Innovation
and Technology Development.
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