Full text: XVIIIth Congress (Part B4)

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responses to circular letters, with some 80 respondents 
registering their interest over the four-year period. The 
lack of intervening meetings has led to very strong 
programmes for both the symposium and the Congress. 
It seems likely that the Working Group could support at 
least one Workshop devoted specifically to Map and 
Database Revision during the next session. Potential 
organisers should note that similar groups exist within 
other international or regional organisations such as ICA, 
CERCO and OEEPE so cooperation is clearly desirable 
and joint meetings should be considered. 
This paper is confined to reviewing only the Congress 
papers offered to this Working Group, although some 
relevant material published elsewhere during the period 
is naturally also cited. It is certain that there will be 
many contributions to other working groups, especially in 
Commissions Il and lll, which are of lively interest to the 
members of WGIV/3. Indeed the present “horizontal” 
Commission structure, with layers of activity from initial 
data capture onwards, requires those who are interested 
in a particular "vertical" theme (for example the whole of 
topographic mapping from sensor to user) to be involved 
in the affairs of almost all of the Commissions. This is 
unduly expensive even for those with institutional support 
and prohibitive for those without sponsorship; thus it is 
certain that even the chairman of this working group has 
overlooked numerous relevant contributions during the 
past eight years. The structure is also inefficient in terms 
of the exchange of ideas and of the cross-fertilisation 
between researchers, theoreticians and practitioners 
which in my view was the main justification for the 
continued survival of the vertical Commission structure of 
ISPRS. It is hoped that the inevitable overlaps in this 
Congress programme, the impossibility of one delegate 
attending all of the sessions relevant to his interests, and 
the dispersal of related papers among numerous 
volumes of the archives, will stimulate the reopening of 
the debate on future ISPRS structure which yielded 
inconclusive results in the 1988-92 session. 
2. REVIEW OF CONTRIBUTIONS TO THIS CONGRESS 
At the time of writing, the detailed programme for the 
Congress is not yet available, but | have seen all of the 
extended abstracts offered for this Working Group and 
have advised on how they should fit into the programme. 
The first session, whose proposed title is "Map Revision : 
Where are we now ? (Progress and Practice 1992 - 96)”, 
readily embraces papers from a range of national 
mapping or similar organisations: van Asperen (The 
Netherlands), Armenakis (Canada), Müller (Germany) 
and Krishna (India) are all using or proposing softcopy 
approaches. The emphasis from the Netherlands is on 
management, rather than technicalities, to ensure 
efficient routine operations. The emerging consensus is 
that mono-plotting, from a digital orthophoto, is the cost 
effective way forward. Peled (Israel) reports on 
developing national mapping procedures as well as his 
own research towards semi-automated revision based on 
the intelligence embodied in the existing database. 
Meanwhile Sehnalek (USA) reports from the private 
sector on procedures which closely follow those reported 
in earlier years by this author (Newby, 1990). 
599 
The theme of automation is taken up in earnest in our 
second session “Change at the Millennium : Is 
automation possible ? (Ongoing developments, with 
total automation the ultimate goal)”. In his invited paper, 
Woodsford (UK) offers us a thoughtful and thought- 
provoking discussion of update philosophy and 
paradigms, with special emphasis on the importance of 
maintaining database integrity. Two papers from 
Germany, offered by Englisch ef al (Munich) and Anders 
et al (Stuttgart) report on important research into 
automated feature extraction, the former emphasising 
medium scale (topographic) data (ATKIS) and the latter 
very large scale (cadastral) data (ALK). Steps towards 
the automation of change detection or feature extraction 
for various themes or scales are also reported by 
Masaharu (Japan), Shi and Shibasaki (Japan), Johnsson 
(Sweden) and Lin (China). 
There are also numerous contributions which fit well into 
a possible third session: “Graphic Revision and Digital 
Update - Field, Office and User. (Diverse needs, diverse 
processes : where should photogrammetry fit in ?)” Mills 
(UK) breaks into true digital airborne imagery (as 
opposed to scanned conventional aerial photography), in 
experiments using a very small format digital camera for 
local map revision. This offers the prospect of a shift in 
the balance between field and photogrammetric surveys 
for change on small sites. Grozdeva (Russia) follows 
the same principle as Mills but proposes appropriate 
technology of conventional small format photography 
taken from a microlight aircraft for the revision of small 
towns, presumably in a country where there is no official 
bar on the use of microlights for business purposes. 
Other varied contributions cover combinations of aerial 
imagery with SPOT (Naithani, India) or with terrestrial 
photography  (Crosilla, Italy), both of which are 
presumably more feasible in the digital era than in the 
past. Solutions at varying levels of technology are also 
proposed by Julia (Argentina) and Ramirez (USA). 
Standards, a topic neglected by ISPRS WGs, are 
addressed by van den Heuvel (The Netherlands). Finally 
| will cite Tempfli (The Netherlands) whose discussion of 
scale, resolution and scanning parameters may help 
users to ensure that digital image technology matches 
the performance to which we are accustomed. Along 
the way he gives a notable demonstration of the benefits 
of stereo imagery, a point possibly yet to be fully 
appreciated by the proponents of digital mono-plotting. 
Several of the papers cited above will receive their 
exposure in the Congress Poster Sessions, along with 
many more which bring fresh perspectives to the same 
themes. | will allow all of these authors to speak for 
themselves through their presentations in Vienna and 
through the Congress Archives, but now offer a 
commentary on the current status of map and database 
revision and on work published earlier in the 1992-96 
session of ISPRS. 
3. THE FRAMEWORK FOR DEVELOPMENT 
| was recently asked to contribute a paper on “digital 
images in the map revision process” for the special 
Commission IV issue of the International Journal of 
Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (Newby, 1996). 
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B4. Vienna 1996 
 
	        
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