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In comparison to the previous period (1989-92) remote
sensing activity has expanded with a shift to a higher
number of person years reported for the 1992-96 period,
with one-third more companies reporting increased effort
expended. This trend concurs with responses to a
separate question in which 23 respondents (64%)
indicated that their remote sensing activities had
expanded during the 1992-96 period whilst 10 (28%)
noted that activities had remained at a constant level.
Only three organisations, all from the private sector,
indicated that their remote sensing activities had in fact
declined during the time period.
3.2 Applications
Respondents were asked to apportion their activities in
remote sensing to the applications listed in Table 3.2.
Although some confusion in interpreting the question is
acknowledged as the categories are not necessarily
mutually exclusive, types of activity were usually further
broken down into particular applications.
TABLE 3.2 Applications and activities of remote sensing
organisations:
only five respondents indicating total 100% activity in one
particular category. Three of these were research
organisations, but two private companies specified 100%
activity in Manufacturing, Software and Development
(Erdas UK Ltd. and Matra Marconi). Of particular activities
apart from education, research and consultancy, the
largest number of respondents were involved in
manufacturing/software development (12) and change
monitoring (12), followed by hydrology/oceanography (6).
Interestingly, some categories were not indicated for any
activity or applications work, namely National Survey and
defence/police/emergency services - either reflecting a
poor coverage or response from companies involved in
this research or the lack of potential near market
applications of current remote sensing technologies in
these categories.
3.3 Techniques
The number of organisations indicating involvement in the
following Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
techniques are listed as follows:
TABLE 3.3 Techniques:
Main Major Minor
>50% 10- <10%
50%
Institution/Profession/Trade matters 1 1
Education/Training 8 14 2
Research 11 15
Consultancy 16 2
Manufacture/Software development 4 6 2
Distribution/support/maintenance 1 2 2
National Survey
Project Mapping 2
National Resource Survey
Project Resource Survey 3 1
Protection of Environment 3
Defence/Police/Emergency Services
Hydrology/Oceanography 6
Meteorology/Space A 4
Monitoring Change 7 5
Other - Geology 1 1
Other - Ecology 1
Other - Oil Exploration 1
Other - Scientific Support 2
The different sectors of the remote sensing community
showed characteristically different usage patterns with
educational establishments naturally rating
Education/Training, Research and Consultancy as their
predominant activities, generally in that order of
preference in the respective categories (6, 8, 0 education;
6, 8, 0 research; 0, 6, 0 consultancy). Some research
institutions maintained responsibilities in
Education/Training (1,2,1) but principal activities
concentrated on research (7,1,0) with less emphasis on
consultancy (0, 2,1).
The interesting highlight is the broad range of
applications in which most institutions were involved with
91
Photogrammetry using space imaging 7
Photogrammetry using aerial photographs 12
Photogrammetry using video/scanned aerial images 6
. Architectural photogrammetry 3
Archaeological photogrammetry 1
Remote sensing using space imagery 34
Remote sensing using scanned aerial imagery 22
Remote sensing using terrestrial imagery 14
Photogrammetry or remote sensing using with GIS — 25
Other - Modelling : 1
Many organisations indicating a primary interest in remote
sensing indicated an involvement in using
photogrammetric techniques, principally photogrammetry
using information derived from space imagery (7), as well
as more conventional; approaches using aerial
photographs. The development and change to digital
photogrammetric systems, improved quality of colour
scanner and plotters, improved software capabilities to
automatically generate orthophoto products and digital
terrain models and the subsequent integration of these
products with remote sensing and within GIS were seen
by several organisations as significant changes during
the study period.
All organisatons used digital remotely sensed data
derived from space sensors as the fundamental basis for
their activities but 65% indicated that airborne digital
imagery was also used to a significant level, perhaps
indicative of the increased investment by NERC in
airborne technologies as well as greater levels of
awareness and interest among commercial companies.
3.4 Education
The growth and awareness of remote sensing at all levels
in the educational sector has continued. Increasingly, the
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B6. Vienna 1996