Geomatics Engineering Seminars

Dr. Lexie Yang from Oak Ridge National Lab will present the next geomatics seminar, "Scaling Geospatial Artificial Intelligence: Opportunities and Challenges," on Thursday, April 28, 2022, at 2:00pm via Zoom.

Dr. Lexie Yang from Oak Ridge National Lab will present the next geomatics seminar on Thursday, April 28, 2022, at 2:00pm via Zoom. For the link to join the seminar, contact Prof. Jinha Jung

Scaling Geospatial Artificial Intelligence: Opportunities and Challenges

Thursday, April 21, 2022
2:00-3:00pm - Webcasted via Zoom

Abstract

The increasing accessibility of geospatial imagery and rapid advances in AI continues to drive a surge in adaptation of GeoAI systems. From mapping to real-time monitoring and solving long-standing geoscience problems, GeoAI plays a critical role to revolutionizing how geospatial data can be transformed into actionable knowledge in our daily life.  While holding great promise, the tremendous amount of imagery describing the surface of the Earth every day entails the challenges of collecting, refining, analyzing, and curating those data. These challenges necessitate the need of integrating advances in computing technologies and artificial intelligence to deliver the actionable geo-knowledge with scalable approaches. In this talk, we will review the current GeoAI advances and several demonstrations of large scale and impactful national security applications. We will also present several key research directions to foster the end-to-end and scalable GeoAI systems to address those challenges.

Bio

H. Lexie Yang is a Research Scientist and PI in GeoAI Group at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Her research interests focus on advancing high performance computing and machine learning approaches for geospatial data analysis. She had collaborated with esteemed scholars for NASA AIST, NSF, DOE sponsored projects and currently leads several AI-enabled geoscience data analytics projects with large-scale multi-modality geospatial data. The recent work from her team has been widely used to support national-scale disaster assessment and management by agencies.  She received PhD in Civil Engineering from Purdue University in 2014.