暴风资源

暴风资源 hosts New Zealand Geospatial Research Conference

Wednesday 12 October 2022

The hosted the New Zealand Geospatial Research Conference on the Wellington campus earlier this year.

Conference Chair and Director of Massey Geoinformatics Collaboratory Dr Kristin Stock presenting at the New Zealand Geospatial Research Conference in Te Rau Karamu Marae.

Last updated: Wednesday 12 October 2022

The conference saw 76 attendees from different universities, Crown Research Institutes, iwi, Government representatives and the private sector.

With the theme of 鈥榝inding our way to an open world鈥, Conference Chair and Director of Massey Geoinformatics Collaboratory Dr Kristin Stock highlighted the need for a truly open and collaborative approach to research processes.

鈥淚nformation about where significant events occur is key to challenges we鈥檙e facing today. Location information is available in a wide range of different forms, but needs particular methods for processing, knowledge extraction and analysis. This reality can only be realised with collaboration across institutions and sectors. The conference provided a forum to continue the work towards open geospatial research,鈥 Dr Stock says.

Awards

The Best Paper Award was won by a team led by Massey鈥檚 Dr Renata Muylaert. The highlights the increasing risk of pandemics resulting from habitat loss from bats. The researchers conducted ecological niche modelling for bat hosts of SARS-like viruses and predicted changes in bat hotspots resulting from climate change.

鈥淭his was my first in-person conference in a long time. It was great to connect with Geographic Information System GIS researchers and exchange information on interesting approaches developed and applied in New Zealand and internationally,鈥 Dr Muylaert says.

The Best Poster Award was won by The Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences, whose poster explored the accuracy of crowdsourcing reports of tsunamis, particularly studying the timing and distribution of reports of booming sounds and unusual sea conditions following Tonga鈥檚 Hunga eruption.

Australian researcher Dr Claudia Cialone won the conference People鈥檚 Choice Award for her paper describing the use of GoPros, GPS and Google Earth to study the way West Arnhem Land Aboriginals navigate and understand the landscape. She found that the Bininj Kunwok navigate using cardinal directions (e.g. turn west) or landscape features (e.g. turn upstream) rather than egocentric terms (e.g. turn left).

The Massey-led project was presented, discussing the use of natural language processing methods with a 28 million-word collection of historical documents in te reo M膩ori to study M膩ori conceptualisations of land.

Workshops

School of Agriculture and Environment Associate Dean M膩ori, Professor Jonathan Procter and Pukenga Reo Associate Professor Hone Morris hosted He H墨konga Tangata, He Ara M膩tauranga 鈥 A journey inspiring knowledge. This bus tour took attendees to locations around Te Whanganui-a-Tara (Wellington) to illustrate stories behind M膩ori place names and their links to the landscape and geology of the area.

鈥淧articipants were invited to listen to the stories of places of the Wellington region. Narratives handed down from ancestors of Ng膩i Tara, Rangit膩ne, Te 膧ti Awa and Toa Rangatira. It is essential that people retain these stories. As M膩ori we listen to the land talking through the names left behind, as my PhD supervisor Professor Cynthia White said at the beginning of my PhD journey, 'the language is in the land and the land is in the language,'" Associate Professor Morris says.

Other workshops explored the future of geospatial education in Aotearoa and career paths for postgraduate students in geospatial science.

Click to find out the full conference report.

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