A presentation by Prof. Tony Cohn given at the DART community workshop on the 27th April 2011 on how we will deliver impact and engage with stakeholders.
2. Areas of impact Academic Archaeology Soils Remote Sensing Computer science Heritage sector Policy Wider public
3. DART heritage audience Primary: those that collect and exploit heritage remote sensing data as part of their daily activities (National Heritage organisations and specialist consultancies). Secondary: those heritage organisations that exploit remote sensing data periodically or exploit synthetic data (contractual units, heritage consultants, regional and national monuments records) Tertiary: all other (non-heritage) exploiters of remote sensing data (industry, planning, affiliated remote sensing researchers, environmental groups, and the public) National and International
4. What we will do Baseline understanding and knowledge about AR contrast processes and preservation dynamics: leading to better management and curation providing data to model environmental impact on Ars enhancing the understanding of the resource base The identification of suitable sensors and conditions for their use (and feedback to improve sensor design) Data fusion techniques (physical models, multi-sensor data and domain knowledge) to improve AR identification An interdisciplinary network between remote sensing, soil science, computing and heritage professionals Techniques for researchers to access data archives more effectively
5. What we are already doing Web site Twitter Press release Publications Participation in AHRC/EPSRC programme events Methodology To come: data availability methodology software PhDs ...
6. How can we maximise impact? What should we do to impact on you/your organisation/sector? How should we do it? When should we do it? Where should we do it?