2014
DOI: 10.1080/2150704x.2014.905728
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Evaluation of NPP-VIIRS night-time light composite data for extracting built-up urban areas

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Cited by 298 publications
(154 citation statements)
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“…The VIIRS images, first released in 2012, are a relatively new alternative to the longer-running and more frequently utilized U.S. Department of Defense Meteorological Satellite Program's Operational Linescan System (DMSP-OLS) NTL dataset. The VIIRS, with a much finer spatial resolution (750 m vs. 2.7 km), lower detection limit, and substantially less saturation in dense urban areas provides better detail and avoids DMSP-OLS's "over-glow" effect [50][51][52]. The superiority of the VIIRS dataset is most pronounced in dense urban areas where it is markedly better and discriminating high light intensity levels relative to DMSP-OLS.…”
Section: Night-time Lights Analysismentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The VIIRS images, first released in 2012, are a relatively new alternative to the longer-running and more frequently utilized U.S. Department of Defense Meteorological Satellite Program's Operational Linescan System (DMSP-OLS) NTL dataset. The VIIRS, with a much finer spatial resolution (750 m vs. 2.7 km), lower detection limit, and substantially less saturation in dense urban areas provides better detail and avoids DMSP-OLS's "over-glow" effect [50][51][52]. The superiority of the VIIRS dataset is most pronounced in dense urban areas where it is markedly better and discriminating high light intensity levels relative to DMSP-OLS.…”
Section: Night-time Lights Analysismentioning
confidence: 87%
“…A downside of night-time imagery, particularly DMSP-OLS data, though, is their tendency to overestimate urban areas because of a blooming effect, of the sensor properties, and/or cumulative georeferencing errors [76]. The newer VIIRS sensor outperforms the DMSP-OLS system through improved spatial, radiometric and spectral resolution [77] as well as accuracy [78]. However, since VIIRS data have only been available since 2012, we use DMSP-OLS stable lights from 2010 in this study.…”
Section: Multi-source Geodata Setsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although nighttime images collected from the VIIRS sensor have been released, empirical research based on these datasets is rare. Comparing results of studies on the same research topic between the old OLS images and the new VIIRS images will allow us to further understand the advancement and intrinsic limitations of the new database [80][81][82][83][84]. Therefore, it can answer a series of research questions, such as how does the VIIRS images perform in overcoming the saturation and blooming phenomena in OLS images; does the improved quality of VIIRS images contribute to better estimations of social-economic parameters, and how to fuse the data from the two sensors?…”
Section: Major Challengesmentioning
confidence: 99%