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Lina Tang

Researcher at Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publications -  111
Citations -  2609

Lina Tang is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Land use & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 93 publications receiving 1532 citations. Previous affiliations of Lina Tang include Guangdong University of Business Studies.

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Drone remote sensing for forestry research and practices

TL;DR: In this article, the benefits of drone remote sensing include low material and operational costs, flexible control of spatial and temporal resolution, high-intensity data collection, and the absence of risk to crews.
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A commentary review on the use of normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) in the era of popular remote sensing

TL;DR: The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) is one of the earliest remote sensing analytical products used to simplify the complexities of multi-spectral imagery, and is now the most popular index used for vegetation assessment as mentioned in this paper.
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Incorporation of extended neighborhood mechanisms and its impact on urban land-use cellular automata simulations

TL;DR: The extracted neighborhood rules were integrated into a commonly used logistic regression urban CA model, resulting in a large neighborhood urban land use model (Logistic-LNCA), which achieved higher simulation accuracy and the Kappa coefficient varied with window sizes and radius intervals.
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Forest degradation deepens around and within protected areas in East Asia

TL;DR: In this paper, Wang et al. showed that over one half of primary forest landscapes in two adjacent biosphere reserves across the border of China and North Korea have been degraded by exploitive uses, including seed harvesting and systematic logging.
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Rapid urbanisation, ecological effects and sustainable city construction in Xiamen

TL;DR: For the first time in history, more than half of the world's human population lives in urban areas (UNPF 2008), which is the most important stage in mankind's development as discussed by the authors.