L
Linda See
Researcher at International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
Publications - 338
Citations - 13633
Linda See is an academic researcher from International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Land cover & Crowdsourcing. The author has an hindex of 55, co-authored 312 publications receiving 10755 citations. Previous affiliations of Linda See include International Institute of Minnesota & University College London.
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Journal ArticleDOI
African crop yield reductions due to increasingly unbalanced Nitrogen and Phosphorus consumption
Marijn van der Velde,Christian Folberth,Juraj Balkovic,Juraj Balkovic,Philippe Ciais,Steffen Fritz,Ivan A. Janssens,Michael Obersteiner,Linda See,Rastislav Skalský,Wei Xiong,Josep Peñuelas +11 more
TL;DR: C crop response functions based on 741 FAO maize crop trials and EPIC crop modeling across Africa are used to examine maize yield deficits resulting from unbalanced N : P applications under low, medium, and high input scenarios, and the P demand to overcome these yield deficits would provide a significant additional pressure on current global extraction of P resources.
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Quality of Crowdsourced Data on Urban Morphology—The Human Influence Experiment (HUMINEX)
Benjamin Bechtel,Matthias Demuzere,Panagiotis Sismanidis,Daniel Fenner,Oscar Brousse,Christoph Beck,Frieke Van Coillie,Olaf Conrad,Iphigenia Keramitsoglou,Ariane Middel,Gerald Mills,Dev Niyogi,Marco Otto,Linda See,Marie-Leen Verdonck +14 more
TL;DR: Improvements of up to 20% in overall accuracy were found when multiple training datasets were used together to create a single LCZ map, and improvement was greatest for small training datasets, saturating at about ten to fifteen sets.
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A Review of Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing in Applications of Pluvial Flooding
TL;DR: The aim of this paper is to review current activities in citizen science and crowdsourcing with respect to applications of pluvial flooding and classify them into four main themes.
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Contributing to WUDAPT: A Local Climate Zone Classification of Two Cities in Ukraine
TL;DR: This paper assesses the transferability of the LCZ concept to two Ukrainian cities, i.e., Kyiv and Lviv, which differ in urban form and topography, and considers three ways to validate and verify this classification scheme.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Need for Improved Maps of Global Cropland
Steffen Fritz,Linda See,Liangzhi You,Christopher O. Justice,Inbal Becker-Reshef,Lieven Bydekerke,Renato Cumani,Pierre Defourny,Karl-Heinz Erb,Jon Foley,Sven Gilliams,Peng Gong,Matthew C. Hansen,Thomas W. Hertel,Martin Herold,Mario Herrero,Francois Kayitakire,John Latham,Olivier Leo,Ian McCallum,Michael Obersteiner,Navin Ramankutty,Jansle Vieira Rocha,Huajun Tang,Philip K. Thornton,Christelle Vancutsem,Marijn van der Velde,Stan Wood,Curtis E. Woodcock +28 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that there are significant additional pressures on existing agricultural land through increased competition from the biofuel sector and the need to elevate feed production, which is being driven by higher levels of meat consumption in low and middle-income countries.