Data Acquisition Methods and Main Considerations

There are four methods of acquiring data: collecting new data; converting/transforming legacy data; sharing/exchanging data; and purchasing data. This includes automated collection (e.g., of sensor-derived data), the manual recording of empirical observations, and obtaining existing data from other sources.

Common Data Acquisition Considerations 

There are a number of consideration when acquiring data . Once the data are collected or received, the data must be reviewed to assure that the data meet standards and can be certified as acceptable for their intended use by USGS.

  • Project Needs: The first thing to always consider is the need – why are these data required? What will be done with them?
     
  • Project Rules: A business rule identifies the constraints under which the business operates. For instance, where applicable, all geospatial data must have Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) compliant metadata. These rules will affect your data acquisition decisions.
     
  • Data Standards: Any Government, USGS, or industry standards that apply will need consideration.
     
  • Accuracy Requirements: Among the most familiar accuracy requirements is the locational accuracy for spatial data; but there are other accuracy requirements that you may need to consider as well.
     
  • Cost: Cost is always a consideration. Sometimes it’s cheaper to buy than to collect.
     
  • Currency of Data: For many types of work, the data need to be fairly current. For others, data may need to cover a specified time period. For others, data need to be in a specific season. If you are trying to determine vegetation coverage, for example, you may want photographs from the summer, when vegetation is at the highest. If you are trying to look for land forms, you may want winter photos.
     
  • Time Constraints: You should determine how soon you need the data.
     
  • Format: Do you need the data as spatial data, photos, flat files, Excel files, XML files? This may not apply, but you need to determine that for each project.

Source: USGS

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Urbanism as a Way of Life

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Research method in urban studies: principles and guidelines

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The blog attempts to articulate the research method, especially within the field of urban studies. The chart attempts to decode the various knowledge territories that are operative functionally as well as spatially within various research areas. The chart also attempts to acknowledge and recognise such knowledge systems. This also makes tangible links that research in any such knowledge systems are central to various urban discourses that recognise the liveability indexes and sustainability of such characters of the city.   

Methodology is the systematic, theoretical position, approach that is applied to a field of study. It comprises the theoretical analysis and principles associated with a branch of knowledge.

Method is simply a research tool and technique component of conducting research – a qualitative method such as interview or quantitative method such as demographic study are examples of methods.

Image Credit: Manoj Parmar Architects

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Gladys West Modelled the Earth So That We Can Have GPS

The name Gladys West is probably unfamiliar, but she was part of creating something you probably use often enough: GPS. You wouldn’t think a child who grew up on a sharecropping farm would wind up as an influential mathematician, but perhaps watching her father work very hard for very little and her mother working for […]

Gladys West Modelled the Earth So That We Can Have GPS — Hackaday
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