Steven P. Norman
United States Forest Service
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Featured researches published by Steven P. Norman.
Remote Sensing | 2017
Steven P. Norman; William W. Hargrove; William M. Christie
Mountainous regions experience complex phenological behavior along climatic, vegetational and topographic gradients. In this paper, we use a MODIS time series of the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) to understand the causes of variations in spring and autumn timing from 2000 to 2015, for a landscape renowned for its biological diversity. By filtering for cover type, topography and disturbance history, we achieved an improved understanding of the effects of seasonal weather variation on land surface phenology (LSP). Elevational effects were greatest in spring and were more important than site moisture effects. The spring and autumn NDVI of deciduous forests were found to increase in response to antecedent warm temperatures, with evidence of possible cross-seasonal lag effects, including possible accelerated green-up after cold Januarys and early brown-down following warm springs. Areas that were disturbed by the hemlock woolly adelgid and a severe tornado showed a weaker sensitivity to cross-year temperature and precipitation variation, while low severity wildland fire had no discernable effect. Use of ancillary datasets to filter for disturbance and vegetation type improves our understanding of vegetation’s phenological responsiveness to climate dynamics across complex environmental gradients.
international conference on data mining | 2015
Jitendra Kumar; Jon Weiner; William W. Hargrove; Steven P. Norman; Forrest M. Hoffman; Doug Newcomb
Vegetation canopy structure is a critically important habitat characteristic for many threatened and endangered birds and other animal species, and it is key information needed by forest and wildlife managers for monitoring and managing forest resources, conservation planning and fostering biodiversity. Advances in Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) technologies have enabled remote sensing-based studies of vegetation canopies by capturing three-dimensional structures, yielding information not available in two-dimensional images of the landscape provided by traditional multi-spectral remote sensing platforms. However, the large volume data sets produced by airborne LiDAR instruments pose a significant computational challenge, requiring algorithms to identify and analyze patterns of interest buried within LiDAR point clouds in a computationally efficient manner, utilizing state-of-art computing infrastructure. We developed and applied a computationally efficient approach to analyze a large volume of LiDAR data and characterized the vegetation canopy structures for 139,859 hectares (540 sq. miles) in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. This study helps improve our understanding of the distribution of vegetation and animal habitats in this extremely diverse ecosystem.
Annals of The Association of American Geographers | 2004
Steven P. Norman
Aitkin, S., and J. Crane. 2001. The pornography of despair: Lust, desire and the music of Matt Johnson. ACME: An International E-journal for Critical Geographies 1:91–116. (http:// www.acme-journal.org/volume1). Berland, J. 1998. Locating listening: Technological space, popular music, andCanadianmeditations place. InThe place ofmusic, eds. A. Leyshon, D. Matless, and G. Revill, 129–50. New York: The Guilford Press. Cohen, S. 1998. Sounding out the city: Music and the sensuous production of place. InThe place of music, ed. A. Leyshon, D. Matless, andG.Revill, 69–90.NewYork: TheGuilford Press. Kong, L. 1997. Popular music in a transnational world: the construction of local identities in Singapore. Asia Pacific Viewpoint 38:19–36. Leyshon, A., D. Matless, and G. Revill, eds. 1998. The place of music. New York: The Guilford Press. White, B., and F. Day. 1997. Country music radio and American culture regions. Journal of Cultural Geography 16:21–35.
Forest Ecology and Management | 2009
Craig G. Lorimer; Daniel J. Porter; Mary Ann Madej; John D. Stuart; Stephen D. Veirs; Steven P. Norman; Kevin L. O'Hara; William J. Libby
Forest Ecology and Management | 2016
Steven P. Norman; Frank H. Koch; William W. Hargrove
international conference on conceptual structures | 2013
Richard Tran Mills; Jitendra Kumar; Forrest M. Hoffman; William W. Hargrove; Joseph P. Spruce; Steven P. Norman
Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS-GTR-180. Asheville, NC: USDA-Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 30 p. | 2013
Steven P. Norman; William W. Hargrove; Joseph P. Spruce; William M. Christie; Sean W. Schroeder
In: GTR-WO-93b Effects of drought on forests and rangelands in the United States. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,#N#Southern Research Station (SRS), Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center (EFETAC), Asheville, NC 28801. | 2016
Steven P. Norman; Frank H. Koch; William W. Hargrove
Japan Geoscience Union | 2017
Forrest M. Hoffman; Jitendra Kumar; William W. Hargrove; Steven P. Norman; Bjørn-Gustaf J. Brooks
2014 AGU Fall Meeting | 2014
Steven P. Norman