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Dive into the research topics where Warren B. Cohen is active.

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Featured researches published by Warren B. Cohen.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2005

Estimates of forest canopy height and aboveground biomass using ICESat

Michael A. Lefsky; David J. Harding; Michael Keller; Warren B. Cohen; Claudia C. Carabajal; Fernando D. B. Espirito-Santo; M. O. Hunter; Raimundo de Oliveira

Exchange of carbon between forests and the atmosphere is a vital component of the global carbon cycle. Satellite laser altimetry has a unique capability for estimating forest canopy height, which has a direct and increasingly well understood relationship to aboveground carbon storage. While the Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS) onboard the Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) has collected an unparalleled dataset of lidar waveforms over terrestrial targets, processing of ICESat data to estimate forest height is complicated by the pulse broadening associated with large-footprint, waveform-sampling lidar. We combined ICESat waveforms and ancillary topography from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission to estimate maximum forest height in three ecosystems; tropical broadleaf forests in Brazil, temperate broadleaf forests in Tennessee, and temperate needleleaf forests in Oregon. Final models for each site explained between 59% and 68% of variance in field-measured forest canopy height (RMSE between 4.85 and 12.66 m). In addition, ICESat-derived heights for the Brazilian plots were correlated with field-estimates of aboveground biomass (r(2) = 73%, RMSE = 58.3 Mgha(-1)).


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2006

Validation of global moderate-resolution LAI products: a framework proposed within the CEOS land product validation subgroup

Jeffrey T. Morisette; Frédéric Baret; Jeffrey L. Privette; Ranga B. Myneni; Jaime Nickeson; Sébastien Garrigues; Nikolay V. Shabanov; Marie Weiss; R.A. Fernandes; S.G. Leblanc; Margaret Kalacska; G.A. Sanchez-Azofeifa; M. Chubey; Benoit Rivard; Pauline Stenberg; Miina Rautiainen; Pekka Voipio; Terhikki Manninen; Andrew Pilant; Timothy E. Lewis; J.S. Iiames; Roberto Colombo; Michele Meroni; Lorenzo Busetto; Warren B. Cohen; David P. Turner; E.D. Warner; G.W. Petersen; Guenther Seufert; R. B. Cook

Initiated in 1984, the Committee Earth Observing Satellites Working Group on Calibration and Validation (CEOS WGCV) pursues activities to coordinate, standardize and advance calibration and validation of civilian satellites and their data. One subgroup of CEOS WGCV, Land Product Validation (LPV), was established in 2000 to define standard validation guidelines and protocols and to foster data and information exchange relevant to the validation of land products. Since then, a number of leaf area index (LAI) products have become available to the science community at both global and regional extents. Having multiple global LAI products and multiple, disparate validation activities related to these products presents the opportunity to realize efficiency through international collaboration. So the LPV subgroup established an international LAI intercomparison validation activity. This paper describes the main components of this international validation effort. The paper documents the current participants, their ground LAI measurements and scaling techniques, and the metadata and infrastructure established to share data. The paper concludes by describing plans for sharing both field data and high-resolution LAI products from each site. Many considerations of this global LAI intercomparison can apply to other products, and this paper presents a framework for such collaboration


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

Evaluation of fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation products for different canopy radiation transfer regimes: Methodology and results using Joint Research Center products derived from SeaWiFS against ground-based estimations

Nadine Gobron; Bernard Pinty; O. Aussedat; Jing M. Chen; Warren B. Cohen; Rasmus Fensholt; Valéry Gond; Karl Fred Huemmrich; Thomas Lavergne; Frederic Melin; Jeffrey L. Privette; Inge Sandholt; Malcolm Taberner; David P. Turner; Michel M. Verstraete; J.-L. Widlowski

[1] This paper discusses the quality and the accuracy of the Joint Research Center (JRC) fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (FAPAR) products generated from an analysis of Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS) data. The FAPAR value acts as an indicator of the presence and state of the vegetation and it can be estimated from remote sensing measurements using a physically based approach. The quality of the SeaWiFS FAPAR products assessed in this paper capitalizes on the availability of a 6-year FAPAR time series over the full globe. This evaluation exercise is performed in two phases involving, first, an analysis of the verisimilitude of the FAPAR products under documented environmental conditions and, second, a direct comparison of the FAPAR values with ground-based estimations where and when the latter are available. This second phase is conducted following a careful analysis of problems arising for performing such a comparison. This results in the grouping of available field information into broad categories representing different radiative transfer regimes. This strategy greatly helps the interpretation of the results since it recognizes the various levels of difficulty and sources of uncertainty associated with the radiative sampling of different types of vegetation canopies.


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2006

MODIS land cover and LAI collection 4 product quality across nine sites in the western hemisphere

Warren B. Cohen; Thomas K. Maiersperger; David P. Turner; William D. Ritts; Dirk Pflugmacher; Robert E. Kennedy; Alan Kirschbaum; Steven W. Running; Marcos Heil Costa; Stith T. Gower

Global maps of land cover and leaf area index (LAI) derived from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MODIS) reflectance data are an important resource in studies of global change, but errors in these must be characterized and well understood. Product validation requires careful scaling from ground and related measurements to a grain commensurate with MODIS products. We present an updated BigFoot project protocol for developing 25-m validation data layers over 49-km2 study areas. Results from comparisons of MODIS and BigFoot land cover and LAI products at nine contrasting sites are reported. In terms of proportional coverage, MODIS and BigFoot land cover were in close agreement at six sites. The largest differences were at low tree cover evergreen needleleaf sites and at an Arctic tundra site where the MODIS product overestimated woody cover proportions. At low leaf biomass sites there was reasonable agreement between MODIS and BigFoot LAI products, but there was not a particular MODIS LAI algorithm pathway that consistently compared most favorably. At high leaf biomass sites, MODIS LAI was generally overpredicted by a significant amount. For evergreen needleleaf sites, LAI seasonality was exaggerated by MODIS. Our results suggest incremental improvement from Collection 3 to Collection 4 MODIS products, with some remaining problems that need to be addressed


Tellus B | 2006

A diagnostic carbon flux model to monitor the effects of disturbance and interannual variation in climate on regional NEP

David P. Turner; William D. Ritts; J. M. Styles; Zhiqiang Yang; Warren B. Cohen; Beverly E. Law; Peter E. Thornton

Net ecosystem production (NEP) was estimated over a 10.9 × 104 km2 forested region in western Oregon USA for 2 yr (2002–2003) using a combination of remote sensing, distributed meteorological data, and a carbon cycle model (CFLUX). High spatial resolution satellite data (Landsat, 30 m) provided information on land cover and the disturbance regime. Coarser resolution satellite imagery (MODIS, 1 km) provided estimates of vegetation absorption of photosynthetically active radiation. A spatially distributed (1 km) daily time step meteorology was generated for model input by interpolation of meteorological station data. The model employed a light use efficiency approach for photosynthesis. It was run over a 1 km grid. This approach captured spatial patterns in NEP associated with climatic gradients, ecoregional differences in NEP generated by different management histories, temporal variation in NEP associated with interannual variation in climate and changes in NEP associated with recovery from disturbances such as the large forest fire in southern Oregon in 2002. Regional NEP averaged 174 gC m-2 yr-1 in 2002 and 142 gC m-2 yr-1 in 2003. A diagnostic modelling approach of this type can provide independent estimates of regional NEP for comparison with results of inversion or boundary layer budget approaches.


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2006

Validation of global moderate-resolution LAI products

Jeffrey T. Morisette; Frédéric Baret; Jeffrey L. Privette; Ranga B. Myneni; Jaime Nickeson; Sébastien Garrigues; Nikolay V. Shabanov; Marie Weiss; Richard Fernandes; Sylvain G. Leblanc; Margaret Kalacska; G. Arturo Sánchez-Azofeifa; Michael Chubey; Benoit Rivard; Pauline Stenberg; Miina Rautiainen; Pekka Voipio; Terhikki Manninen; Andrew Pilant; Timothy E. Lewis; John S. Iiames; Roberto Colombo; Michele Meroni; Lorenzo Busetto; Warren B. Cohen; David P. Turner; Eric D. Warner; Gary W. Petersen; Guenter Seufert; R. B. Cook

Initiated in 1984, the Committee Earth Observing Satellites Working Group on Calibration and Validation (CEOS WGCV) pursues activities to coordinate, standardize and advance calibration and validation of civilian satellites and their data. One subgroup of CEOS WGCV, Land Product Validation (LPV), was established in 2000 to define standard validation guidelines and protocols and to foster data and information exchange relevant to the validation of land products. Since then, a number of leaf area index (LAI) products have become available to the science community at both global and regional extents. Having multiple global LAI products and multiple, disparate validation activities related to these products presents the opportunity to realize efficiency through international collaboration. So the LPV subgroup established an international LAI intercomparison validation activity. This paper describes the main components of this international validation effort. The paper documents the current participants, their ground LAI measurements and scaling techniques, and the metadata and infrastructure established to share data. The paper concludes by describing plans for sharing both field data and high-resolution LAI products from each site. Many considerations of this global LAI intercomparison can apply to other products, and this paper presents a framework for such collaboration


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2006

International LAI Product Intercomparison: Initial Results

Jeffrey T. Morisette; Jeffrey L. Privette; Frédéric Baret; Ranga B. Myneni; Jaime Nickeson; Sébastien Garrigues; S Shabanov; Richard Fernandes; Sylvain G. Leblanc; Margaret Kalacska; G.A. Sanchez-Azofeifa; M. Chubey; Benoit Rivard; Pauline Stenberg; Miina Rautiainen; Pekka Voipio; Terhikki Manninen; D Pilant; Timothy E. Lewis; J.S. Iiames; Roberto Colombo; Michele Meroni; Lorenzo Busetto; Warren B. Cohen; David P. Turner; E.D. Warner; Gary W. Petersen; Guenther Seufert; R Cooke

Initiated in 1984, the Committee Earth Observing Satellites Working Group on Calibration and Validation (CEOS WGCV) pursues activities to coordinate, standardize and advance calibration and validation of civilian satellites and their data. One subgroup of CEOS WGCV, Land Product Validation (LPV), was established in 2000 to define standard validation guidelines and protocols and to foster data and information exchange relevant to the validation of land products. Since then, a number of leaf area index (LAI) products have become available to the science community at both global and regional extents. Having multiple global LAI products and multiple, disparate validation activities related to these products presents the opportunity to realize efficiency through international collaboration. So the LPV subgroup established an international LAI intercomparison validation activity. This paper describes the main components of this international validation effort. The paper documents the current participants, their ground LAI measurements and scaling techniques, and the metadata and infrastructure established to share data. The paper concludes by describing plans for sharing both field data and high-resolution LAI products from each site. Many considerations of this global LAI intercomparison can apply to other products, and this paper presents a framework for such collaboration


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2006

Evaluation of MODIS NPP and GPP products across multiple biomes

David P. Turner; William D. Ritts; Warren B. Cohen; Stith T. Gower; Steve Running; Maosheng Zhao; Marcos Heil Costa; Al A. Kirschbaum; Jay M. Ham; Scott R. Saleska; Douglas E. Ahl


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2007

Trajectory-based change detection for automated characterization of forest disturbance dynamics

Robert E. Kennedy; Warren B. Cohen; Todd A. Schroeder


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2006

Radiometric correction of multi-temporal Landsat data for characterization of early successional forest patterns in western Oregon

Todd A. Schroeder; Warren B. Cohen; Conghe Song; Morton J. Canty; Zhiqiang Yang

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Jeffrey L. Privette

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Jaime Nickeson

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Jeffrey T. Morisette

United States Geological Survey

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