Center Aids Cops With Technology

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
While the University of Southern Mississippi's Center of Higher Learning, located at the John C. Stennis Space Center, is known for its educational and workforce development offerings, two applied technology programs, Geospatial Applications and Visualization, also call CHL their home.

Over the last year, the Geospatial Applications Lab has updated a computer-based system to assist in the decision-making process for counterdrug technologies that aid the Mississippi National Guard and the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics.

The heart of the system is a map showing the areas in the state most likely for outdoor growth of marijuana. The Geo Lab produced this map by coupling two cutting-edge technologies, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and an Artificial Neural Network (ANN).

Jim Matthews, director of the CHL Geospatial Applications Laboratory, said, "This technology highlights areas with the highest potential for marijuana cultivation and has proven very useful in the strategic planning to eliminate marijuana."

The ANN is supplied with a large number of GIS themes such as demographics, roads, topography and land cover as well as data about marijuana growth. By testing the themes to see which ones have the potential to separate growth sites from the random locations, the ANN produces a map that shows the similarity of every point in the state to the characteristics of where marijuana has been grown in the past.

The Office of National Drug Control Policy, an organization of the federal government, has shown interest in the process as a way to estimate domestic marijuana production.
By identifying areas where marijuana is most likely and least likely to be grown, ONDCP can conduct statistical surveys to estimate its production.

"Producing counterdrug information is just one of the ways this technology can be utilized. It also has promising wide-spread applications to the analysis of many types of spatial data," said Joe Swaykos, director of the Center of Higher Learning.


News Hawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: The Student Printz
Copyright: 2008 The Student Printz
Contact: Student Printz
Website: Center aids cops with technology - News
 
I think a more useful application of the geospatial technology would be a program to predict the location of an improved class of politicians. The ones we've got now just aren't working out.
 
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