Linda See profile picture

Linda See

Principal Research Scholar

Novel Data Ecosystems for Sustainability Research Group

Advancing Systems Analysis Program

Biography

Linda See is a senior research scholar in the Novel Data Ecosystems for Sustainability (NODES) Research Group of the IIASA Advancing Systems Analysis Program. Her research interests include artificial intelligence-based methods, geographic information systems (GIS), land cover, crowdsourcing, and citizen science. As part of the NODES group she works with the Geo-Wiki team on crowdsourcing of land cover data, quality assurance of crowdsourced data, and community building. In addition, she coordinated the Austrian ASAP-10 LACO-Wiki project, which is an online tool for the validation of land cover, and the Austrian-funded project ADAPT-UHI, which has developed strategies for climate change mitigation and adaptation in small to medium-sized cities in Austria. She was the IIASA lead of the European Space Agency funded CAMALIOT project and led a successful crowdsourcing campaign to collect satellite navigation data using a mobile app. She also supported the Horizon 2020-funded LandSense and WeObserve projects. She is currently the work package lead in the Horizon Europe Land Management for Sustainability (LAMASUS) project (2022-2026) and supports the Urban ReLeaf project (2023-2026), both of which are led by IIASA. She is an editor of the journal Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science.

See has a PhD in spatial applications of fuzzy logic from the School of Geography at the University of Leeds in the UK, where she taught for more than a decade as a senior lecturer in Computational Geography and GIS. She has MSc and BSc degrees in physical geography and environmental management from McMaster University and the University of Toronto in Canada. In between her MSc and PhD, she spent one year working at the Max Planck Institute for Atmospheric Sciences near Goettingen, Germany, followed by four years at the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations in Rome, Italy, where she worked on agrometeorology and early warning for food security.



Last update: 19 JAN 2023

Publications

Fritz, S. , Barasso, C., Ehrmann, F., Lesiv, M. , McCallum, I. , Meyer, C., Laso Bayas, J.C. , & See, L. (2023). Opening up FAIR in-situ land-use reference data: current gaps, obstacles and future challenges. In: EGU General Assembly 2023, 23-28 April 2023, Vienna.

Fraisl, D. , See, L. , Estevez, D., Tomaska, N., & MacFeely, S. (2023). Citizen science for monitoring the health and well-being related Sustainable Development Goals and the World Health Organization’s Triple Billion Targets. In: Citizen Science for Health and Well-Being Statistics: Side Event to the United Nations Expert Group Meeting on Citizen Contributions to Data: A Conceptual Framework, 28 September 2023, Danish Institute for Human Rights, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Shvidenko, A., Mukhortova, L., Kapitsa, E., Kraxner, F., See, L. , Pyzhev, A., Gordeev, R., Fedorov, S., Korotkov, V., Bartalev, S., & Shchepashchenko, D. (2023). A Modelling System for Dead Wood Assessment in the Forests of Northern Eurasia. Forests 14 (1) p. 45. 10.3390/f14010045.