scholarly journals QUALITY OF BIM–GIS CONVERSION

Author(s):  
F. Biljecki ◽  
H. Tauscher

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Much work has been done on quality of geoinformation and interoperability between BIM and GIS. However, the intersection of the two – quality control of the conversion between BIM and GIS – remains uncharted. This discussion paper, based on empirical results, is one of the first steps towards mapping out a framework on errors and quality control in the context of BIM–GIS interoperability. In our work we focus on the conversion from IFC to CityGML, identifying several systematic errors potentially common and/or exclusive to the context of BIM–GIS conversion. Besides exposing several faults pertaining to IFC-sourced 3D city models, we discuss their taxonomy and their potential impact when engaged in applications. This paper is also relevant with respect to the growing popularity of conversion between IFC and CityGML, potentially aiding others to avoid many of the errors that can occur in the process and establishing directions to set up a benchmark to assess the performance of the interoperability workflows.</p>

2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Achin Jain ◽  
M P Venkatesh M P ◽  
Pramod T.M. Kumar

In Tanzania, Tanzania Food and Drugs Authority (TFDA), is a regulatory body responsible for controlling the quality,safety and effectiveness of food, drugs, herbal drugs, cosmetics and medical devices. The Authority has been ensuringsafety, efficacy and quality of medicines by quality control tests; in addition to other quality assessment mechanisms.The guidelines laid by TFDA have also emanated from commitment to democracy and gives strong emphasis to thefulfilment of the needs of the less privileged rural population.Tanzania is an emerging market; the pharmaceutical market is valued at over US$250 million, and is growing at anannual rate of around 16.5% and is expected to reach approximately US$550 billion in 2020. Currently, the market ishighly dependent on imports, which account for around 75% of the total pharmaceutical market.The procedures and approval requirements of new drugs, variations, import, export and disposal have been set up bythe TFDA, which help in maintaining quality of the drug products that are imported as well being produced locally 


FIKROTUNA ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 777-788
Author(s):  
Abdul Mu'in

Schools need a leader who can create better education for learners. The effective leader, who can understand the needs of learners and able to provide a solution, and also produce a better quality of education. In fact, the behavior of leaders relies heavily on his leadership model. Thus, the leadership model will have much effect to the quality of education. Good facilities and qualified teachers will not give anoptimal results without effective leader. Theoretically, many leadership model need to re-discussed so it can be seen the right leadership model for educational leadership. Effective leadership will be required to set up a school system where the applications can be seen from better learning activities and the result is quality learners. This discussion will emphasis on how each model of leadership influence on the quality of education. The results of this research may provide the potential impact on the advancement of education.


Author(s):  
F. Biljecki ◽  
M. Sindram

Building datasets (e.g. footprints in OpenStreetMap and 3D city models) are becoming increasingly available worldwide. However, the thematic (attribute) aspect is not always given attention, as many of such datasets are lacking in completeness of attributes. A prominent attribute of buildings is the year of construction, which is useful for some applications, but its availability may be scarce. This paper explores the potential of estimating the year of construction (or age) of buildings from other attributes using random forest regression. The developed method has a two-fold benefit: enriching datasets and quality control (verification of existing attributes). Experiments are carried out on a semantically rich LOD1 dataset of Rotterdam in the Netherlands using 9 attributes. The results are mixed: the accuracy in the estimation of building age depends on the available information used in the regression model. In the best scenario we have achieved predictions with an RMSE of 11 years, but in more realistic situations with limited knowledge about buildings the error is much larger (RMSE = 26 years). Hence the main conclusion of the paper is that inferring building age with 3D city models is possible to a certain extent because it reveals the approximate period of construction, but precise estimations remain a difficult task.


2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Merica Slišković ◽  
Helena Ukić ◽  
Katja Božić

The aim of this paper is to assess the quantity of solid waste in the port of Split produced by cruisers during the past five years. The increased number of cruising guests in the port ofSplit is associated with more marine litter produced and directly increases a potential impact on the marine environment. To sustainably manage its resources, the city of Split should carefully consider the positive and negative effects of the cruising industry, set up a quality control system in cruising and consider how potential profit impacts on the environment and natural resources.


Author(s):  
F. Biljecki ◽  
H. Ledoux ◽  
X. Du ◽  
J. Stoter ◽  
K. H. Soon ◽  
...  

To be used as input in most simulation and modelling software, 3D city models should be geometrically and topologically valid, and semantically rich. We investigate in this paper what is the quality of currently available CityGML datasets, i.e. we validate the geometry/topology of the 3D primitives (Solid and MultiSurface), and we validate whether the semantics of the boundary surfaces of buildings is correct or not. We have analysed all the CityGML datasets we could find, both from portals of cities and on different websites, plus a few that were made available to us. We have thus validated 40M surfaces in 16M 3D primitives and 3.6M buildings found in 37 CityGML datasets originating from 9 countries, and produced by several companies with diverse software and acquisition techniques. The results indicate that CityGML datasets without errors are rare, and those that are nearly valid are mostly simple LOD1 models. We report on the most common errors we have found, and analyse them. One main observation is that many of these errors could be automatically fixed or prevented with simple modifications to the modelling software. Our principal aim is to highlight the most common errors so that these are not repeated in the future. We hope that our paper and the open-source software we have developed will help raise awareness for data quality among data providers and 3D GIS software producers.


Geographies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 333-345
Author(s):  
Steffen Goebbels ◽  
Regina Pohle-Fröhlich

3D city models are mainly viewed on computer screens, but many municipalities also use 3D printing to make urban planning tangible. Since 3D color printing is still comparatively expensive and the colors often fade over time, many of these models are monochrome. Here, color textured paper models offer an inexpensive and under-appreciated alternative. In this paper, a greedy algorithm adapted to CityGML building models is presented, which creates print templates for such paper models. These 2D layouts consist of cut edges and fold edges that bound polygons of a building. The polygons can be textured or left blank depending on the existence of CityGML textures. Glue tabs are attached to cut edges. In addition to the haptic 3D visualization, the quality of the 3D models can sometimes be better assessed on the basis of the print templates than from a perspective projection. The unfolding procedure was applied to parts of the freely available CityGML model of Berlin as well as to parts of models of the cities of Dortmund and Krefeld.


Author(s):  
O. Wysocki ◽  
Y. Xu ◽  
U. Stilla

Abstract. Throughout the years, semantic 3D city models have been created to depict 3D spatial phenomenon. Recently, an increasing number of mobile laser scanning (MLS) units yield terrestrial point clouds at an unprecedented level. Both dataset types often depict the same 3D spatial phenomenon differently, thus their fusion should increase the quality of the captured 3D spatial phenomenon. Yet, each dataset has modality-dependent uncertainties that hinder their immediate fusion. Therefore, we present a method for fusing MLS point clouds with semantic 3D building models while considering uncertainty issues. Specifically, we show MLS point clouds coregistration with semantic 3D building models based on expert confidence in evaluated metadata quantified by confidence interval (CI). This step leads to the dynamic adjustment of the CI, which is used to delineate matching bounds for both datasets. Both coregistration and matching steps serve as priors for a Bayesian network (BayNet) that performs application-dependent identity estimation. The BayNet propagates uncertainties and beliefs throughout the process to estimate end probabilities for confirmed, unmodeled, and other city objects. We conducted promising preliminary experiments on urban MLS and CityGML datasets. Our strategy sets up a framework for the fusion of MLS point clouds and semantic 3D building models. This framework aids the challenging parallel usage of such datasets in applications such as façade refinement or change detection. To further support this process, we open-sourced our implementation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aladin Ombeni Mahano ◽  
Aline Zawadi Mahano ◽  
Nelson Hendwa Cubaka ◽  
Félicien Mushagalusa Kasali ◽  
Benjamin Bavurhe Zirirane ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Malaria is a tropical parasitic disease caused by Plasmodium species, mainly falciparum, transmitted by the female Anopheles mosquito, strongly affecting sub-Saharan Africa and Indian areas. Generic antimalarial drugs sold in these regions require tighter quality control as counterfeiting has grown more and more out of control. The study aimed to analyze the pharmaceutical quality of Quinine sulfate and Artemether/Lumefantrine tablets marketed in Bukavu city compared to current trends in other African cities. Methods: We set up 13 simple TLC and UV spectrometric quality-control tests and applied them to analyze five Quinine brands divided into 12 batches and two Artemether/Lumefantrine brands divided into 12 batches. Quality scores were expressed as a percentage of compliance with each or the whole set of 13 tests. The samples were collected from community pharmacies and ambulatory street vendors. For comparison, available literature data related to the subject was retrieved from Google Scholar and PubMed search. Results: The analysis showed 16.6% of QS batches failed quality specifications concerning hardness, friability, and uniformity of mass; 66.6% failed the disintegration test; 33.3% did not contain quinine, and 8.33% had an active ingredient other than quinine. Only 3 batches exhibited a global score >90%. For Artemether/Lumefantrine, 93% of batches had an acceptable quality score >90%. Conclusion: The findings strongly support literature data from many countries. Simple TLC procedures may help to detect any low-quality generics to avoid microbial resistance and guarantee the health of the population. Pharmacists and regulatory authorities are alerted to the circulation of low-quality generic quinine preparations in the country.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 2861-2861
Author(s):  
Jeffrey McCullough ◽  
David McKenna ◽  
Diane Kadidlo ◽  
Therese Schierman ◽  
John Wagner

Abstract INTRODUCTION As the frequency of umbilical cord blood (UCB) stem cell transplantation has increased, the quality of UCB available in banks is an important part of the success of UCB stem cell transplants. METHODS UCB units from outside banks were received in the Clinical Cell Therapy Laboratory where accompanying documentation, transfusion-transmitted disease test results, histocompatibility and ABO typing results, medical history, sterility testing, and processing records including cell counts were reviewed. Deviations were categorized based on cord blood regulations and the potential impact of deviations using a system developed to categorize according to the medical history, quality control testing, or labeling and documentation and for their potential risk to the patient. RESULTS Between January 1, 2001 and December 31, 2003, 268 UCB units were received for transplantation from 14 UCB banks. Of these 268 units, 151 (56%) from 12 banks (86%) had a total of 246 quality issues (Table). Most (54%) of the issues were in quality control. Examples included: 21 units with transmissible diseases tests that were incomplete, pending, or with positive results; 4 with a positive microbiological screening culture at the shipping UCB bank from a sample obtained prior to cryopreservation; 20 from mothers thought to be colonized with group B streptococcus; 31 from mothers who received antibiotics during labor; and 7 units arrived with inadequate temperature monitoring so it could not be documented that the units were maintained at an acceptable temperature. 11 units had questionable quality control test results for cell viability &lt; 50% (2), poor CFU growth (2), nucleated red cell content &gt; 20% (5), leaking segment (1) and confirmatory HLA typing not performed from attached segment (1). Of the 132 units with quality control issues, 25 (19%) were likely to pose a risk to patients. Documentation was inadequate for five units because related records did not have a complete numbering system. Reports of transmissible disease testing, cell content, donor medical history, or other details were sent on sheets of paper that did not contain the unique number of the UCB unit or other identifying information to assure that the data on that page were from the unit in question. Very few (4%) medical history issues posed a risk to patients. Examples of the medical history issues included: maternal exposure to malaria, recent tattoo, body piercing, maternal HIV risk factors, and maternal history of herpes, chlamydia, human papilloma virus (HPV) or use of donor sperm for the pregnancy. CONCLUSION Because standards have evolved over time, UCB banks contain units that have different levels of quality. Some units have been placed in the usable inventory with incomplete test results and/or documentation or that may not meet the banks own current criteria. Since many are only recognized after a transplant decision has been made, information about any quality or operating procedure deviation should be provided in sufficient detail and at the initiation of the search process so that transplant physicians can consider these quality issues when making a transplant decision. Total Potential Impact # % Likely Potential Unlikely Medical history 99 40 4 37 58 Quality control 132 54 25 30 77 Labeling/documentation 15 6 4 11 0 TOTAL 246 100 33 78 135


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