1. Report on the Marine Imaging Workshop 2022
- Author
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Catherine Borremans, Jennifer Durden, Timm Schoening, Emma Curtis, Luther Adams, Alexandra Branzan Albu, Aurélien Arnaubec, Sakina-Dorothée Ayata, Reshma Baburaj, Corinne Bassin, Miriam Beck, Katharine Bigham, Rachel Boschen-Rose, Chad Collett, Matteo Contini, Paulo Correa, Carlos Dominguez-Carrió, Gautier Dreyfus, Graeme Duncan, Maxime Ferrera, Valentin Foulon, Ariell Friedman, Santosh Gaikwad, Chloe Game, Adriana Gaytán-Caballero, Fanny Girard, Michela Giusti, Mélissa Hanafi-Portier, Kerry Howell, Iryna Hulevata, Kiamuke Itiowe, Chris Jackett, Jan Jansen, Clarissa Karthäuser, Kakani Katija, Maxime Kernec, Gabriel Kim, Marcelo Kitahara, Daniel Langenkämper, Tim Langlois, Nadine Lanteri, Claude Jianping Li, Qi-Ran Li, Pierre-Olivier Liabot, Dhugal Lindsay, Ali Loulidi, Yann Marcon, Simone Marini, Ashley Marranzino, Miquel Massot-Campos, Marjolaine Matabos, Lenaick Menot, Bernabé Moreno, Marcus Morrissey, David Nakath, Tim Nattkemper, Monika Neufeld, Matthias Obst, Karine Olu, Alexa Parimbelli, Francesca Pasotti, Dominique Pelletier, Margaux Perhirin, Nils Piechaud, Oscar Pizarro, Autun Purser, Clara Rodrigues, Elena Ceballos Romero, Brian Schlining, Yifan Song, Heidi Sosik, Marc Sourisseau, Bastien Taormina, Jan Taucher, Blair Thornton, Loïc Van Audenhaege, Charles von der Meden, Guillaume Wacquet, Jack Williams, Kea Witting, and Martin Zurowietz
- Subjects
photography ,method development ,underwater ,pelag ,Science - Abstract
Imaging is increasingly used to capture information on the marine environment thanks to the improvements in imaging equipment, devices for carrying cameras and data storage in recent years. In that context, biologists, geologists, computer specialists and end-users must gather to discuss the methods and procedures for optimising the quality and quantity of data collected from images. The 4th Marine Imaging Workshop was organised from 3-6 October 2022 in Brest (France) in a hybrid mode. More than a hundred participants were welcomed in person and about 80 people attended the online sessions. The workshop was organised in a single plenary session of presentations followed by discussion sessions. These were based on dynamic polls and open questions that allowed recording of the imaging community’s current and future ideas. In addition, a whole day was dedicated to practical sessions on image analysis, data standardisation and communication tools. The format of this edition allowed the participation of a wider community, including lower-income countries, early career scientists, all working on laboratory, benthic and pelagic imaging.This article summarises the topics addressed during the workshop, particularly the outcomes of the discussion sessions for future reference and to make the workshop results available to the open public.
- Published
- 2024
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