(Press-News.org) Embargoed until 2 p.m. ET, Wednesday June 28, 2023
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Imagine strapping on a virtual reality headset and “walking” through a long-gone neighborhood in your city – seeing the streets and buildings as they appeared decades ago.
That’s a very real possibility now that researchers have developed a method to create 3D digital models of historic neighborhoods using machine learning and historic Sanborn Fire Insurance maps.
But the digital models will be more than just a novelty – they will give researchers a resource to conduct studies that would have been nearly impossible before, such as estimating the economic loss caused by the demolition of historic neighborhoods.
“The story here is we now have the ability to unlock the wealth of data that is embedded in these Sanborn fire atlases,” said Harvey Miller, co-author of the study and professor of geography at The Ohio State University.
“It enables a whole new approach to urban historical research that we could never have imagined before machine learning. It is a game changer.”
The study was published today (June 28, 2023) in the journal PLOS ONE.
This research begins with the Sanborn maps, which were created to allow fire insurance companies to assess their liability in about 12,000 cities and towns in the United States during the 19th and 20th centuries. In larger cities, they were often updated regularly, said Miller, who is director of Ohio State’s Center for Urban and Regional Analysis (CURA).
The problem for researchers was that trying to manually collect usable data from these maps was tedious and time-consuming – at least until the maps were digitized.  Digital versions are now available from the Library of Congress.
Study co-author Yue Lin, a doctoral student in geography at Ohio State, developed machine learning tools that can extract details about individual buildings from the maps, including their locations and footprints, the number of floors, their construction materials and their primary use, such as dwelling or business.
“We are able to get a very good idea of what the buildings look like from data we get from the Sanborn maps,” Lin said.
The researchers tested their machine learning technique on two adjacent neighborhoods on the near east side of Columbus, Ohio, that were largely destroyed in the 1960s to make way for the construction of I-70.
One of the neighborhoods, Hanford Village, was developed in 1946 to house returning Black veterans of World War II.
“The GI bill gave returning veterans funds to purchase homes, but they could only be used on new builds,” said study co-author Gerika Logan, outreach coordinator of CURA. “So most of the homes were lost to the highway not long after they were built.”
The other neighborhood in the study was Driving Park, which also housed a thriving Black community until I-70 split it in two.
The researchers used 13 Sanborn maps for the two neighborhoods produced in 1961, just before I-70 was built. Machine learning techniques were able to extract the data from the maps and create digital models.
Comparing data from the Sanford maps to today showed that a total of 380 buildings were demolished in the two neighborhoods for the highway, including 286 houses, 86 garages, five apartments and three stores.
Analysis of the results showed that the machine learning model was very accurate in recreating the information contained in the maps – about 90% accurate for building footprints and construction materials.
“The accuracy was impressive. We can actually get a visual sense of what these neighborhoods looked like that wouldn’t be possible in any other way,” Miller said.
“We want to get to the point in this project where we can give people virtual reality headsets and let them walk down the street as it was in 1960 or 1940 or perhaps even 1881.”
Using the machine learning techniques developed for this study, researchers could develop similar 3D models for nearly any of the 12,000 cities and towns that have Sanborn maps, Miller said.
This will allow researchers to re-create neighborhoods lost to natural disasters like floods, as well as urban renewal, depopulation and other types of change.
Because the Sanborn maps include information on businesses that occupied specific buildings, researchers could re-create digital neighborhoods to determine the economic impact of losing them to urban renewal or other factors.  Another possibility would be to study how replacing homes with highways that absorbed the sun’s heat affected the urban heat island effect.
“There’s a lot of different types of research that can be done. This will be a tremendous resource for urban historians and a variety of other researchers,” Miller said.
“Making these 3D digital models and being able to reconstruct buildings adds so much more than what you could show in a chart, graph, table or traditional map. There’s just incredible potential here.”
Editor’s note: An Ohio State News story on an earlier version of this study was published here.
 END
Turning old maps into 3D digital models of lost neighborhoods
Machine learning technique viewed as boon to urban research
2023-06-28
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
NYC researchers' community-led response to the mpox outbreak used principles learned from Global South colleagues
2023-06-28
NYC researchers' community-led response to the mpox outbreak used principles learned from Global South colleagues.
####
Article URL: https://journals.plos.org/globalpublichealth/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgph.0002042
Article Title: Global North learning from Global South: A community-led response to mpox in New York City
Author Countries: USA
Funding: This work was supported by amfAR (110396-72-PAGN to KM), the Harvard University Center for AIDS Research (HU CFAR NIH/NIAID fund 5P30AO060354-18 to KM), the Harvard University ...
Skin disease in endangered killer whales concerns scientists
2023-06-28
Scientists studying endangered southern resident killer whales have observed a strong increase in the prevalence of skin disease in this population. 
In a study published today, June 29, in PLOS ONE, researchers document a steady increase in the occurrence of highly correlated gray patches and gray targets on the whales’ skin from 2004 to 2016. Despite not knowing the underlying cause, the study’s authors are concerned. 
After ruling out potential environmental factors, such as changes ...
An unexpected doorway into the ear opens new possibilities for hearing restoration
2023-06-28
An international team of researchers has developed a new method to deliver drugs into the inner ear.  The discovery was possible by harnessing the natural flow of fluids in the brain and employing a little understood backdoor into the cochlea. When combined to deliver a gene therapy that repairs inner ear hair cells, the researchers were able to restore hearing in deaf mice. 
“These findings demonstrate that cerebrospinal fluid transport comprises an accessible route for gene delivery to the adult inner ear and may represent an important step towards using gene therapy to restore hearing in humans,” ...
Benzodiazepine use associated with brain injury, job loss and suicide
2023-06-28
Benzodiazepine use and discontinuation is associated with nervous system injury and negative life effects that continue after discontinuation, according to a new study from researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.
The study was published today in the journal PLOS One.
“Despite the fact that benzodiazepines have been widely prescribed for decades, this survey presents significant new evidence that a subset of patients experience long-term neurological complications,” said Alexis Ritvo, M.D, M.P.H., an assistant professor in psychiatry at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and  medical director of the nonprofit ...
Antibody treatment prevents graft versus host disease, a major bone marrow transplant complication, in advanced preclinical tests
2023-06-28
PHILADELPHIA – An experimental antibody treatment largely prevented a bone marrow transplant complication called graft versus host disease (GVHD) in the intestines, without causing broad immune suppression, in a preclinical study led by researchers from Penn Medicine and Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center and published today in Science Translational Medicine.
Even when a bone marrow transplant cures leukemia or lymphoma, GVHD—in which T cells in the donor graft attack the recipient’s own tissues—can still be fatal. The condition ...
GPT-3 informs and disinforms us better
2023-06-28
A recent study conducted by researchers at the University of Zurich delved into the capabilities of AI models, specifically focusing on OpenAI’s GPT-3, to determine their potential risks and benefits in generating and disseminating (dis)information. Led by postdoctoral researchers Giovanni Spitale and Federico Germani, alongside Nikola Biller-Andorno, director of the Institute of Biomedical Ethics and History of Medicine (IBME), University of Zurich, the study involving 697 participants sought to evaluate whether individuals could differentiate between disinformation and accurate ...
Vehicle color recognition based on smooth modulation neural network with multi-scale feature fusion
2023-06-28
Vehicle Color Recognition (VCR) is vital in intelligent traffic management and criminal investigation assistance. However, the existing vehicle color datasets only cover 13 classes, which can not meet the current actual demand. Besides, although lots of efforts are devoted to VCR, they suffer from the problem of class imbalance in datasets.
To solve the problems, a research team led by Mingdi HU published their new research in Frontiers of Computer Science co-published by Higher Education Press and Springer·Nature.
The team propose a novel VCR method ...
Science Partner Journals achieve new milestones
2023-06-28
The Science Partner Journal (SPJ) program is pleased to announce the inclusion of five SPJs in the 2023 Journal Citation Reports (JCR) from Clarivate.
Research, launched in 2018, received its second Journal Impact Factor (JIF) this year, 11.0, ranking it #9 among 73 journals in the Multidisciplinary category in Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE).  
Plant Phenomics also launched in 2018 and received its second JIF this year, 6.5, ranking it #5 among 88 journals in the Agronomy, #21 among ...
What makes multiple sclerosis worse, and how to make it better
2023-06-28
Scientists identify the first genetic marker for MS severity, opening the door to preventing long-term disability.
A study of more than 22,000 people with multiple sclerosis has discovered the first genetic variant associated with faster disease progression that can rob patients of their mobility and independence over time. Multiple sclerosis (MS) is the result of the immune system mistakenly attacking the brain and the spinal cord, resulting in symptom flares known as relapses as well as longer-term degeneration known as progression. Despite the development of effective treatments for relapses, ...
Vague language impacts perceptions of vaping risks, study finds
2023-06-28
ITHACA, N.Y. -- When it comes to e-cigarette warning labels, respondents in focus groups organized by Cornell researchers were clear: Give it to me straight.
But approximately 20 years after they hit the market, electronic cigarettes’ precise health risks remain unclear. And for adults trying to quit smoking conventional cigarettes, ambiguity in messaging can skew perceptions of the health benefits of using these products as an alternative to combustible cigarettes.
A multidisciplinary team led by Jeff ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
More than 100,000 Norwegians suffer from work-related anxiety
The American Pediatric Society selects Dr. Harolyn Belcher as the recipient of the 2026 David G. Nichols Health Equity Award
Taft Armandroff and Brian Schmidt elected to lead Giant Magellan Telescope Board of Directors
FAU Engineering receives $1.5m gift to launch the ‘Ubicquia Innovation Center for Intelligent Infrastructure’
Japanese public show major reservations to cell donation for human brain organoid research
NCCN celebrates expanding access to cancer treatment in Africa at 2025 AORTIC Meeting with new NCCN adaptations for Sub-Saharan Africa
Three health tech innovators recognized for digital solutions to transform cardiovascular care
A sequence of human rights violations precedes mass atrocities, new research shows
Genetic basis of spring-loaded spider webs
Seeing persuasion in the brain
Allen Institute announces 2025 Next Generation Leaders
Digital divide narrows but gaps remain for Australians as GenAI use surges
Advanced molecular dynamics simulations capture RNA folding with high accuracy
Chinese Neurosurgical Journal Study unveils absorbable skull device that speeds healing
Heatwave predictions months in advance with machine learning: A new study delivers improved accuracy and efficiency
2.75-million-year-old stone tools may mark a turning point in human evolution
Climate intervention may not be enough to save coffee, chocolate and wine, new study finds
Advanced disease modelling shows some gut bacteria can spread as rapidly as viruses
Depletion of Ukraine’s soils threatens long-term global food security
Hornets in town: How top predators coexist
Transgender women do not have an increased risk of heart attack and stroke
Unexpectedly high concentrations of forever chemicals found in dead sea otters
Stress hormones silence key brain genes through chromatin-bound RNAs, study reveals
Groundbreaking review reveals how gut microbiota influences sleep disorders through the brain-gut axis
Breakthrough catalyst turns carbon dioxide into essential ingredient for clean fuels
New survey reveals men would rather sit in traffic than talk about prostate health
Casual teachers left behind: New study calls for better induction and support in schools
Adapting to change is the real key to unlocking GenAI’s potential, ECU research shows
How algae help corals bounce back after bleaching
Decoding sepsis: Unraveling key signaling pathways for targeted therapies
[Press-News.org] Turning old maps into 3D digital models of lost neighborhoodsMachine learning technique viewed as boon to urban research







