UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — A massive release of passive-surveillance satellite data of nighttime lights could help researchers in fields ranging from agriculture to epidemiology. Researchers at Penn State and the University of Southampton in the U.K. have provided open access to detailed satellite data on brightness for five cities in Niger and Nigeria from 2000 to 2005, as well as detailed methods for analyzing the data to track seasonal population movements.
A paper describing the data and methods, which can be applied to other populations and other similar data sets, is available in the online, open-access journal Scientific Data.
“This type of data set has never been released before,” said Nita Bharti, assistant professor of biology at Penn State and lead author of the paper. “We initially used it to track seasonal changes in population sizes to help vaccination campaigns achieve higher coverage levels in areas where diseases like measles still pose a large threat. We later received a lot of inquiries for access to these data from researchers in diverse fields. The data and associated code in ‘R’ — an open-source statistical computing software — are now openly available on ‘ScholarSphere,’ Penn State’s open-access, online data repository.”