On 13 September 2013 14:58, SK53 <sk53....@gmail.com> wrote: Whilst most of the error terms may well, unfortunately, be true... > > OSSV scale is 1 pixel / metre, so accuracy is less than that.
That's a common misunderstanding about spatially, or time quantised data. If it were really true, the 300m chip length in GPS would limit GPS accuracy to much worse than 5m. This is not just true of photographic imagery. It is also true of anti-aliased line art, like StreetView, or even non-anti-aliased material, as long as lines are not parallel to the primary axes. Providing you know what has been reduced to 1m pixels, and it has sufficient high spatial frequency component, e.g. footpath edges in aerial imagery and the underlying vector lines in the maps, one can interpolate to rather better than 1m. > > So sources of error are: > > Feature generalisation in OSSV, noticeable on buildings & roads These tend to be local distortions. By choosing features carefully, I think you can avoid them when aligning aerial imagery with StreetView. > Re-projection of OSSV tiles using proj4 using OSGB36, errors of +/- 5m Errors in the OS survey. > Given an average road is about 7-8 metres across we are less likely to > notice this with roads anyway. Which is why the problem only really starts to show now that there is extensive, armchair, mapping of individual buildings. > If one looks at GPS traces for the same footpath walked again and again, > their spread is quite considerable, perhaps as much as 20 m, although an > average would probably be close to the actual 2 m path. Many are mapped on a single pass. > > So just like any other survey organisation, ultimately we will need our own > set of convenient reference points. Unfortunately, StreetView doesn't seem to have OS' trig points! My feeling is, that, until we can get our own grid of accurately surveyed reference points, we ought choose one source that is better than GPS. As the US probably uses government maps, for this, now that they are available to us, they would seem to be the best option. _______________________________________________ Talk-GB mailing list Talk-GB@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-gb