Kontaktperson
Olof Mogren
Senior Researcher
Kontakta OlofPå RISE Learning Machines Seminar den 19 mars 2026 ger Isabelle Tingzon, RISE, sin presentation: ridging data gaps in the Global South: Harnessing AI and Earth observation in the humanitarian sector. Seminariet är på engelska
När: 19 mars 2026, 15:00 CET
Var: Online via Zoom. Detta seminarium kommer också att ha en fysisk närvaro på RISE-kontoret i Lund, beläget på Scheelevägen 17, IDEON Science Park, hus Beta5, fjärde våningen. Se till att du kommer i god tid och knackar på dörren.
This talk highlights how AI and Earth Observation (EO) are transforming data availability for two global challenges: climate resilience and universal school connectivity.
In the Caribbean, where extreme climatic hazards like hurricanes, floods, and landslides can devastate over 90% of built infrastructure across Small Island Developing States, comprehensive and up-to-date housing stock information is critical to enable resilient housing operations but is often incomplete, inaccessible, or completely non-existent.
The “Digital Earth for Resilient Caribbean” initiative addresses these gaps by integrating EO data such as drone, LiDAR, satellite, and street-view imagery with AI workflows to classify roof types, materials, and building conditions. These efforts aim not only to enhance disaster response and recovery but also strengthen long-term resilience through government capacity building and knowledge exchange.
In parallel, the presentation showcases UNICEF Giga’s mission to connect every school to the Internet by 2030. Reliable school location data is critical for planning telecommunications infrastructure, yet often inaccurate or incomplete in many low- and middle-income countries.
By leveraging ML and satellite imagery, we’ve developed scalable pipelines to map schools across Africa on a nationwide scale, helping to ensure that no child is left behind in accessing digital learning opportunities. Together, these projects demonstrate how Geospatial AI can help bridge critical data gaps in the Global South, supporting both climate adaptation and inclusive education.
Isabelle Tingzon is a doctoral researcher at RISE and PhD student at KTH. Previously, she was a Geospatial Data Scientist at the World Bank, where she spearheaded AI-driven climate adaptation projects in support of resilient housing operations. She has also worked as a Data Science Consultant at UNICEF, where she led the development and deployment of UNICEF Giga’s AI-enabled school mapping pipeline across low- and middle-income countries. Her other projects span high-resolution poverty estimation, informal refugee settlement detection, and disaster- fragility, conflict, and violence assessment, in partnership with humanitarian organizations and non-profits in Southeast Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and the Caribbean.