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Digital Pen & Peninized Forms. By: George Teachman National Soil Survey Center USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service Lincoln, NE Digital Pen and Capturx for Excel Webinar 21 May 2013. Digital Pen & Peninized Forms. ¡YOU DON’T NEED SPECIAL PAPER!
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Digital Pen & Peninized Forms By: George Teachman National Soil Survey Center USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service Lincoln, NE Digital Pen and Capturx for Excel Webinar 21 May 2013
Digital Pen & Peninized Forms • ¡YOU DON’T NEED SPECIAL PAPER! • Application: primarily, field data collection • Collect information on paper maps and forms using pen • Import data from pen into standard soil survey applications • Benefit: create usable digital data directly from a paper map or form
Analog Data to Digital Data • Data is stored in the pen • Except as a backup, the paper map or form and ink become superfluous • Analog data recorded by the Pen is downloaded to the computer and imported into an Excel ‘peninized’ form as digital data • Digital data can be manipulated like any other digital data
Requirements - Hardware • Digital Pen and Dock • USB cable can be used to charge the pen with a car plug-in adapter • Supported Color Laser Printer
Requirements - Digital Pen • Easier to carry and use in the field than a tablet or laptop computer • Short-cut to usable, digital spatial and tabular data compared to manual digitizing and data entry
Requirements - Printer • Four-color • CYMK – cyan,magenta, yellow, black • Postscript Level 2 • High resolution • Laser • 256 MB memory minimum • List of supported printers available
Requirements - Printing Capability • A4: 14” x 14” • Letter & legal; 8½” x 11”, 8½” x 14” • Maps and forms; field data collection • A2: 23.4” x 23.4” • Tabloid; 11” x 17” • Maps and forms; field data collection
Requirements – Software • Capturx for Excel v 1.2.1 • Add-In to Microsoft Excel • Adds Capturx toolbar to the Excel ribbon • Capturx Pen Manager v 3.4 • CCE certified • Supported for Windows XP and 7
WorkflowCapturx for Excel 1.2.1 Workflow Save as Supporting Doc
Peninized ‘Field Note’ Form
Printing With Capturx Choose a supported printer Set the number of copies Click OK
Printing With Capturx Printed through Capturx on a supported printer Printed through Excel on a supported printer
‘Field Note’ Form With Ink
Capturx Forms for Excel 1.1 Handwriting OCR Corrected
Capturx for Excel • Keys for reliable OCR and high quality data • Form design • Setting field data validation rules • Setting field to correct data type • Choice lists • Setting appropriate ranges • Field concatenation (of mixed alpha – numeric fields) • Pattern matching (to a limited few special situations) • Field design conveys obvious intended content • Fields big enough to completely contain handwriting • Penmanship • User training and practice
Capturx for Excel • Keys for effective QC • Cell formatting • Validation criteria • Numeric ranges and precision • Text length • Wordlists (domains; choice lists) • Custom expressions
Next Steps to the Finish(Run 2 Macros) • Click on the Macros Icon on the Developer ribbon. • Double click on CleanStyles • Double click on Rename_filledform
Workflow Summary • Digital pen Excel NASIS workflow • Record observations on paper form with pen • Import pen data into Excel workbook • Validate and correct data • Excel tools • Capturx for Excel tools 4. Import Excel workbook into NASIS
Anecdotal Time Savings • P. Finnell reported it is faster entering TUDs into NASIS using peninized 232 form than using NASIS or Pedon PC. • An SSO reports entering a pedon into NASIS is 2.5 times faster using peninized forms than any other way. • An RSS reported saving about 1.5 hours of office time per wetland determination using peninized forms rather than transcribing handwritten forms
Forms Available for Use • Soils NASIS • 232 (Organic, Mineral, SAS) Ledger and Legal size • SSO Lab • Generic Field Note • Transect – ledger and legal size • Penetrometer • Soil Stability • Wetland Determination • Alaska • Arid West • Atlantic & Gulf Coast • Caribbean • Eastern Mts & Piedmont • Great Plains • Midwest • N. Central & N. East • Pacific Island Area • West Valleys & Coast • Ecological Site Inventory* • CA Releve’ • Forest Plot * Not yet sanctioned (done as a demo)
Where Do Forms Come From? • Two basic types of forms • Ones used to import data into a corporate database • Soils forms – 232s, Field Notes, ESI, etc • Ones used as supporting documentation • Wetland Determination, map unit description, other program areas • Anyone with Capturx for Excel can create a form • To import into NASIS requires a NASIS import script • Intervention from NSSC • Those to provide Program support have fewer requirements • To date, I have acted as the Peninized Form Czar • I work with an experienced user of the existing form • Let me know if you need another type of form
Support? • Digital Pen and Forms – USDA Connect Community • Moderated community – Can request to join or I can add members • Forum – Members can submit questions and answers • Files – All the various forms and supporting documentation are there • Contact me at: • George.Teachman@lin.usda.gov • 402-437-5504 • Adapx Technical Support • techsupport@adapx.com • 866-208-9673
Digital Pen & Peninized Forms • Familiar, ‘low-tech’ data collection solution • Pen & paper (no computer needed in the field) • Short-cut to usable digital data compared to manual data entry • Less capital outlay • Each SSO already has hardware/software • License fees paid by NSSC
Future of Digital Pens • Depends on field staff using the tool. If the demand is there the pens/forms can be there. • Currently the SSD centrally funds yearly license fees for about 200 licenses. • Unless there is a significant rise in users we may do a strategic reallocation of the funds marked for license renewal.