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El. knyga: Foundations of Geographic Information Science

Edited by (University of Maine, Orono, USA), Edited by (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA), Edited by (University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia)
  • Formatas: 272 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jan-2003
  • Leidėjas: CRC Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134398263
  • Formatas: 272 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jan-2003
  • Leidėjas: CRC Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781134398263

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As the use of geographical information systems develops apace, a significant strand of research activity is being directed to the fundamental nature of geographic information. This volume contains a collection of essays and discussions on this theme.

What is geographic information? What fundamental principles are associated with it? How can it be represented? How does it represent the world? How can geographic information be quantified? How can it be communicated and related to the other information sciences? How does HCI tie in with it? A number of other more specific but relevant issues are considered, such as Spatio-temporal relationships, boundaries, granularity and taxonomy.

This book is a revised and updated version of a collection of presentations given by a group of distinguished researchers in the field of Geographic Information Science who gathered in Manchester in July 2001. It should be useful for graduate students as well as researchers and high-level professionals.

Recenzijos

'A well-crafted, authoritative volume with a coherent structure ... This volume is a useful review of GI science ten years from Goodchild's (1992) seminal paper ... The authors have posed challenging questions.' - Environment and Planning B, 2005 'A well-crafted, authoritative volume with a coherent structure ... This volume is a useful review of GI science ten years from Goodchild's (1992) seminal paper ... The authors have posed challenging questions.'- Environment and Planning B, 2005

Contributors vii
Introduction 1(2)
Geographic Information Science: Defining the Field
3(16)
David M. Mark
The Nature and Value of Geographic Information
19(14)
Michael F. Goodchild
Communicating Geographic Information in Context
33(14)
Michael F. Worboys
Pragmatic Information Content -- How to Measure the Information in a Route Description
47(22)
Andrew U. Frank
Representational Commitment in Maps
69(26)
Christopher Habel
Granularity in Change over Time
95(22)
John G. Stell
A Theory of Granular Partitions
117(34)
Thomas Bittner
Barry Smith
On the Ontological Status of Geographical Boundaries
151(22)
Antony Galton
Regions in Geography: Process and Content
173(18)
Daniel R. Montello
Neighborhoods and Landmarks
191(14)
Stephen C. Hirtle
Geographical Terminology Servers -- Closing the Semantic Divide
205(18)
Christopher B. Jones
Harith Alani
Douglas Tudhope
Placing Cultural Events and Documents in Space and Time
223(18)
Ray R. Larson
Geographic Activity Models
241(14)
Sabine Timpf
Index 255


Matt Duckham is a visiting researcher at the National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis, University of Maine, USA. He completed his PhD in spatial data quality at the University of Glasgow, UK, at the end of 1999, and worked for two years as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Keele, UK. He is currently co-authoring, with Michael Worboys, the second edition of the text book Geographic Information Systems: A Computing Perspective.