100 research outputs found
GI Systems for public health with an ontology based approach
Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies.Health is an indispensable attribute of human life. In modern age,
utilizing technologies for health is one of the emergent concepts in
several applied fields. Computer science, (geographic) information
systems are some of the interdisciplinary fields which motivates this
thesis.
Inspiring idea of the study is originated from a rhetorical disease
DbHd: Database Hugging Disorder, defined by Hans Rosling at
World Bank Open Data speech in May 2010. The cure of this disease
can be offered as linked open data, which contains ontologies for
health science, diseases, genes, drugs, GEO species etc. LOD-Linked
Open Data provides the systematic application of information by
publishing and connecting structured data on the Web.
In the context of this study we aimed to reduce boundaries
between semantic web and geo web. For this reason a use case data is
studied from Valencia CSISP- Research Center of Public Health in
which the mortality rates for particular diseases are represented
spatio-temporally. Use case data is divided into three conceptual
domains (health, spatial, statistical), enhanced with semantic relations
and descriptions by following Linked Data Principles. Finally in order
to convey complex health-related information, we offer an
infrastructure integrating geo web and semantic web. Based on the
established outcome, user access methods are introduced and future
researches/studies are outlined
Derivation methods for hybrid knowledge bases with rules and ontologies
Trabalho apresentado no Ăąmbito do Mestrado em Engenharia InformĂĄtica, como requisito parcial para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Engenharia InformĂĄticaFirst of all, I would like to thank my advisor, JosĂ© JĂșlio Alferes, for his incredible support. Right from the start, during the first semester of this work, when we were 2700 km apart and meeting regularly via Skype, until the end of this dissertation, he was always committed and available for discussions, even when he had lots of other urgent things to do.
A really special thanks to Terrance Swift, whom acted as an advisor, helping me a lot in
the second implementation, and correcting all XSBâs and CDFâs bugs. This implementation
wouldnât surely have reached such a fruitful end without his support.
I would also like to thank all my colleagues and friends at FCT for the great work environment and for not letting me take myself too serious. A special thanks to my colleagues from Dresden for encouraging me to work even when there were so many other interesting things to do as an Erasmus student.
Iâm indebted to LuĂs Leal, BĂĄrbara Soares, Jorge Soares and CecĂlia Calado, who kindly
accepted to read a preliminary version of this report and gave me their valuable comments.
For giving me working conditions and a partial financial support, I acknowledge the Departamento de InformĂĄtica of the Faculdade de CiĂȘncias e Tecnologias of Universidade Nova de Lisboa.
Last, but definitely not least, I would like to thank my parents and all my family for their continuous encouragement and motivation. A special thanks to Bruno for his love, support and patience
Kiel Declarative Programming Days 2013
This report contains the papers presented at the Kiel Declarative Programming Days 2013, held in Kiel (Germany) during September 11-13, 2013. The Kiel Declarative Programming Days 2013 unified the following events: * 20th International Conference on Applications of Declarative Programming and Knowledge Management (INAP 2013) * 22nd International Workshop on Functional and (Constraint) Logic Programming (WFLP 2013) * 27th Workshop on Logic Programming (WLP 2013) All these events are centered around declarative programming, an advanced paradigm for the modeling and solving of complex problems. These specification and implementation methods attracted increasing attention over the last decades, e.g., in the domains of databases and natural language processing, for modeling and processing combinatorial problems, and for high-level programming of complex, in particular, knowledge-based systems
Web Processing Services for Forestry and Environmental Applications
Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geospatial Technologies.Nowadays spatial processing on the web is becoming a requirement for more and more
web applications. The use of processes helps to find solutions to a wide range of spatial
problems and extends the common functionality of Web GIS. There are many open
source technologies that can be implemented in each component of a Web GIS
application. Forestry and environmental problems, with their strong territorial
implications, are especially suitable to be analyzed applying these technologies.
In order to create an application with spatial processes, we propose a framework with a
layered service-based architecture. It is layered because its structure is divided in a set
of functional layers: the user layer (geoportal or client), the service layer (inside the
server) and the data layer (spatial database). The access and processing of spatial data is
accomplished through adequate service standards of OGC (Open Geospatial
Consortium): Web Map Services (WMS), Web Feature Services (WFS), Web Coverage
Services (WCS) and Web Processing Services (WPS).
We implement a complete forestry â related application from scratch that offers access,
visualization, querying and processing of spatial data and an active user interaction. The
key of the application is WPS. Additionally, other processing solutions (like making
queries with the spatial database) are discussed.
In brief, this work presents an overview of the current technology and possible solutions
for integrating spatial processes on the web and proposes some guidelines to implement
them in a fully working system
Q(sqrt(-3))-Integral Points on a Mordell Curve
We use an extension of quadratic Chabauty to number fields,recently developed by the author with Balakrishnan, Besser and M Ìuller,combined with a sieving technique, to determine the integral points overQ(ââ3) on the Mordell curve y2 = x3 â 4
Service-oriented design of environmental information systems
Service-orientation has an increasing impact upon the design process and the architecture of environmental information systems. This thesis specifies the SERVUS design methodology for geospatial applications based upon standards of the Open Geospatial Consortium. SERVUS guides the system architect to rephrase use case requirements as a network of semantically-annotated requested resources and to iteratively match them with offered resources that mirror the capabilities of existing services
Work Practice Simulation of Complex Human-Automation Systems in Safety Critical Situations: The Brahms Generalized berlingen Model
The transition from the current air traffic system to the next generation air traffic system will require the introduction of new automated systems, including transferring some functions from air traffic controllers to on-board automation. This report describes a new design verification and validation (V&V) methodology for assessing aviation safety. The approach involves a detailed computer simulation of work practices that includes people interacting with flight-critical systems. The research is part of an effort to develop new modeling and verification methodologies that can assess the safety of flight-critical systems, system configurations, and operational concepts. The 2002 Ueberlingen mid-air collision was chosen for analysis and modeling because one of the main causes of the accident was one crew's response to a conflict between the instructions of the air traffic controller and the instructions of TCAS, an automated Traffic Alert and Collision Avoidance System on-board warning system. It thus furnishes an example of the problem of authority versus autonomy. It provides a starting point for exploring authority/autonomy conflict in the larger system of organization, tools, and practices in which the participants' moment-by-moment actions take place. We have developed a general air traffic system model (not a specific simulation of berlingen events), called the Brahms Generalized Ueberlingen Model (Brahms-GUeM). Brahms is a multi-agent simulation system that models people, tools, facilities/vehicles, and geography to simulate the current air transportation system as a collection of distributed, interactive subsystems (e.g., airports, air-traffic control towers and personnel, aircraft, automated flight systems and air-traffic tools, instruments, crew). Brahms-GUeM can be configured in different ways, called scenarios, such that anomalous events that contributed to the berlingen accident can be modeled as functioning according to requirements or in an anomalous condition, as occurred during the accident. Brahms-GUeM thus implicitly defines a class of scenarios, which include as an instance what occurred at berlingen. Brahms-GUeM is a modeling framework enabling "what if" analysis of alternative work system configurations and thus facilitating design of alternative operations concepts. It enables subsequent adaption (reusing simulation components) for modeling and simulating NextGen scenarios. This project demonstrates that BRAHMS provides the capacity to model the complexity of air transportation systems, going beyond idealized and simple flights to include for example the interaction of pilots and ATCOs. The research shows clearly that verification and validation must include the entire work system, on the one hand to check that mechanisms exist to handle failures of communication and alerting subsystems and/or failures of people to notice, comprehend, or communicate problematic (unsafe) situations; but also to understand how people must use their own judgment in relating fallible systems like TCAS to other sources of information and thus to evaluate how the unreliability of automation affects system safety. The simulation shows in particular that distributed agents (people and automated systems) acting without knowledge of each others' actions can create a complex, dynamic system whose interactive behavior is unexpected and is changing too quickly to comprehend and control
Training of Crisis Mappers and Map Production from Multi-sensor Data: Vernazza Case Study (Cinque Terre National Park, Italy)
This aim of paper is to presents the development of a multidisciplinary project carried out by the cooperation between Politecnico di Torino and ITHACA (Information Technology for Humanitarian Assistance, Cooperation and Action). The goal of the project was the training in geospatial data acquiring and processing for students attending Architecture and Engineering Courses, in order to start up a team of "volunteer mappers". Indeed, the project is aimed to document the environmental and built heritage subject to disaster; the purpose is to improve the capabilities of the actors involved in the activities connected in geospatial data collection, integration and sharing. The proposed area for testing the training activities is the Cinque Terre National Park, registered in the World Heritage List since 1997. The area was affected by flood on the 25th of October 2011. According to other international experiences, the group is expected to be active after emergencies in order to upgrade maps, using data acquired by typical geomatic methods and techniques such as terrestrial and aerial Lidar, close-range and aerial photogrammetry, topographic and GNSS instruments etc.; or by non conventional systems and instruments such us UAV, mobile mapping etc. The ultimate goal is to implement a WebGIS platform to share all the data collected with local authorities and the Civil Protectio
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