2,356 research outputs found

    Artificial intelligence and visual analytics in geographical space and cyberspace: Research opportunities and challenges

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    In recent decades, we have witnessed great advances on the Internet of Things, mobile devices, sensor-based systems, and resulting big data infrastructures, which have gradually, yet fundamentally influenced the way people interact with and in the digital and physical world. Many human activities now not only operate in geographical (physical) space but also in cyberspace. Such changes have triggered a paradigm shift in geographic information science (GIScience), as cyberspace brings new perspectives for the roles played by spatial and temporal dimensions, e.g., the dilemma of placelessness and possible timelessness. As a discipline at the brink of even bigger changes made possible by machine learning and artificial intelligence, this paper highlights the challenges and opportunities associated with geographical space in relation to cyberspace, with a particular focus on data analytics and visualization, including extended AI capabilities and virtual reality representations. Consequently, we encourage the creation of synergies between the processing and analysis of geographical and cyber data to improve sustainability and solve complex problems with geospatial applications and other digital advancements in urban and environmental sciences

    Exploring place through user-generated content: Using Flickr tags to describe city cores

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    Terms used to describe city centers, such as Downtown, are key concepts in everyday or vernacular language. Here, we explore such language by harvesting georeferenced and tagged metadata associated with 8 million Flickr images and thus consider how large numbers of people name city core areas. The nature of errors and imprecision in tagging and georeferencing are quantified, and automatically generated precision measures appear to mirror errors in the positioning of images. Users seek to ascribe appropriate semantics to images, though bulk-uploading and bulk-tagging may introduce bias. Between 0.5--2% of tags associated with georeferenced images analyzed describe city core areas generically, while 70% of all georeferenced images analyzed include specific place name tags, with place names at the granularity of city names being by far the most common. Using Flickr metadata, it is possible not only to describe the use of the term Downtown across the USA, but also to explore the borders of city center neighborhoods at the level of individual cities, whilst accounting for bias by the use of tag profiles

    Abstraction and cartographic generalization of geographic user-generated content: use-case motivated investigations for mobile users

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    On a daily basis, a conventional internet user queries different internet services (available on different platforms) to gather information and make decisions. In most cases, knowingly or not, this user consumes data that has been generated by other internet users about his/her topic of interest (e.g. an ideal holiday destination with a family traveling by a van for 10 days). Commercial service providers, such as search engines, travel booking websites, video-on-demand providers, food takeaway mobile apps and the like, have found it useful to rely on the data provided by other users who have commonalities with the querying user. Examples of commonalities are demography, location, interests, internet address, etc. This process has been in practice for more than a decade and helps the service providers to tailor their results based on the collective experience of the contributors. There has been also interest in the different research communities (including GIScience) to analyze and understand the data generated by internet users. The research focus of this thesis is on finding answers for real-world problems in which a user interacts with geographic information. The interactions can be in the form of exploration, querying, zooming and panning, to name but a few. We have aimed our research at investigating the potential of using geographic user-generated content to provide new ways of preparing and visualizing these data. Based on different scenarios that fulfill user needs, we have investigated the potential of finding new visual methods relevant to each scenario. The methods proposed are mainly based on pre-processing and analyzing data that has been offered by data providers (both commercial and non-profit organizations). But in all cases, the contribution of the data was done by ordinary internet users in an active way (compared to passive data collections done by sensors). The main contributions of this thesis are the proposals for new ways of abstracting geographic information based on user-generated content contributions. Addressing different use-case scenarios and based on different input parameters, data granularities and evidently geographic scales, we have provided proposals for contemporary users (with a focus on the users of location-based services, or LBS). The findings are based on different methods such as semantic analysis, density analysis and data enrichment. In the case of realization of the findings of this dissertation, LBS users will benefit from the findings by being able to explore large amounts of geographic information in more abstract and aggregated ways and get their results based on the contributions of other users. The research outcomes can be classified in the intersection between cartography, LBS and GIScience. Based on our first use case we have proposed the inclusion of an extended semantic measure directly in the classic map generalization process. In our second use case we have focused on simplifying geographic data depiction by reducing the amount of information using a density-triggered method. And finally, the third use case was focused on summarizing and visually representing relatively large amounts of information by depicting geographic objects matched to the salient topics emerged from the data

    Proceedings of the Academic Track at State of the Map 2019 - Heidelberg (Germany), September 21-23, 2019

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    State of the Map featured a full day of academic talks. Building upon the motto of SotM 2019 in "Bridging the Map" the Academic Track session was aimed to provide the bridge to join together the experience, understanding, ideas, concepts and skills from different groups of researchers, academics and scientists from around the world. In particular, the Academic Track session was meant to build this bridge that connects members of the OpenStreetMap community and the academic community by providing an open passage for exchange of ideas, communication and opportunities for increased collaboration. These proceedings include 14 abstracts accepted as oral presentations and 6 abstracts presented as posters. Contributions were received from different academic fields, for example geography, remote sensing, computer and information sciences, geomatics, GIScience, the humanities and social sciences, and even from industry actors. We are particularly delighted to have included abstracts from both experienced researchers and students. Overall, it is our hope that these proceedings accurately showcase the ongoing innovation and maturity of scientific investigations and research into OpenStreetMap, showing how it as a research object converges multiple research areas together. Our aim is to show how the sum total of investigations of issues like Volunteered Geographic Information, geo-information, and geo-digital processes and representation shed light on the relations between crowds, real-world applications, technological developments, and scientific research

    The Analysis of Big Data on Cites and Regions - Some Computational and Statistical Challenges

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    Big Data on cities and regions bring new opportunities and challenges to data analysts and city planners. On the one side, they hold great promise to combine increasingly detailed data for each citizen with critical infrastructures to plan, govern and manage cities and regions, improve their sustainability, optimize processes and maximize the provision of public and private services. On the other side, the massive sample size and high-dimensionality of Big Data and their geo-temporal character introduce unique computational and statistical challenges. This chapter provides overviews on the salient characteristics of Big Data and how these features impact on paradigm change of data management and analysis, and also on the computing environment.Series: Working Papers in Regional Scienc
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