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Toward the semantic geospatial web
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Source Geographic Information Systems archive
Proceedings of the 10th ACM international symposium on Advances in geographic information systems table of contents
McLean, Virginia, USA
Pages: 1 - 4  
Year of Publication: 2002
ISBN:1-58113-591-2
Author
Max J. Egenhofer  University of Maine, Orono, ME
Sponsor
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 40,   Downloads (12 Months): 233,   Citation Count: 25
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ABSTRACT

With the growth of the World Wide Web has come the insight that currently available methods for finding and using information on the web are often insufficient. In order to move the Web from a data repository to an information resource, a totally new way of organizing information is needed. The advent of the Semantic Web promises better retrieval methods by incorporating the data's semantics and exploiting the semantics during the search process. Such a development needs special attention from the geospatial perspective so that the particularities of geospatial meaning are captured appropriately. The creation the Semantic Geospatial Web needs the development multiple spatial and terminological ontologies, each with a formal semantics; the representation of those semantics such that they are available both to machines for processing and to people for understanding; and the processing of geospatial queries against these ontologies and the evaluation of the retrieval results based on the match between the semantics of the expressed information need and the available semantics of the information resources and search systems. This will lead to a new framework for geospatial information retrieval based on the semantics of spatial and terminological ontologies. By explicitly representing the role of semantics in different components of the information retrieval process (people, interfaces, search systems, and information resources), the Semantic Geospatial Web will enable users to retrieve more precisely the data they need, based on the semantics associated with these data.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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J. Berners-Lee, J. Hendler, and O. Lassila, The Semantic Web, Scientific American, vol. 184, no. 5, pp. 34--43, 2001.
 
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F. Fonseca, M. Egenhofer, P. Agouris, and G. Câmara, Using Ontologies for Integrated Geographic Information Systems, Transactions in GIS, vol. 6, no. 3, pp. 231--257, 2002.
 
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J. Hastings and L. Hill, Treeatment of "Duplicates" in the Alexandria Digital Library Gazetteer, in: M. Egenhofer and D. Mark, Eds., GIScience 2002-Collection of Extended Abstracts and Poster Summaries, Boulder, CO, 2002, pp. 64--66.
 
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R. Rugg, M. Egenhofer, and W. Kuhn, Formalizing Behavior of Geographic Feature Types, Geographical Systems, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 159--179, 1997.
 
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B. Smith and D. Mark, Geographical Categories: An Ontological Investigation, International Journal of Geographical Information Science, vol. 15, no. 7, pp. 591--612, 2001.
 
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CITED BY  25