The European Information Society: Leading the Way with Geo-information

Voorkant
Sara Fabrikant, Monica Wachowicz
Springer Science & Business Media, 12 dec 2007 - 488 pagina's
The Association of Geographic Information Laboratories for Europe (AGILE) conferences provide a multidisciplinary forum for an increasingly varied landscape of scientific knowledge production and dissemination, to th GI Scientists from around the world. This year’s landmark 10 AGILE Conference, held at the top of Europe in Aalborg, Denmark, brought a number of significant changes to the well-established conference series. For the first time the call for papers included a full-paper submission track of original, unpublished, fundamental scientific research, the results of which you will find published in this volume. The response for this call provides ample evidence that GI Science and Systems are alive and well in Europe. Twenty-eight papers (out of 62 submissions) were accepted for this volume (acceptance rate: 45%). Judging by the author’s affiliations in this volume, the diverse AGILE Community includes (but is not limited to) computer scientists, geographers, geomatic engineers, GI Science pr- titioners, just to mention a few. The breadth of submissions reflects a vibrant and globally interc- nected GI Science community. You will find contributions from all four corners of Europe, as well as from China, Japan, and the United States.
 

Inhoudsopgave

Enabling P2P Cooperative WMS Proxy Cachingand Prefetching in an Educational Environment
1
An ontologicalbased approach to GeographicInformation Science curricula design
15
An Adaptive Landuse Simulation Model forIntegrated Coastal Zone Planning
35
Delineation of individual tree crowns for LiDARtree and stand parameter estimation in scottishwoodlands
55
Resolution Sensitivity of a Compound TerrainDerivative as Computed from LiDARBasedElevation Data
87
A Universal Abstract Model forFuture Movements of Moving Objects
111
A user context approach for adaptive anddistributed GIS
121
The impact ofprivacy law on the use of location technology fornational security purposes
135
Extending the OpenGeospatial Specification forManaging Discrete and Continuous TimeDependent Data
265
Spatial Data Management Aspects inArchaeological Excavation Documentation1
287
a Space Partitioning Approach
303
Towards a Mathematical Theory for Snapshot andTemporal Formal Ontologies
317
Spacecontained conflict revision for geographicinformation
335
A Hybrid Knowledge Representation SystemArchitecture
349
A Matter ofTrust and Semantics
365
Improving Spatial Data Usability By CapturingUser Interactions
389

The Aggregation of Urban Building ClustersBased on the Skeleton Partitioning of Gap Space
153
Effects of Ground Surface Relief in 3D SpatialAnalysis on Residential Environment
171
Could Spatial Data Infrastructures provide it?
187
Estimating the costs of an SDIbased project
201
a Web Map Service providingSVG maps with a builtin client
217
Definition and Implementation of an Active WebMap Service
231
Increasing the Fitness ofOGCCompliant Web Map Services for the Web 20
247
Improving the Usability of Spatial InformationProducts and Services
405
Characterising Straightness Qualitatively
419
Extending Geographic Data Modeling by AdoptingConstraint Decision Table to Specify SpatialIntegrity Constraints
435
A Compact Topological DBMS Data Structure For3D Topography
455
Depth Cue of Occlusion Information as Criterionfor the Quality of Annotation Placement inPerspective Views
473
Index
487
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