2012
DOI: 10.1080/13658816.2011.639303
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Criteria of geographic relevance: an experimental study

Abstract: The relevance of geographic information has become an emerging problem in geographic information science due to an enormous increase in volumes of data at high spatial, temporal, and semantic resolution, because of ever faster rates of new data capturing. At the same time, it is not clear whether the concept of relevance developed in information science and implemented for document-based information retrieval can be directly applied to this new, highly dynamic setting. In this study, we analyze the criteria us… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(35 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
(25 reference statements)
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“…Ideally, relevance would be measured quantitatively. However, quantifying relevance in a geographic context is complicated [37,38] and considered outside the scope of this paper. We employed a practical approach: to use landmark salience to approximate task relevance.…”
Section: Designing the 3d Mapmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ideally, relevance would be measured quantitatively. However, quantifying relevance in a geographic context is complicated [37,38] and considered outside the scope of this paper. We employed a practical approach: to use landmark salience to approximate task relevance.…”
Section: Designing the 3d Mapmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The four models are characterized by increasing complexity, richness, and expressive power: the geometrical one includes metrics, the topological one adds relations, the structural adds configuration, and the semantic adds meaning. To show how these more sophisticated models of space can be used, one might consider that a structural conception of space is necessary to implement criteria of geographic relevance, such as cluster and colocation (De Sabbata and Reichenbacher, 2012). However, only a semantic conception of space would enable a comprehensive development of the activity, preferences, social, and context component, as it accounts for the functions, properties, and qualities of a place.…”
Section: From Time To Space-timementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A key difference between situational relevance as defined by Wilson (1973) and GRRaper as defined by Raper (2007) is that the former defines the relevance of a document referring to a physical entity, whereas the latter defines the relevance of a physical entity. A difference of the same kind can be found when comparing relevance as defined in GIR (Palacio et al, 2010) and MIR (Mountain and Macfarlane, 2007) (which are pragmatic derivations of situational relevance) and GRR&D as defined by Reichenbacher and De Sabbata (Reichenbacher and De Sabbata, 2011;De Sabbata and Reichenbacher, 2012). A surrogate taken into account in IR, GIR, and MIR provides information about a document, such as an entry in database of crawled Web pages and a set of entries in an inverted index.…”
Section: Analysis Of Relevance Conceptsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…De Andrade [18] further integrates the overlap degree of MBRs with the spatial relevance, which is defined by the overlapping frequencies of MBRs, to calculate the spatial rankings. De Sabbata and Reichenbacher [19,20] present five fine-grained criteria (including topicality, spatiotemporal proximity, directionality, cluster, and colocation) for calculating spatial relevance Some efforts have been made to overcome the above issues. Improved geometric footprint models, including multiple polygons [14,15] and MBR set [16,17], are presented as one kind of solutions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%