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  Colloquia  
  Department of Information Science and Telecommunications Dissertation Defense  
     
 

Title: "GeoInterpret: An Ontological Engineering Methodology for Automated Interpretation of Geospatial Queries"

When: Tuesday, November 30, 2004 , 2:00pm - 4:00pm

Where: Room 503 IS Bldg.

Who: Ratchata Peachavanish

Committee:

Dr. Stephen C. Hirtle, DIST
Dr. Michael Lewis, DIST
Dr. Jeen-Shang Lin, Civil and Environmental Engineering
Dr. Burcu Akinci, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University
Dr. Hassan A. Karimi, DIST, Dissertation Director

Abstract:Despite advances in GIS technology, solving geospatial problems using current GIS platforms involves complex tasks requiring specialized skills and knowledge that are attainable through formal training and experience in implementing GIS projects. These requisite skills and knowledge include: understanding domain-specific geospatial problems; understanding GIS representation of real-world objects, concepts, and activities; knowing how to identify, locate, retrieve, and integrate geospatial data sets into GIS projects; knowing specific geoprocessing capabilities available on specific GIS platforms; and skills in utilizing geoprocessing tools in GIS with appropriate data sets to solve problems effectively and efficiently. Users interested in solving application-domain problems often lack such skills and knowledge and resort to GIS experts (this is especially true for applications dealing with diverse geospatial data sets and complex problems). Therefore, there is a gap between users knowledge about geoprocessing and GIS tools and the GIS knowledge and skills needed to solve geospatial problems. To fill this gap, a new approach that automates the tasks involved in geospatial problem solving is needed. Of these tasks, the most important is geospatial query (usually expressed in application-specific concepts and terminologies) interpretation and mapping to geoprocessing operations implementable by GIS. The goal of this research is to develop an ontological engineering methodology, called GeoInterpret, to automate the task of geospatial query interpretation and mapping. This methodology encompasses: a conceptualization of geospatial queries; a multiple-ontology approach for representing knowledge needed to solve geospatial queries; a set of techniques for mapping elements between different ontologies; and a set of algorithms for geospatial query interpretation, mapping, and geoprocessing workflow composition. A proof of concept was developed to demonstrate the working of GeoInterpret.

 
     

 

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