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Interoperating Geographic Information Systems

Title
Interoperating Geographic Information Systems [electronic resource] / edited by Michael Goodchild, Max Egenhofer, Robin Fegeas, Cliff Kottman.
ISBN
9781461551898
Published
Boston, MA : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1999.
Physical Description
1 online resource.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
Geographic information systems have developed rapidly in the past decade, and are now a major class of software, with applications that include infrastructure maintenance, resource management, agriculture, Earth science, and planning. But a lack of standards has led to a general inability for one GIS to interoperate with another. It is difficult for one GIS to share data with another, or for people trained on one system to adapt easily to the commands and user interface of another. Failure to interoperate is a problem at many levels, ranging from the purely technical to the semantic and the institutional. <br/> <em>Interoperating Geographic Information Systems</em> is about efforts to improve the ability of GISs to interoperate, and has been assembled through a collaboration between academic researchers and the software vendor community under the auspices of the US National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis and the Open GIS Consortium Inc. It includes chapters on the basic principles and the various conceptual frameworks that the research community has developed to think about the problem. Other chapters review a wide range of applications and the experiences of the authors in trying to achieve interoperability at a practical level. Interoperability opens enormous potential for new ways of using GIS and new mechanisms for exchanging data, and these are covered in chapters on information marketplaces, with special reference to geographic information. Institutional arrangements are also likely to be profoundly affected by the trend towards interoperable systems, and nowhere is the impact of interoperability more likely to cause fundamental change than in education, as educators address the needs of a new generation of GIS users with access to a new generation of tools. The book concludes with a series of chapters on education and institutional change. <br/> <em>Interoperating Geographic Information Systems</em> is suitable as a secondary text for graduate level courses in computer science, geography, spatial databases, and interoperability and as a reference for researchers and practitioners in industry, commerce and government.
Variant and related titles
Springer ebooks.
Other formats
Printed edition:
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
January 29, 2013
Series
The Springer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science, 495
The Springer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science, 495
Also listed under
Egenhofer, Max.
Fegeas, Robin.
Kottman, Cliff.
SpringerLink (Online service)
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