Zusammenfassung der Ressource
GIS
- Geo-referencing
& Map
Co-Ordinate
Systems
- Geo-references
Anmerkungen:
- -How locations are determined
Common types:
-place names
-postal codes
-linear references
-co-ordinates
- A geo-reference must be:
1-Unique (links to exactly one location)
2- Understood (so different users understand the meaning of a geo-reference)
3- Consistent (same projection is used for all map layers)
4- Persistent (through time, so today's geo-references are still meaningful tomorrow)
- Ellipsoid
Anmerkungen:
- A reference surface for horizontal measurements
- Geoid
Anmerkungen:
- A reference surface for vertical measurements-ellipsoids don't take into account for the Earth's complex topography
- A equipotential surface based on gravitational irregularities
- Datum
Anmerkungen:
- 'a system for anchoring an ellipsoid to known locations on the Earths surface
- Map
Projections
Anmerkungen:
- Mathematical formula to transform the curved surface of the Earth onto a flat map
- Vector
- Object
Anmerkungen:
- Implementation of the object model of spatial data
Object:
- discrete spatial features
- each object has precisely defined spatial boundaries, buildings, roads, lakes
-represented in the DB through points, lines & polygons
- these are generally things we can see on the landscape
- Analysis
- Queries
Anmerkungen:
- Queries do not change existing data sets or create new data by combining existing data sets
- Measurements
Anmerkungen:
- Distance
Length or PerimeterArea ShapeRatio of perimeter to the square root of area Volume
- Proximity-based
Transformations
Anmerkungen:
- Buffering
Overlays
- The point in polygon algorithm
- a point inside a polygon has a odd number of crossings
- a point outside a polygon has an even number of crossings
- Overly issues
-Spurious polygons (sliver polys)
-Complexity of output map layers
-Dissolving adjacent polygons (spatial
aggregation) to solve these issues
- Raster
Anmerkungen:
- Regular tessellation of cells
-Represents fields by assigning attribute values to cells
- Raster model is generally much better for modeling
continuous features than vector and performing
analyses that involve spread, flow, or diffusion
processes
- It is relatively easier to understand as a method of representing spatial features and processes and is usually computationally faster and simpler than vector
- Field
Anmerkungen:
- -have properties that vary continuosly over space
eg elevation, temperature, noise
- Encoding
Methods
- Presence/Absence
Anmerkungen:
- This involves recording what you want into the cell. If a feature of interest is found within a cell, code the cell to reflect the presence of that feature and ignore all other features
- Centroid
of a Cell
Anmerkungen:
- Presence of an entity is recorded only if a portion of it
occurs directly at the central point of each cell Appropriate for continuous data such as elevation,
temperature
- Dominant
Type
Anmerkungen:
- Encodes the presence of an entity if it occupies more than 50% of the cell
- Percent
Occurrence
Anmerkungen:
- Identify what feature to record in raster layer (e.g. urban land) If several types of land use occur in a cell, then value of each cell reflects the percentage of the cell that the feature of interest (e.g. urban land) occupies
- Compression
Methods
- Run Length
Coding
Anmerkungen:
- scan a row, noting each unique cell value and the # of
occurrences for each cell value
- Chain
& Block
Coding
Anmerkungen:
- similar to Run Length Encoding but scans rows & columns to
define 2D regions with same cell values
- Quadtree
Data
Structure
Anmerkungen:
- recursive subdivision of raster cells into quadrants with the
same cell value - uses variable cell resolution to reduce
data storage requirements
- Sources
Anmerkungen:
- Remote sensing
Raster scanning
Vector to raster conversion
- Analysis
- Local
Anmerkungen:
- Is the most basic of the associative operations in Raster GIS. These functions produce a new grid where the value of each cell is determined as some arithmetic operation among the values of same-location cells on any number of input layers
Boolean statements
Reclass: aggregating values to produce new classes
- Overlay
-Create new data by combining map layers of different features based on
-Combines 2 layers (fields) to produce a 3rd field (layer)
f x f ---> f
have to have the same # of cells and location
- Reclass
- cell by cell operations
-neighbouring or distant cells have no effect on the output grid values
-local operations include:
-reclassification (assign a new value to each unique value on the input layer) f--->f
scalar
-overlay
- Zonal
Anmerkungen:
- This means of association produces a new grid of zones that summarize the values of a raster grid over the areas covered by the zones in a zone grid.
Operation on groups of cells
- Focal
Anmerkungen:
- This class of associative functions evaluates a new grid by summarizing statistics in the neighbourhood around each cell. This may be on the same or a different layer
- Surface Analysis Functions: associations of cells in a raster of elevations, a DEM, can be analysed to calculate slope & aspect
- Filtering -moving window that is passed across the entire raster
Slope and aspect derivation uses a method similar to filtering
- Viewsheds: a surface that represents the field of view across a study area from a given location, calculated from a DEM
- Map Algebra
Anmerkungen:
- input raster layer(s) ---> [operation] ---> output raster layer
3 categories: local, focal, zonal
- More analysis
Anmerkungen:
- Inverse Distance Weighting- assumption that space is correlated
-values nearby are not independent, and this correlation may be used to support the prediction of values at nearby sites
Weighted Distance Buffers
-can reflect differences in 'cost of distance' using a 'friction'surface
-Resultant buffer will be wider in areas of low friction and narrower where cells represent higher friction values
If moving straight across, it is a cost of 1*the cost of the cell itself. Or if moving diagonally, it is 1.414* the cost of the cell itself.
- A surface is a continuous field of values over an infinite number of points eg elevation, temp, concentration of a chemical
- Independence and Spatial Correlation- consider dependence between nearby points in space, a sample that occurs near in space is likely to be more similar than one that is further away (aka auto-correlation)
- Cost
Surfaces
& Least
Cost
Paths
Anmerkungen:
- Cost Surface represents the total 'cost'of travelling overland from one or more starting points
1 - Generate a Friction Surface
--absolute barriers- you cannot travel through that cell
--relative barriers- you can pass through cell, but incur travel costs
2- Create an accumulated cost surface from the point(s) of origin to the destination cell(s)
3- Create a least cost path across the accumulated surface from origin to destination
- Spatial
Data
Anmerkungen:
- Data is the foundation of a GIS
It determines:
-what theme
- what types of analysis
-where
-when
- quality of your analysis
- Collection
- Someone
else
Anmerkungen:
- Buy it from vendors- government or commercial
Get it from free websites
Data sharing agreements
- Yourself
Anmerkungen:
- -Primary- collection of raw data from direct measurement in the field, eg GPS, Surveying, Remote Sensing
-Secondary - data derivation from other sources
-Hardcopies (scanning or digitizing)
-Digital copies (data model or format conversion)
- Metadata
Anmerkungen:
- Data about data
Describes the identity, extent, quality, spatial and temporal schema, origin, condition and many other characteristics
- It can come in many forms: file headers, XML documents, data dictionaries & definitions, time date and authorship
- It adds value to an already valuable resource
- SDIs
Anmerkungen:
- Spatial Data Infrastructure - a relevant base collection of technologies, policies & institutional arrangements that facilitate the avaliability of and access to spatial data. An SDI provides a basis for spatial data discovery, evalutaion, and application for users and providers.
- Uncertainty
Anmerkungen:
- Has 3 components:
Error: the known uncertainty due to systematic and human limitations (chief uncertainty)
Vagueness:uncertainty associated with a spatial or attribute & concept eg boundary or density
Randomness: the component of of uncertainty that despite minimised error it cannot be modelled eg Human error or GPS signal affected by atomsphere
- Error: accuracy( how close to the recorded data values are to the 'true'value
precsion: interpreted in terms of how 'exact' data measurement & storage area aka as we repeatdly collect data for a point, how precise we are
- Sources of Positional Error
- map projection, datum & their parameters...as soon as you use an ellipsoid/geoid there will always be some kind of error
- primary measurement error - error determining location of features - instrument or human error...humans operate the instruments & they all have a range of skill levels
-secondary data acquisition errors- digitizer/scanner resolution - media, quality of source maps & photos (the older it is, the more time has elapsed to distort that media) - operator, registration/interpretation error...friday afternoons
-improper representation or conceptualisation of objects or phenomena- scale effects, resolutions, data model effects
- Screen or “heads-up” digitizing
- digitizing features on computer screen based on digital orthophotos, it is relatively easy, but not as accurate as table digitizing
- Attribute Error:
- Modifiable Areal Unit Problem
- Topology
Anmerkungen:
- Branch of maths that describes the geometric relationships among objects that remain constant when the objects are subjected to certain
types of geometric transformations
- Planar
Enforcement
Anmerkungen:
- A set of rules used to define a consistent method of building point, line and polygon features from spaghetti-digitized data. For example, planar enforcement includes rules that polygons of differing soil types cannot overlap, and that lines must be split at intersections.
- Management
- GIS
Professionals
Anmerkungen:
- Must be educated
Must follow ethical behaviour
Should continue with their education
In order to become a GISP, they are submitted for review
- Ethics
Anmerkungen:
- Unethical behaviour involves:
-lying with maps
-using GIS to plan/support war
-using GIS as a surveillance tool
-plagarism
- Privacy
/Legal
Issues
Anmerkungen:
- The need for ready availability of information
for the social and economic benefit of the
community; vs. The responsibility to ensure that the rights of individuals and groups are not infringed by
abuse of that information. e.g. In e-commerce, consumers’ private and personal information is subject to collection, storage, manipulation and analysis using: Cookies, Personal digital certificates, Customer tracking systems, Mass customization and personalized marketing, Dynamic content servers, DBMS and data mining
- Copyright (protects the expression of an idea)
Trade Secrets(confidential info-providing a competitive advantage)
Patents (protects the idea itself)
Trademarks- word or symbol used to distinguish the wares or services of an organization from other
- Project
Management
Anmerkungen:
- Investigation
Analysis
Documentation
Critical Appraisal & Review
Presentation
- RFPs
You have to convince the client that you are the best for the job.
Tips:
-Take notes of what they are actually requesting
Elements such as ToC and clear structure
Diagrams + figures preferable to lots of text
Do not give away too much
Contingencies: inflate the price by 10-15%
- Hydro-logical Applications
- Hydro-logical
Geomorphometry
Anmerkungen:
- Geomorphometry is the quantitative science of land surface analysis
Inputs: DEMs
Methods: Image Analysis, Statistical, Mathematical, Algorithmic
Outputs:
-surface parameters & objects
- Surface
Anmerkungen:
- The land surface could be theoretically be described by a function of x & y (N,E)
- Flow direction
-Direction in which water will flow
-The direction of steepest descent
-Similar to aspect
- Pits &
Catchments
Anmerkungen:
- Local minima in the surface
-Raster: cells with no lower neighbours
- A catchment is the region contributing flow to a single outlet point
Usually depicted as a polygon or contiguous region of a nomial raster values
A basin is the catchment of a pit
The lowest point on the perimeter of a basin is the pour point, and so is the outlet. A basins pour point is the point where pits will overflow
- Automated
Watershed
Analysis
Anmerkungen:
- Take a DEM --->
Fill sinks--->
Determine flow direction--->
Determine flow accumulation--->
Determine watersheds
- 3D
Anmerkungen:
- 'the natural choice, as its how we see the world"
- Isarithmic Map- depicts continuous smooth phenomena such as precipitation or elevation
2.5D
ArcGIS ArcScene- is a 3D vizualization app that allows you to view your GIS data in 3D
Building & Texturing- you can use various apps to do 3D modelling like GoogleSketchUp, ESRI CityEngine
- Time
Anmerkungen:
- It is unidirectional
Yet it has no obvious physical form or properties, so it is difficult to conceptualise
Can be absolute (6/06/2014, 1:50pm) or relative (In lecture time slot 5 aka 12pm
Time really hasn't received much attention in GIS until recently, this may be due to GIS databases being designed to handle static not dynamic situations
- Time data is stored as separate events in a GIS. There are 3 approaches to event representation
Datestamps: time recorded when an attribute changes, this means that the history of a single object can be selected & ordered.
Timeslices: separate layers used to represent passing time, this is the most common way to represent time in a GIS
Timeline: timeslices into single dataset DBMS enabling temporal queries aka Spacetime composites
- Diagramming
Examples
Anmerkungen:
- OpenSim Demo
Static Time Mapping- Cartograms- map of London underground, you can click on any staion and it morphs the map into travel time, rather than distance (can literally turn time into space)
Time Geography Constucts - lifeline represents where we go in the day, a station is a location, domain represents a land area and a prism is the potential for movement.
- Distributed GIS
Anmerkungen:
- User, software, hardware and data can all be in different places, accessed via a network. Data in the cloud, client and server interaction with the desktop and mobile GIS
- Network
& Internet
Anmerkungen:
- Moving/moved away from desktop GIS delivery, to it being delivered from a remote server. This means it can handle concurrent access
- 3 tier
architecture
Anmerkungen:
- Clients are situated at the top
Middleware is in the middle
Server is at the bottom
- File-based doesn't handle large amounts of info well
The DBMS Oracle cant directly talk to ArcGIS, so it has to use the middleware ArcSDE
- Municipalities
Anmerkungen:
- Local government authorities- it is the most persuasive force in the industry - in charge of land management, zoning, property evaluation, road & asset management, emergency response
- Web
Mapping
Options
Anmerkungen:
- There is a limited number of options & the commercial industry is dominated by ArcGIS, though a few use AutoDesk-MapGuide
- There are also plenty of non-commercial opensource tools
- GI
Services
Anmerkungen:
- 'replaces a local GIS function with one provided
remotely by a server'
- Mobile
Anmerkungen:
- Devices have become more compact & mobile in recent years
- Issues
-Egocentric Context - the location of the user is important
-Limitations of the display due to its small size'
-Certain environments unsuitable for certain media
-Battery life is limited
-Wifi/3G issues
-Security
- LBS
Anmerkungen:
- Location Based Services - information that it spatially fixed and can be delivered to network devices...
“A location-based service (LBS) is an information service provided by a device that knows where it is and is capable of modifying the information it provides based in that knowledge"
- Neogeography
Anmerkungen:
- Neogeography (literally "new geography") is the use of geographical techniques and tools for personal and community activities or by a non-expert group of users