Crowdsourcing Geographic Knowledge
Springer (Verlag)
978-94-007-9826-7 (ISBN)
Chapter 1: VGI, the exaflood, and the growing digital divide: Daniel Sui, Michael Goodchild, & Sarah Elwood.- Section I. Public Participation and Citizen Science.- Chapter 2: Understanding the value of VGI: Rob Feick & Stéphane Roche.- Chapter 3: To volunteer or to contribute locational information? Towards truth in labeling for crowd-sourced geographic information: Francis Harvey.- Chapter 4: Metadata squared: Enhancing its usability for volunteered geographic information and the GeoWeb: Barbara Poore & Eric Wolf.- Chapter 5: Situating the adoption of VGI by government: Peter Johnson & Renee Sieber.- Chapter 6: When Web 2.0 meets public participation GIS (PPGIS): VGI and spaces of participatory mapping in China: Wen Lin.- Chapter 7: Citizen science and volunteered geographic information: Overview and typology of participation: Muki Haklay.- Section II. Geographic Knowledge Production and Place Inference.- Chapter 8: Volunteered geographic information and computational geography: New perspectives: Bin Jiang.- Chapter 9: The evolution of geo-crowdsourcing: Bringing volunteered geographic information to the third dimension: Marcus Goetz & Alexander Zipf: Chapter 10: From volunteered geographic information to volunteered geographic services:Jim Thatcher.- Chapter 11: The geographic nature of Wikipedia authorship.- Darren Hardy.- Chapter 12: Inferring thematic places from spatially referenced natural language observations: Benjamin Adams & Grant McKenzie.- Chapter 13: “I don't come from anywhere:" Exploring the role of VGI and the Geoweb in rediscovering a sense of place in a dispersed Aboriginal community: Jon Corbett.- Section III. Emerging Applications and New Challenges.- Chapter 14: Potential contributions and challenges of VGI for conventional topographic base-mapping programs: David Coleman.- Chapter 15: “We know who you are and we know where you live:”A research agenda for web demographics: T. Edwin Chow.- Chapter 16: Volunteered geographic information, actor-network theory, and severe storm reports: Mark Palmer & Scott Kraushaar.- Chapter 17: VGI as a compilation tool for navigation map databases: Michael Dobson.- Chapter 18: VGI and public health: Possibilities and pitfalls: Christopher Goranson, Sayone Thihalolipavan, & Nicolás di Tada.- Chapter 19: VGI in education: From K-12 to graduate studies: Thomas Bartoschek & Carsten Keßler.- Chapter 20: The prospects VGI research and the emerging fourth paradigm: Sarah Elwood, Michael Goodchild, & Daniel Sui.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 21.9.2014 |
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Zusatzinfo | XII, 396 p. |
Verlagsort | Dordrecht |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 155 x 235 mm |
Themenwelt | Informatik ► Datenbanken ► Data Warehouse / Data Mining |
Informatik ► Theorie / Studium ► Künstliche Intelligenz / Robotik | |
Naturwissenschaften ► Geowissenschaften ► Geografie / Kartografie | |
Schlagworte | Conventional topographic base-mapping programs • Crowd-sourced geographic information • Crowdsourcing • Emerging applications in VGI • Exaflood • Geographic Knowledge • Geo Web • Growing digital divide • K-12 • Navigation map databases • neogeography • Participatory mapping in China • Public participation GIS (PPGIS) • User-generated content • VGI and Public health • VGI applications • VGI in education • Volunteered geographic information (VGI) • Web 2.0 Technologies • Wikipedia authorship |
ISBN-10 | 94-007-9826-1 / 9400798261 |
ISBN-13 | 978-94-007-9826-7 / 9789400798267 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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