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Assertion and Authority: The Science of User-Generated Geographic Content’, in Proceedings of the Colloquium for Andrew U. Frank’s 60th Birthday. http:// www.geog.ucsb.edu/ygood/papers/454.pdf (2008)

by M F Goodchild
Venue:International Journal of Digital Earth
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Review Recent Developments and Future Trends in Volunteered Geographic Information Research: The Case of OpenStreetMap

by Pascal Neis, Dennis Zielstra , 2014
"... future internet ..."
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future internet
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...proach to answer whether OSMsor any other VGI source should be utilized or not is to assess the OSM dataset quality for the selectedsarea of interest and its particular role or purpose in the project =-=[60,116,117]-=-. Therefore, it is importantsnot to look only at the completeness of the map data, but also to review the collected information insmore detail, especially in areas where data imports or automated scri...

Chapter 3 Information Technology as Megaengineering: The Impact of GIS

by Michael F. Goodchild
"... We normally think of engineering, and particularly megaengineering, in terms of big iron: large-scale physical investments in the form of ports, bridges, highways, and dams. Science has its own versions, such as the Hubble Telescope, the CERN Large Hadron Collider, and the South Pole Research Statio ..."
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We normally think of engineering, and particularly megaengineering, in terms of big iron: large-scale physical investments in the form of ports, bridges, highways, and dams. Science has its own versions, such as the Hubble Telescope, the CERN Large Hadron Collider, and the South Pole Research Station, each designed in its

Towards (Re)Constructing Narratives from Georeferenced Photographs through Visual Analytics

by Ralph K. Straumann, Gennady Andrienko
"... We present a study that explores methodological steps towards (re)constructing collective narratives from the photo-taking behaviour of two groups (foreign tourists and inhabitants of Switzerland) by analysing spatial and temporal patterns in user-contributed, georeferenced photographs of Zurich, Sw ..."
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We present a study that explores methodological steps towards (re)constructing collective narratives from the photo-taking behaviour of two groups (foreign tourists and inhabitants of Switzerland) by analysing spatial and temporal patterns in user-contributed, georeferenced photographs of Zurich, Switzerland. We reason that the photographers typically capture a scene or a moment because they want to remember or share it, thus these scenes or moments are meaningful to them. Various scholars suggest that the human experience (i.e. this meaningfulness) is what separates a place from the mathematical descriptions of space. While this notion is well known in larger geographic literature, it is under-explored in cartographic research. We respond to this research gap and reconstruct static and dynamic patterns of photo-taking and-sharing behaviour to assist in capturing the implicit meaning in the studied locations. These locations may be meaningful to only a certain group of people in certain moments; therefore, studying group differences in spatial and temporal photo-taking patterns will help building a collective and comparative story about the studied place. In our study, we focus on experiences of foreign versus domestic visitors, and in the process, we examine the potential (and feasibility) of georeferenced photographs for extracting such collective narratives using qualitative and quantitative visual analytical methods.
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... change took us away from a state where geographic information was exclusively produced and distributed (and thus, controlled) by official authorities to a new age in which alternatives are possible (=-=Goodchild, 2008-=-). Contentcreation by users (as opposed to top-down depictions of space) enables us to study how people experience and make sense of things bottom-up, therefore, allowing us to study place (Agnew, 200...

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