• DocumentCode
    296435
  • Title

    Spatial metadata and GIS for decision support

  • Author

    Wong, David W S ; Wu, C. Victor

  • Author_Institution
    Geogr. & Earth Syst. Sci., George Mason Univ., Fairfax, VA, USA
  • Volume
    3
  • fYear
    1996
  • fDate
    3-6 Jan 1996
  • Firstpage
    557
  • Abstract
    The proliferation of GIS technology has greatly increased the access to and the usage of spatial data. Making maps is relatively easy even for those who do not have much cartographic training. Nonetheless, the concerns for spatial data quality among GIS and spatial data users have just began to sprout partly because information about spatial data quality is not readily available or useful. Metadata, which refer to data describing data, include the quality and accuracy information of the data. The Federal Geographic Data Committee has proposed content standards of metadata for spatial databases. However, the standards are not adequate to document the spatial variation in data quality in geographic data. The paper argues that information about the quality of spatial data over a geographical area, which can be regarded as spatial metadata, should be derived and reported to help users of spatial data to make intelligent spatial decisions or policy formulations. While cartographers focus on the representation of spatial data quality, and statisticians emphasize the quantitative measures of data quality, this paper proposes that GIS are logical tools to assess certain types of error in spatial databases because GIS are widely used to gather, manipulate, analyze, and display spatial data. A framework is proposed to derive several types of data quality information using GIS. These types of quality information include positional accuracy, completeness, attribute accuracy, and to some extent logical consistency. However, not every type of spatial metadata can be derived from GIS
  • Keywords
    cartography; decision support systems; geographic information systems; software standards; visual databases; Federal Geographic Data Committee; GIS; accuracy information; attribute accuracy; cartographers; completeness; content standards; decision support; geographic data; geographical area; intelligent policy formulation; intelligent spatial decisions; logical consistency; logical tools; positional accuracy; quality information; spatial data quality; spatial database; spatial metadata; statisticians; Area measurement; Data visualization; Decision making; Displays; Geographic Information Systems; Geography; Geoscience; Spatial databases; Statistics;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    System Sciences, 1996., Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Hawaii International Conference on ,
  • Conference_Location
    Wailea, HI
  • Print_ISBN
    0-8186-7324-9
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/HICSS.1996.493251
  • Filename
    493251