International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B6. Istanbul 2004
The workshops were successful in raising the
profile of EuroSpec across the stakeholder groups
and the issues that need to be resolved. The
outcome fed into a plan to take forward EuroSpec
and approved at the EuroGeographics general
assembly in autumn 2003.
The workshop findings and presentations will be
found on the EuroGeographics web site
[EuroSpec, 2004]
Ontologies and Schema Translation Services
Held in Marne la Vallee, near Paris in spring
2004 this workshop heard from several experts on
research into taxonomies and ways of classifying
geographic objects. This is not only important in
establishing a more recognisable set of objects but
in relating these from one organisation to another
at national or international levels to establish a
seamless mapping capability and achieve greater
automation.
The workshop will be reported in a future official
publication.
o
EuroSDR has driven all but the EuroSpec workshops but
several of these have been jointly sponsored in collaboration
with other bodies including EuroGeographics, ISPRS and
others, such the host organisations. The workshop programme is
consolidating a network of very specific GI expertise across
Europe.
4.3 Future Plans
Based on this successful track record, there are several areas for
future investigation already being planned. Some of these are
described below, others will start to emerge, driven to underpin
the EuroSpec programme goals and objectives. Where
appropriate, and where there is general support, projects or
some other form of collaboration may emerge from the
workshop. Wider collaboration will also extend to build
stronger links with other organisations such as ISPRS, ICA,
FIG, AGILE and OpenGIS.
Forthcoming Workshops
Impacts of improving the positional accuracy of GI databases,
Dublin — spring 2004
In conjunction with the Dublin Institute of Technology [DIT],
who also are part funding the event and FIG, the workshop will
address the issues created when the position of reference data is
changed as a result of some improvement in data quality or
other policy change. The workshop will focus on:
e The extent of positional accuracy problem
internationally,
e The drivers that are now forcing NMCAs to
address positional accuracy issues.
e The inevitable impact this has on users, their
data holdings and maintenance regimes and
e How this process is managed.
Map Generalisation, Leicester — summer 2004
In conjunction with the International Cartographic Association,
this workshop will investigate issues involved with GI
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generalisation and multi-scale data. The requirement arises
from the need to reduce the number of ‘flowlines’ and to
improve consistency and currency across outputs from an
NMCA. Specific issues to be addressed include:
e The role of the model in generalisation, with a
separate cartographic (or rendering) process.
e Rules for model generalisation, including 3D data.
e The propagation of updates across scales
Possible future topics
2D to 3D.
Further work is envisaged following on from the previous
workshops to develop pragmatic approaches to the height
element and support the growing requirements in land
registration, georeferencing and planning. Research topics
proposed include:
The definition, utility and implementation of
capabilities short of (and less expensive than) full 3D.
These include 2.5D and multi-surface capabilities
The possibilities for a unified 3D data model handling
both geospatial and engineering/CAD/architectural
models
The possibilities for a ‘hybrid’ approach, with
linkages between the geospatial model and the
CAD/engineering/architecture models operating in a
seamless manner
Georeferencing, Data Integration and Modelling
In a database environment, careful data modelling is critical to
enable and provide access to the data. There is always an
inevitable balance, or trade off, in terms of developing the
richness (and perhaps complexity) of the data model vs. the
practicality of achieving an effective operational system. The
workshop is envisaged to explore:
Data Models. Are these user/organisation driven or
vendor driven?
Object Identifiers. The trend towards object models
and the use of persistent identifiers is growing.
Object Semantics. Research is needed into object
semantics and the consistency (or otherwise) of the
approaches being adopted
History and Versioning. It is not clear whether the
capabilities emerging from database technology will
be sufficient for the needs of geospatial core data
(particularly at very high granularity).
Object Lifecycle. The models and relationships of
reference data and application data.
Data Quality — setting and achieving acceptable levels.
Currency, consistency, completeness, interoperability
accuracy are all critical characteristics of a database centric
environment. This raises several questions:
and
e Do organisations (NMCAs and users) set targets to
manage these aspects of their data?
e What drives those targets? Internal or external needs?
« How are quality statements prepared and the
information?
e What techniques are used to assure data quality?
e What, if anything, needs to change to support quality
statements of pan-European datasets?