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The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B6b. Beijing 2008
these components are: people, access network, policy, standards
and data.
Technology
Figurei. SDI components (Rajabifard & Williamson 2001 p.5)
order to reduce expenses in the field of data collection, the data
that is acquired by one organization should be useable for others.
Descriptions about data quality should assure the user that the
data are suitable for his/her purposes. There are some known
criterions for stating quality of data. These elements are: lineage,
positional accuracy, attributes accuracy, logical consistency and
completeness.
Reasons of applicability forced Salge add another elements to
describe data quality, semantic accuracy.Semantic accuracy
describes the number of features, relationship, or attributes that
have been correctly encoded in accordance with a set of feature
representation rules. Related to the meaning of the “things” of
the universe of discourse (the reality), semantic accuracy refers
to the pertinence of the meaning of the geographical object
rather than to the geometrical representation [5].
Each dataset that is collected or updated should be evaluated in
the context of known quality parameters like integrity,
completeness and accuracy. It is obvious that a perfect quality
management is needed but this paper has been limited to define
and impose some of data quality parameters in data acquisition
process. The following cases are the issues that this article has
considered:
Each of the five components is described briefly below [4]:
The data component comprises the core data elements for the
SDI. For example a state SDI could define geodetic control,
cadastral information, administrative boundaries, elevation and
hydrology data themes as fundamental.
The avenue by which data within an SDI is made available to
the community can be described as the access network. Access
arrangements must be made in accordance with the policy
decisions and technical specifications defined within the
implementing organization’s institutional framework.
The institutional framework of the organization implementing
the SDI defines the policy and administrative arrangements for
collecting, maintaining, accessing and applying the standards
and data sets.
1- Each object should have the right geometry type
2- All attributes about a feature and their relations
must be considered
3- Values of attributes should have pertinence with
defined attributes types
4- Integrity constraints should be taking into
account (for example intersection of a ditch and a
road is forbidden)
2.4 Web Feature Services
For controlling the first three challenges we used the data
schemas that are available via the appropriate Web Feature
Services (WFS). A web feature service enables the user to
access integrated data that are stored in a server. Using WFS we
can have operations such as:
The standards component defines the technical characteristics
of the fundamental data sets. These can include metadata, data
dictionaries, data quality, data transfer, reference systems and
data models.
The people component of an SDI encompasses the diversity of
the users and producers of spatial data (including value-adding
agents).
These components can be classified in two groups. One of them
consists data and people and other contains technical
components and both of them have dynamic nature. The users
need for different types of data and this need change with the
time and at the other side technology developments change the
technical components of SDI and so it can be said that the
concept of SDI has a dynamic and changing nature.
2.3 Data Quality
When the producer and user of data are not the same, stating the
data quality will be needed and producer must describe the
quality of acquired data and in the other side the user should
describe requirement quality for his/her work. The issue of data
quality becomes more important when we want to share data. In
Querying on a database and retrieving features
Finding the definition of any object and its whole
attributes
Adding new feature to database
Deleting an object from database
Updating an object in a database
Lock features to prevent modification
The Web Feature Service (WFS) is easily one of the most
valuable specifications of the OGC (one of the leaders in the
field of standardization for SDI). It provides a generic way to
access raw geographic data over the web. To the general user,
this can be a wealth of information embedded in the map being
viewed. Parts of the WMS (Web Mapping Services) tried to
implement this functionality, but using WFS gives much more
control over how to actually access that data [6].
Figure 2 shows the components necessary to serve geographic
features and process transaction requests from client
applications using HTTP.