ISPRS, Vol.34, Part 2W2, "Dynamic and Multi-Dimensional GIS”, Bangkok, May 23-25, 2001
REFERENCE:
Abraham, T. (1999). Knowledge Discovery in Spatio-temporal
Databases. Ph D. Thesis School of Computer and
Information Science. Mawson Lakes, Australia,
University of South Australia.
Abraham, T. and J. F. Roddick (1998). “Opportunities for
knowledge discovery in spatio-temporal information
systems.” Australian Journal of Information Systems
5(2): 3-12.
Buttenfield, B., M. Gahegan, et al. (2000). Geospatial Data
Mining and Knowledge Discovery. 2000-01
Emerging Themes in GIScience Research of the
UCGIS. http://www.ucgis.org/emerging/
Egenhofer, M. and J. Herring (1990). Categorizing Binary
Topological Relations Between Regions, Lines, and
Points in Geographic Databases, Technical Report,
Department of Surveying Engineering, University of
Maine.
Egenhofer, M. J. and R. G. Golledge (1998). Spatial and
temporal reasoning in geographic information
systems. New York, Oxford University Press.
Frank, A. U. (1992). “Qualitative Spatial Reasoning about
Distances and Directions in Geographic Space.”
Journal of Visual Languages and Computing 3(4):
343-371.
Jayant Sharma, D. M. Flewelling, et al. (1994). A Qualitative
Spatial Reasoner. Six International Symposium on
Spatial Data Handling, Edinburgh, Scotland.
koperski, K. (1999). A Progressive Refinement Approach to
Spatial Data Mining. Ph D. Thesis, School of
Computing Science, Simon Fraser University.
Mannila, H., H. Toivonen, et al. (1997). Discovery of frequent
episodes in event sequences, Report C-1997-15,
Department of Computer Science, University of
Helsinki.
Miller, H. J. and J. Han (2001). Geographic Data Mining and
Knowledge Discovery: An Overview. Geographic
Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery
(Forthingcoming Book). H. J. Miller and J. Han,
Taylor and Francis.
Rainsford, C. P. (1999). Accommodating Temporal Semantics
in Data Mining And Knowledge Discovery. Ph.D.
Thesis, School of Computer and Information
Science. Australia, University of South Australia.