Crayons: Empowering CyberGIS by Employing Cloud Infrastructure.
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
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ReferencesMapping Spatial Information Landscape in Cyberspace with Social Media; 1 Mapping the Invisible World: Cyberspace; 2 Tweets as Big Data; 3 Spatial-Oriented Tweet Content Analysis #1: 2012 Republican Primary Elections; 4 Spatial-Oriented Tweet Content Analysis #2: 2012 Summer Movies and Box Offices; 5 Summary and Concluding Remarks; References; Integrating GIScience Application Through Mashup; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Challenges in Integrating Geospatial Web Resources; 1.2 Efforts to Integrate Diverse GI and Services: Interoperability and Web Services; 1.3 The Mashup; 2 Key Technologies.
CONTENTS NOTE
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Intro; Preface; Contents; Introduction; CyberGIS for Transforming Geospatial Discovery and Innovation; 1 Introduction; 2 Science and Technology Frontiers; 3 Social Dimensions; References; Applications and Science Drivers; Coupling Traffic and Gas Dispersion Simulation for Atmospheric Pollution Estimation; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The Need for CyberGIS; 1.2 Using CyberGIS for the Methodology; 2 Related Work; 3 Methodology; 3.1 MAINSIM Traffic Model; 3.2 Generation of Traffic; 3.3 Simulation of Traffic; 3.4 SCIPUFF Transport and Dispersion Atmospheric Model.
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1.1 Modern Internal Infrastructures for Spatially-Enabled eResearch1.2 Structure; 2 Background; 2.1 From SDIs to CyberGIS and eResearch Platforms; 2.2 eResearch-Beyond Data and Compute Infrastructures; 3 eResearch Infrastructure for the Urban Sciences; 3.1 The Specifics of Urban Research; 3.2 AURIN's Approach and Functional Requirements; 4 AURIN Loosely-Coupled Architecture for Urban eResearch; 4.1 Need for an Adaptable Architecture; 4.2 Loose Coupling; 4.3 The AURIN Architecture; 5 Discussion; 5.1 Strengths of Loose Coupling; 5.2 Weaknesses of Loose Coupling; 6 Conclusions and Future Work.
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2.1 XML and JSON2.2 Web Services; 2.3 SOAP and RESTful; 2.4 Service Oriented Architecture (SOA); 2.5 RSS Feeds; 2.6 Virtual Globe; 3 Architecture; 4 The LLUMC Advanced Emergency GIS; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Information Needed and Challenges; 4.3 Implementation; 5 Discussion; 5.1 Standard and Non-standard, Screen Scraping; 5.2 Unintended Use; 5.3 Social Media Content Consumption and Quality Assurance; 5.4 Web Sources Discovery and Consumption: Metadata and the Semantic Web; 5.5 Scientific Workflow; 5.6 Future Prospects; 6 Conclusions; References; Science and Technology Frontiers.
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3.5 Transport and Dispersion Simulation of Contaminants3.6 Combining MAINSIM and SCIPUFF; 3.7 Assessment Metrics; 4 Results; 5 Conclusion and Future Work; References; CyberGIS for Analyzing Urban Data; 1 Introduction; 2 The Changing Urban Data System; 3 Population Characteristics: Revolutionizing Geodemographics; 3.1 Applications of New Data Such as Short Text Messaging: Twitter; 4 Urban Transport in Real Time; 4.1 Analyzing Daily Journeys; 4.2 Monitoring Transport Infrastructure; 5 Conclusions; References; Designing Adaptable Spatial Cyberinfrastructure for Urban eResearch; 1 Introduction.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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This book elucidates how cyberGIS (that is, new-generation geographic information science and systems (GIS) based on advanced computing and cyberinfrastructure) transforms computation- and data-intensive geospatial discovery and innovation. It comprehensively addresses opportunities and challenges, roadmaps for research and development, and major progress, trends, and impacts of cyberGIS in the era of big data. The book serves as an authoritative source of information to fill the void of introducing this exciting and growing field. By providing a set of representative applications and science drivers of cyberGIS, this book demonstrates how cyberGIS has been advanced to enable cutting-edge scientific research and innovative geospatial application development. Such cyberGIS advances are contextualized as diverse but interrelated science and technology frontiers. The book also emphasizes several important social dimensions of cyberGIS such as for empowering deliberative civic engagement and enabling collaborative problem solving through structured participation. In sum, this book will be a great resource to students, academics, and geospatial professionals for leaning cutting-edge cyberGIS, geospatial data science, high-performance computing, and related applications and sciences.
OTHER EDITION IN ANOTHER MEDIUM
Title
CyberGIS for Geospatial Discovery and Innovation.
International Standard Book Number
9789402415292
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Geographic information systems-- Industrial applications.
Geographic information systems-- Scientific applications.