Re: Spatial context

Hi,

> This discussion seems to point at an important requirement for our 
> work, which may or may not be derived from use cases, but still is 
> important: We need clear and universal semantics. 

IMHO, this has been tried in the realm of philosophical ontology for 
2500+ years and we are not there yet. Language simply does not work that 
way. In information ontology we want to restrict the meaning of domain 
vocabulary towards its intended interpretation. Today's semantic web 
technologies, for instance, are meant to uncover similarities and 
differences by providing a formal axiomatization of the used terminology 
to foster interoperability, not to arrive at some sort of 'truth' (i.e., 
universal semantics).

> What makes a thing spatial? Does it have to have geometry? Does it 
> have to have three dimensions? Does it need to be a terrestial object? 
> Does it need to be non-fictional? All these things are debatable, but 
> rather than debate them it would be good to have agreed upon semantics.

I tried to make this point during our call by introducing the 
platial/placial notion but maybe I was not clear enough. I would suggest 
not to confuse spatial with geometry and explicitly include the notion 
of place into our scope. Otherwise we would not be able to address many 
relevant spatial search problems like vague regions. This nice paper 
"Montello, Daniel R., Alinda Friedman, and Daniel W. Phillips. "Vague 
cognitive regions in geography and geographic information science." 
/International Journal of Geographical Information Science/ 28.9 (2014): 
1802-1820." from my college Dan illustrated the problems and differences 
nicely.

> This is an example of what Mike Goodchild calls a Platial Problem !
>
> This must be in scope, does the current wording around spatial 
> information accommodate it ?

I agree, this should be very much in scope.

Personally, I would strongly prefer if we would scope the working group 
*methodologically* instead of by trying to define exact borders for a 
complex and dynamic topic such as spatial data.

Best,
Jano


On 02/19/2015 05:14 AM, Frans (Geodan) wrote:
>
> I think that the question whether data are spatial data largely 
> depends on the data publisher. The designation “Greater London” could 
> be published as a text label, in which case it is not spatial data. It 
> could also be published as a toponym, in which it is spatial data.
>
> This discussion seems to point at an important requirement for our 
> work, which may or may not be derived from use cases, but still is 
> important: We need clear and universal semantics.
>
> What makes a thing spatial? Does it have to have geometry? Does it 
> have to have three dimensions? Does it need to be a terrestial object? 
> Does it need to be non-fictional? All these things are debatable, but 
> rather than debate them it would be good to have agreed upon semantics.
>
> At the moment, there are some definitions out there on the semantic 
> web. For example, the Location Core Vocabulary 
> <http://www.w3.org/ns/locn> defines the concept 'location'. 
> Unfortunately the definition is self-referencing: “any location, 
> irrespective of size or other restriction”. In other words, it is very 
> open to interpretation. Is “Paris” a location (knowing that there are 
> multiple locations with that name)? Is Atlantis (fictional) a 
> location? Is Olympus Mons (on Mars) a location?
>
> GeoSPARQL <%28http://www.opengis.net/ont/geosparql> has definitions 
> for the concept 'SpatialObject': “..everything that can have a spatial 
> representation” (unfortunately the 'spatial representation' part is 
> undefined) and 'Feature': “..equivalent to GFI_Feature defined in ISO 
> 19156:2011”. Unfortunately GFI_Feature as defined in ISO 19156:2011 is 
> not a web resource and ISO 19156:2011 is not an open standard (because 
> you have to pay for it). But it's a start...
>
> Greetings,
> Frans
>
>
> On 2015-02-19 11:50, Ed Parsons wrote:
>> This is a great discussion and I think it is central to the 
>> potentially difficult overlap between the two community perspectives.
>>
>> I'm sure Josh will chip in but I do think we need to recognise that 
>> we need to include spatial information for which it is not possible 
>> to define a geometry or have linked to as an attribute - This I think 
>> is what Josh means by context, I am writing this email from a 
>> location within "Central London" although there is not a canonical 
>> geometry that represents the shape of central London.
>>
>> This is an example of what Mike Goodchild calls a Platial Problem !
>>
>> This must be in scope, does the current wording around spatial 
>> information accommodate it ?
>>
>> Ed
>>
>>
>> On Thu Feb 19 2015 at 10:26:55 Andrea Perego 
>> <andrea.perego@jrc.ec.europa.eu 
>> <mailto:andrea.perego@jrc.ec.europa.eu>> wrote:
>>
>>     Andreas's mail gives me the opportunity to explain the objection I
>>     raised during the call [1] about the proposal of adding "spatial
>>     context" into scope question #1 [2].
>>
>>     My main concern is that the use of "spatial context" in the scoping
>>     question may be confusing, and probably unnecessary.
>>
>>     In my understanding, spatial context is specified through spatial
>>     data
>>     - i.e., it denotes one of their possible uses. So, "spatial data"
>>     should be inclusive enough - it would cover spatial data as a whole,
>>     irrespective of their use.
>>
>>     Thanks!
>>
>>     Andrea
>>
>>     ----
>>     [1]http://www.w3.org/2015/02/18-sdw-minutes.html
>>     [2]http://www.w3.org/2015/spatial/wiki/Scope_questions_and_Requirements
>>
>>     On Wed, Feb 18, 2015 at 10:10 PM, Andreas Harth <harth@kit.edu
>>     <mailto:harth@kit.edu>> wrote:
>>     > Hi,
>>     >
>>     > the issue I had with the term "spatial context" is that I did
>>     not know
>>     > what the "context" part was supposed to mean.
>>     >
>>     > If I understood Josh correctly, he mentioned that a geometry,
>>     > a place description or a spatial feature should be referenceable
>>     > in data.
>>     >
>>     > If "spatial context" does mean that, I'm fine with the phrasing of
>>     > the scoping question.
>>     >
>>     > Cheers,
>>     > Andreas.
>>     >
>>
>>
>>
>>     --
>>     Andrea Perego, Ph.D.
>>     Scientific / Technical Project Officer
>>     European Commission DG JRC
>>     Institute for Environment & Sustainability
>>     Unit H06 - Digital Earth & Reference Data
>>     Via E. Fermi, 2749 - TP 262
>>     21027 Ispra VA, Italy
>>
>>     https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/
>>
>>     ----
>>     The views expressed are purely those of the writer and may
>>     not in any circumstances be regarded as stating an official
>>     position of the European Commission.
>>
>
>
>
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-- 
Krzysztof Janowicz

Geography Department, University of California, Santa Barbara
4830 Ellison Hall, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-4060

Email: jano@geog.ucsb.edu
Webpage: http://geog.ucsb.edu/~jano/
Semantic Web Journal: http://www.semantic-web-journal.net

Received on Saturday, 21 February 2015 18:38:39 UTC