A simple method for serving Web hypermaps with dynamic database drill-down

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>HealthCyberMap <url>http://healthcybermap.semanticweb.org</url> aims at mapping parts of health information cyberspace in novel ways to deliver a semantically superior user experience. This is achieved through "intel...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carson Ewart R, Roudsari Abdul V, Boulos Maged
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2002-08-01
Series:International Journal of Health Geographics
Online Access:http://www.ij-healthgeographics.com/content/1/1/1
Description
Summary:<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>HealthCyberMap <url>http://healthcybermap.semanticweb.org</url> aims at mapping parts of health information cyberspace in novel ways to deliver a semantically superior user experience. This is achieved through "intelligent" categorisation and interactive hypermedia visualisation of health resources using metadata, clinical codes and GIS. HealthCyberMap is an ArcView 3.1 project. WebView, the Internet extension to ArcView, publishes HealthCyberMap ArcView Views as Web client-side imagemaps. The basic WebView set-up does not support any GIS database connection, and published Web maps become disconnected from the original project. A dedicated Internet map server would be the best way to serve HealthCyberMap database-driven interactive Web maps, but is an expensive and complex solution to acquire, run and maintain. This paper describes HealthCyberMap simple, low-cost method for "patching" WebView to serve hypermaps with dynamic database drill-down functionality on the Web.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The proposed solution is currently used for publishing HealthCyberMap GIS-generated navigational information maps on the Web while maintaining their links with the underlying resource metadata base.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The authors believe their map serving approach as adopted in HealthCyberMap has been very successful, especially in cases when only map attribute data change without a corresponding effect on map appearance. It should be also possible to use the same solution to publish other interactive GIS-driven maps on the Web, e.g., maps of real world health problems.</p>
ISSN:1476-072X