Topological augmentation: A step forward for qualitative partition reasoning

The current state of the art for partition based qualitative spatial reasoning systems such as the 9-intersection, 9+-intersection, direction relation matrix, and peripheral direction relations is that of the binary set intersection — either empty or non-empty — conveying the intersection (or lack t...

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Main Author: Matthew P. Dube
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Maine 2017-06-01
Series:Journal of Spatial Information Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://josis.org/index.php/josis/article/view/288
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spelling doaj-6a0956b33603453a90210876d669b3422020-11-24T22:00:10ZengUniversity of MaineJournal of Spatial Information Science1948-660X2017-06-0120171412910.5311/JOSIS.2017.14.288150Topological augmentation: A step forward for qualitative partition reasoningMatthew P. Dube0University of MaineThe current state of the art for partition based qualitative spatial reasoning systems such as the 9-intersection, 9+-intersection, direction relation matrix, and peripheral direction relations is that of the binary set intersection — either empty or non-empty — conveying the intersection (or lack thereof) of an object in the sets deriving the partition. While such representations are sufficient for topological components of objects, these representations are not sufficient for various tasks in qualitative spatial reasoning (composition, representation transfer, converse, etc.) regarding partitions as tiles. Topological augmentation expands the current binary status quo into a system of assigning topological relations between objects and tiles. A case study is presented in the form of the direction relation matrix, demonstrating that an increased vocabulary has benefits for spatial information systems, providing localized context within a qualitative embedding.http://josis.org/index.php/josis/article/view/288direction relation matrixtopological intersectionsgeographic information sciencequalitative spatial reasoningpartitions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew P. Dube
spellingShingle Matthew P. Dube
Topological augmentation: A step forward for qualitative partition reasoning
Journal of Spatial Information Science
direction relation matrix
topological intersections
geographic information science
qualitative spatial reasoning
partitions
author_facet Matthew P. Dube
author_sort Matthew P. Dube
title Topological augmentation: A step forward for qualitative partition reasoning
title_short Topological augmentation: A step forward for qualitative partition reasoning
title_full Topological augmentation: A step forward for qualitative partition reasoning
title_fullStr Topological augmentation: A step forward for qualitative partition reasoning
title_full_unstemmed Topological augmentation: A step forward for qualitative partition reasoning
title_sort topological augmentation: a step forward for qualitative partition reasoning
publisher University of Maine
series Journal of Spatial Information Science
issn 1948-660X
publishDate 2017-06-01
description The current state of the art for partition based qualitative spatial reasoning systems such as the 9-intersection, 9+-intersection, direction relation matrix, and peripheral direction relations is that of the binary set intersection — either empty or non-empty — conveying the intersection (or lack thereof) of an object in the sets deriving the partition. While such representations are sufficient for topological components of objects, these representations are not sufficient for various tasks in qualitative spatial reasoning (composition, representation transfer, converse, etc.) regarding partitions as tiles. Topological augmentation expands the current binary status quo into a system of assigning topological relations between objects and tiles. A case study is presented in the form of the direction relation matrix, demonstrating that an increased vocabulary has benefits for spatial information systems, providing localized context within a qualitative embedding.
topic direction relation matrix
topological intersections
geographic information science
qualitative spatial reasoning
partitions
url http://josis.org/index.php/josis/article/view/288
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