1st Edition

Advanced Geoinformation Science

Edited By Chaowei Yang, David Wong, Qianjun Miao, Ruixin Yang Copyright 2010
    526 Pages 44 Color & 132 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    526 Pages 44 Color & 132 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Many of the challenges of the next century will have physical dimensions, such as tsunamis, hurricanes, and climate change as well as human dimensions such as economic crises, epidemics, and emergency responses. With pioneering editors and expert contributors, Advanced Geoinformation Science explores how certain technical aspects of geoinformation have been used and could be used to address such global issues. The editors and chapter authors have been involved in global initiatives such as Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) and Digital Earth, and research problems such as air quality, public health, and cloud computing.

    The book delineates the problems communities are likely to face and how advanced geoinformation science can be a part of their solution. It introduces different methods in collecting spatial data as the initial feeds to geoinformation science and computing platforms. It discusses systems for data management, data integration and analysis, the geoinformation infrastructure, as well as knowledge capture, formatting, and utilization. The book then explores a variety of geoinformation applications, highlighting environmental, agriculture, and urban planning uses.

    Geoinformation science encompasses more than just traditional technologies such as Remote Sensing, GIS, GPS, and supporting disciplines. And although the science continues to become more multidisciplinary, the literature remains compartmentalized according to the traditional disciplinary boundaries. Capturing recent developments in geoinformation science and linking IT with a wide range of Earth sciences, the authors explain how advanced technology and concepts play a significant role in recent advancements. Enhanced with forty-four color illustrations, live examples such as GOS and AirNow, and insights from NASA, EPA, and USGS, the book provides a vision for the future and explores how to bring that vision into reality.

    Advanced Geoinformation Science: An Overview, C. Yang, D. Wong, and R. Yang
    Earth Observations, L.S. Chiu, X. Hao, R.G. Resmini, D. Sun, A. Stefanidis, J.J. Qu, and R. Yang
    Geoinformation Computing Platforms, Q. Huang, C. Yang, W. Li, H. Wu, J. Xie, and Y. Cao
    Data Access and Data Systems, R. Yang, H.K. Ramapriyan, and C.B. Meyer
    Spatial Data Analysis and Geoinformation Extraction, A. Croitoru, D. Guo, F. Wang, D. Wong, P. Agouris, and A. Stefanidis
    Geoinformation Infrastructure (GII), X. Shi, D. Nebert, C. Zhang, H. Yang, H. Wu, P. Zhao, Z. Li, L. Di, Q. Huang, J. Li, W. Li, M. Sun, and G. Yu
    Geoinformation Knowledge Representation and Applications, R. Raskin, N. Zhou, and W. Li
    Environmental and Related Applications, J.L. Aron, S. Luzzadder-Beach, M. Sun, F. Wang, L.E. Jackson, G. Susanke, E. Washburn, J. White, D. Wong, C. Yang, and S. Young
    Other Applications, M. Deng, Z. Liu, Q. Miao, Q. Pan, M. Zhang, L.S. Chiu, L. Di, S. Kempler, L. Milich, H. Rui, J. Tan, Y. Tang, W. Teng, R. Yang, H. Yu, and C. Yang
    Vision for Geoinformation Science, K. Foote, M. Bambacus, Q. Miao, H. Wu, W. Li, J. Li, J. Tan, Y. Tang, M. Sun, and H. Yu
    Index

    Biography

    Chaowei Yang, David Wong, Qianjun Miao, Ruixin Yang

    "The concepts within the book are written very thoroughly. Ti avoids repeating many basic concepts, and achieves its goal of covering advanced topics in geoinformation science. In general, the book does an excellent job of presenting issues that are at the forefront of geographic data collection, management, transformation, analysis and decision-making."
    —GEOMATICA, Vol. 65, No. 2,2011