Workshop on GIScience in the Big Data Age 2012
Workshop on GIScience in the Big Data Age 2012 (GIBDA2012) will be organized in conjunction with the seventh International Conference on Geographic Information Science 2012 (GIScience 2012) in Columbus, Ohio, USA on September 18th, 2012.
Workshop Description and Scope
The rapidly increasing information universe with new data created at a speed surpassing our capacities to store it, calls for improved methods to retrieve, filter, integrate, and share data. The vision of a data-intensive science hopes that the open availability of data with a higher spatial, temporal, and thematic resolution will enable us to better address complex scientific and social questions. However, on the downside, understanding, sharing, and reusing these data becomes more challenging. Big Data is not only big because it involves a huge amount of data, but also because of the high-dimensionality and inter-linkage of these data sets. The on-the-fly integration of heterogeneous data from various sources has been named one of the frontiers of Digital Earth research, Bioinformatics, the Digital Humanities, and other emerging research visions.
From a more technical perspective, a knowledge infrastructure is required to handle Big Data. Currently, the most promising approach is the Linked Data cloud. While the Web has changed with the advent of the Social Web from mostly authoritative towards increasing amounts of user-generated content, it is essentially still about linked documents. These documents provide structure and context for the described data and easy their interpretation. In contrast, the upcoming Data Web is about linking data, not documents. Such data sets are not bound to a specific document but can be easily combined and used outside of the original context. With a growth rate of millions of new facts encoded as RDF-triples per month, the Linked Data cloud allows users to answer complex queries spanning multiple sources. Due to the uncoupling of data from its original creation context, semantic interoperability, identity resolution, and ontologies are central methodologies to ensure consistency and meaningful results.
Space and time are fundamental ordering relations to structure such data and provide an implicit context for their interpretation. Prominent geo-related Linked Data hubs include Geonames.org as well as the Linked Geo Data project, which provides a RDF serialization of Open Street Map. Furthermore, many other Linked Data sources contain location references, e.g., observation data provided by sensors.
This full day workshop is a follow-up event of the successful first workshop on Linked Spatiotemporal Data at GIScience 2010. While this first workshop was centered around Linked Data and geo-ontologies, the GiBDA 2012 workshop takes a broader perspective by highlighting data-intensive science as the research vision and Linked Data as a promising knowledge infrastructure. We hope that the workshop will help better define the data, knowledge representations, infrastructure, reasoning methodologies, and tools needed to link and query massive data based on their spatial and temporal characteristics.
Topics of interest for the Linked Spatiotemporal Data workshop include (but are not limited to):
Learning geo-ontologies out of massive data
Abduction-based frameworks and systems
Mining Location-based Social Networks
Studying the geo-indicativeness of massive, semi-structured data
Analogy-based search in Big Data
Semantic heterogeneity and ontology alignment
Semantics-enabled geo-statistics
Retrieving and browsing of Linked Spatiotemporal Data
Learning Linked Spatiotemporal Data from existing sources
Spatiotemporal indexing of Linked Data
Harvesting Linked Data from heterogeneous sources
Spatial extensions to query languages (e.g., GeoSPARQL)
Visualizing and browsing through Linked Spatiotemporal Data
Big Data and Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI)
Spatiotemporal aspects of data quality, trust, and provenance
Tag and vocabulary recommendations for annotating VGI
Maintenance of outgoing links
Application of Linked Spatiotemporal Data
Linked Data and Sensor Web Enablement (SWE)
Linked Data and mobile applications
Linked Data gazetteers and Points Of Interest
Linked Data in the domain of cultural heritage research
Integration and Interoperation of Linked Spatiotemporal Data
Ontologies and vocabularies to support interoperability
Geo-Ontology Design Patterns
Identity assumptions and resolution for data fusion and integration
The role of space and time to structure Linked Data
Versioning of spatiotemporal data.
Semantic annotation and Microformats
Adding contextual information to Linked Data
Workshop Format and Structure
The full day workshop will focus on intensive discussions setting a roadmap towards publishing, structuring, retrieving, and consuming Linked Spatiotemporal Data and understanding how GIScience can contribute to the vision of a data-intensive science. The workshop will accept three kinds of contributions, full research papers presenting new work in the indicated areas, statements of interest, and data challenge papers. While the research papers will be selected based on the review results adhering to classical scientific quality criteria, the statements of interest should raise questions, present visions, and point to the open gaps. However, statements of interest will also be reviewed to ensure quality and clarity of the presented ideas.
We also welcome demonstrations of existing tools, applications, and geo-ontologies. Details for the data challenge are given below. The presentation time per speaker will be restricted to 5 minutes for statements of interest and 10 minutes for full papers. Based on the presented work, all workshop participants will decide on 2--3 research topics to be discussed in breakout groups. In a final session, the breakout groups will present their findings on research topics and challenges and try to integrate them across the discussed topics.
Submissions and Proceedings
All presented papers will be made available through the workshop Web-page, the electronic conference proceedings of GIScience 2012, as well as via CEUR-WS. Full research papers should be approximately 7-10 pages, while statements of interest and data challenge papers should be between 5-6 pages. Selected papers may be considered for a fast-track submission to the Semantic Web journal by IOS Press.
Please upload your submission using the workshop's EasyChair web-page.
The website spatial.linkedscience.org/ contains a growing collection of metadata for proceedings of conferences on topics related to geographic information science. So far, it contains most of the metadata for the GIScience, COSIT, ACM GIS, and AGILE conference series. Within the GIBDA Data Challenge, we are looking for
innovative analyses of the data
interactive visualizations
approaches for cleaning the data up
enrichment and interlinking with other datasets (e.g., from the Linked Data cloud)
insights into GIScience as research field
adding social roles and aspects
The raw data can be queried via SPARQL using the SPARQL endpoint spatial.linkedscience.org/sparql. Submissions to the data challenge are to be submitted through EasyChair as a brief description of the entry, along with a link to the demo/analysis/dataset. Entries to the challenge will be evaluated by the program committee based on innovativeness and potential impact. The winner will be awarded a $250 price and will present at the workshop.
Submission due: 18. June 2012
Acceptance Notification: 6. July 2012
Camera-ready Copies: 16. July 2012
Krzysztof Janowicz, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Carsten Keßler, University of Münster, Germany
Tomi Kauppinen, University of Münster, Germany
Dave Kolas, BBN Technologies, USA
Workshop on Linked Spatiotemporal Data 2010 (LSTD2010)
spatial@linkedscience portal and SPARQL endpoint
Terra Cognita 2011 Workshop
Geographic Vocabularies Camp Santa Barbara 2012 (GeoVoCampSB2012)
Big Data in Geographic Information Science Panel