Development of intelligent geographical information systems
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Geographical Information Science
- Vol. 6 (1) , 1-11
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02693799208901891
Abstract
The analysis of geographical information is compared with other production processes in which a user can only accept an end-product if it meets certain quality requirements. Whereas users are responsible for defining the levels of quality they need to use the results of the analyses of geographical information systems in their work, database managers, experts and modellers could greatly assist users to achieve the quality of results they seek by formalizing information on: (1) data collection, level of resolution and quality; (2) the use of the basic analytical functions of the geographical information system; and (3) the data requirements, sensitivity and error propagation in models. These meta-data could be incorporated in a knowledge base alongside the geographical information system where, together with procedures for on-line error propagation, a user could be advised on the best way to achieve a desired aim. If the analysis showed that the original constellation of data, methods and models could not achieve the aim with the desired quality, the intelligent geographical information system would present a range of alternative strategies—better methods, more data, different data, better models, better model calibration, or better spatial resolution—and their costs by which the user's aims could reasonably be achieved.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Propagation of errors in spatial modelling with GISInternational Journal of Geographical Information Science, 1989
- Matching spatial databases and quantitative models in land resource assessmentSoil Use and Management, 1989
- Techniques of crop yield assessment for agricultural land evaluationSoil Use and Management, 1989
- Use of soil-map delineations to improve (Co-)kriging of point data on moisture deficitsGeoderma, 1988
- Transferable parameterization methods for distributed hydrological and agroecological catchment modelsCATENA, 1986