Using Volunteered Geographic Information to measure name changes of artificial geographical features as a result of political changes: a Libya case study

被引:6
作者
Ahmouda A. [1 ]
Hochmair H.H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Geomatics Program, Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center, University of Florida, 3205 College Avenue, Fort Lauderdale, 33314, FL
关键词
Crowd-sourcing; Libya; Name change; Political change; Volunteered Geographic Information; Web; 2.0;
D O I
10.1007/s10708-016-9764-5
中图分类号
G252.7 [文献检索]; G354 [情报检索];
学科分类号
摘要
Over the past few years, political systems have changed in several countries of the Middle East as a result of citizen revolutions on the ruling regimes. These geopolitical changes have had effects on the names of artificial geographical features, such as roads and schools. Many of the names, especially those that were associated with previous regimes, were changed to become associated with the revolutions, their dates, their leaders, or their martyrs. The recent change in the paradigm of Web use towards data sharing and crowd-sourcing in the Web 2.0 provides new opportunities to get insight into a local community’s perception of political events. Crowd-sourced spatial data, often referred to as Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI), can be contributed and accessed through various websites and data repositories. These data can supplement traditional data sources, such as road maps hosted by governmental offices. Libya’s governmental maps of urban infrastructure are scarce and incomplete. This provides an incentive for citizens and grassroots groups to collect and generate spatial data on their own and to express changed realities of feature names by the means of crowd-sourced mapping. Using two districts in Libya this study evaluates for five Web 2.0 platforms (OpenStreetMap, Wikimapia, Google Map Maker, Panoramio, and Flickr) to which extent VGI reflects name changes of geographical features as a result of the revolution in 2011. Other data sources, such as school directories posted by teachers on Facebook, serve as additional information for feature name change detection. Results show that the extent to which VGI reflects name changes based on the 2011 revolution in Libya varies strongly between VGI data sources. VGI provides a useful supplement to limited governmental resources to better understand how names of artificial geographical features are affected by changes in political systems. © 2017, Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.
引用
收藏
页码:237 / 255
页数:18
相关论文
共 54 条
[11]  
Burns R., Moments of closure in the knowledge politics of digital humanitarianism, Geoforum, 53, pp. 51-62, (2014)
[12]  
Chow T.E., We know who you are and we know where you live”: A research agenda for web demographics, Crowdsourcing geographic knowledge: Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) in theory and practice, pp. 265-285, (2012)
[13]  
Cohen S.B., Kliot N., Place-names in Israel’s ideological struggle over the administered territories, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 82, 4, pp. 653-680, (1992)
[14]  
Coleman D.J., Georgiadou Y., Labonte J., Volunteered Geographic Information: The nature and motivation of produsers, International Journal of Spatial Data Infrastructures Research, 4, 1, pp. 332-358, (2009)
[15]  
Couclelis H., The certainty of uncertainty: GIS and the limits of geographic knowledge, Transactions in GIS, 7, 2, pp. 165-175, (2003)
[16]  
Dunn C.E., Participatory GIS—a people’s GIS?, Progress in Human Geography, 31, 5, pp. 616-637, (2007)
[17]  
Elwood S., Grassroots groups as stakeholders in spatial data infrastructures: Challenges and opportunities for local data development and sharing, International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 22, 1, pp. 71-90, (2008)
[18]  
Elwood S., Geographic information science: Emerging research on the societal implications of the geospatial web, Progress in Human Geography, 34, 3, pp. 349-357, (2010)
[19]  
Elwood S., Goodchild M.F., Sui D.Z., Researching Volunteered Geographic Information: Spatial data, geographic research, and new social practice, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 102, 3, pp. 571-590, (2012)
[20]  
Fraser Taylor D., Caquard S., Cybercartography: Maps and mapping in the information era, Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization, 41, 1, pp. 1-6, (2006)