Why are events important and how to compute them in geospatial research?

Geospatial research has long centered around objects. While attention to events is growing rapidly, events remain objectified in spatial databases. This paper aims to highlight the importance of events in scientific inquiries and overview general event-based approaches to data modeling and computing...

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Main Author: May Yuan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Maine 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Spatial Information Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://josis.org/index.php/josis/article/view/723
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spelling doaj-24181ed929ed47999217005a67c346882020-12-22T22:33:41ZengUniversity of MaineJournal of Spatial Information Science1948-660X2020-12-01202021476110.5311/JOSIS.2020.21.723290Why are events important and how to compute them in geospatial research?May Yuan0University of Texas at DallasGeospatial research has long centered around objects. While attention to events is growing rapidly, events remain objectified in spatial databases. This paper aims to highlight the importance of events in scientific inquiries and overview general event-based approaches to data modeling and computing. As machine learning algorithms and big data become popular in geospatial research, many studies appear to be the products of convenience with readily adaptable data and codes rather than curiosity. By asking why events are important and how to compute events in geospatial research, the author intends to provoke thinking into the rationale and conceptual basis of event-based modeling and to emphasize the epistemological role of events in geospatial information science. Events are essential to understanding the world and communicating the understanding, events provide points of entry for knowledge inquiries and the inquiry processes, and events mediate objects and scaffold causality. We compute events to improve understanding, but event computing and computability depend on event representation. The paper briefly reviews event-based data models in spatial databases and methods to compute events for site understanding and prediction, for spatial impact assessment, and for discovering events' dynamic structures. Concluding remarks summarize key arguments and comment on opportunities to extend event computability.http://josis.org/index.php/josis/article/view/723objectenduranteventoccurrentpartonomyevent-based modelingevent computingepistemology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author May Yuan
spellingShingle May Yuan
Why are events important and how to compute them in geospatial research?
Journal of Spatial Information Science
object
endurant
event
occurrent
partonomy
event-based modeling
event computing
epistemology
author_facet May Yuan
author_sort May Yuan
title Why are events important and how to compute them in geospatial research?
title_short Why are events important and how to compute them in geospatial research?
title_full Why are events important and how to compute them in geospatial research?
title_fullStr Why are events important and how to compute them in geospatial research?
title_full_unstemmed Why are events important and how to compute them in geospatial research?
title_sort why are events important and how to compute them in geospatial research?
publisher University of Maine
series Journal of Spatial Information Science
issn 1948-660X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Geospatial research has long centered around objects. While attention to events is growing rapidly, events remain objectified in spatial databases. This paper aims to highlight the importance of events in scientific inquiries and overview general event-based approaches to data modeling and computing. As machine learning algorithms and big data become popular in geospatial research, many studies appear to be the products of convenience with readily adaptable data and codes rather than curiosity. By asking why events are important and how to compute events in geospatial research, the author intends to provoke thinking into the rationale and conceptual basis of event-based modeling and to emphasize the epistemological role of events in geospatial information science. Events are essential to understanding the world and communicating the understanding, events provide points of entry for knowledge inquiries and the inquiry processes, and events mediate objects and scaffold causality. We compute events to improve understanding, but event computing and computability depend on event representation. The paper briefly reviews event-based data models in spatial databases and methods to compute events for site understanding and prediction, for spatial impact assessment, and for discovering events' dynamic structures. Concluding remarks summarize key arguments and comment on opportunities to extend event computability.
topic object
endurant
event
occurrent
partonomy
event-based modeling
event computing
epistemology
url http://josis.org/index.php/josis/article/view/723
work_keys_str_mv AT mayyuan whyareeventsimportantandhowtocomputethemingeospatialresearch
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