Automated web-based analysis and visualization of spatiotemporal data

Most data are associated with a place, and many are also associated with a moment in time, a time interval, or another linked temporal component. Spatiotemporal data (i.e., data with elements of both space and time) can be used to assess movement or change over time in a particular location, an appr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Keon, Dylan B.
Other Authors: Wright, Dawn J.
Language:en_US
Published: 2012
Subjects:
GIS
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1957/35789
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spelling ndltd-ORGSU-oai-ir.library.oregonstate.edu-1957-357892012-12-15T03:13:33ZAutomated web-based analysis and visualization of spatiotemporal dataKeon, Dylan B.GISGeographic Information ScienceComputational GeographySpatiotemporalVisualizationTime SeriesWeb MappingGeographic information systemsWeb-based user interfacesInformation visualizationMost data are associated with a place, and many are also associated with a moment in time, a time interval, or another linked temporal component. Spatiotemporal data (i.e., data with elements of both space and time) can be used to assess movement or change over time in a particular location, an approach that is useful across many disciplines. However, spatiotemporal data structures can be quite complex, and the datasets very large. Although GIS software programs are capable of processing and analyzing spatial information, most contain no (or minimal) features for handling temporal information and have limited capability to deal with large, complex multidimensional spatiotemporal data. A related problem is how to best represent spatiotemporal data to support efficient processing, analysis, and visualization. In the era of "big data," efficient methods for analyzing and visualizing large quantities of spatiotemporal data have become increasingly necessary. Automated processing approaches, when made scalable and generalizable, can result in much greater efficiency in spatiotemporal data analysis. The growing popularity of web services and server-side processing methods can be leveraged to create systems for processing spatiotemporal data on the server, with delivery of output products to the client. In many cases, the client can be a standard web browser, providing a common platform from which users can interact with complex server-side processing systems to produce specific output data and visualizations. The rise of complex JavaScript libraries for creating interactive client-side tools has enabled the development of rich internet applications (RIA) that provide interactive data exploration capabilities and an enhanced user experience within the web browser. Three projects involving time-series tsunami simulation data, potential human response in a tsunami evacuation scenario, and large sets of modeled time-series climate grids were conducted to explore automated web-based analysis, processing, and visualization of spatiotemporal data. Methods were developed for efficient handling of spatiotemporal data on the server side, as well as for interactive animation and visualization tools on the client side. The common web browser, particularly when combined with specialized server side code and client side RIA libraries, was found to be an effective platform for analysis and visualization tools that quickly interact with complex spatiotemporal data. Although specialized methods were developed to for each project, in most cases those methods can be generalized to other disciplines or computational domains where similar problem sets exist.Graduation date: 2013Wright, Dawn J.2012-12-14T23:55:41Z2012-12-14T23:55:41Z2012-11-162012-11-16Thesis/Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1957/35789en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic GIS
Geographic Information Science
Computational Geography
Spatiotemporal
Visualization
Time Series
Web Mapping
Geographic information systems
Web-based user interfaces
Information visualization
spellingShingle GIS
Geographic Information Science
Computational Geography
Spatiotemporal
Visualization
Time Series
Web Mapping
Geographic information systems
Web-based user interfaces
Information visualization
Keon, Dylan B.
Automated web-based analysis and visualization of spatiotemporal data
description Most data are associated with a place, and many are also associated with a moment in time, a time interval, or another linked temporal component. Spatiotemporal data (i.e., data with elements of both space and time) can be used to assess movement or change over time in a particular location, an approach that is useful across many disciplines. However, spatiotemporal data structures can be quite complex, and the datasets very large. Although GIS software programs are capable of processing and analyzing spatial information, most contain no (or minimal) features for handling temporal information and have limited capability to deal with large, complex multidimensional spatiotemporal data. A related problem is how to best represent spatiotemporal data to support efficient processing, analysis, and visualization. In the era of "big data," efficient methods for analyzing and visualizing large quantities of spatiotemporal data have become increasingly necessary. Automated processing approaches, when made scalable and generalizable, can result in much greater efficiency in spatiotemporal data analysis. The growing popularity of web services and server-side processing methods can be leveraged to create systems for processing spatiotemporal data on the server, with delivery of output products to the client. In many cases, the client can be a standard web browser, providing a common platform from which users can interact with complex server-side processing systems to produce specific output data and visualizations. The rise of complex JavaScript libraries for creating interactive client-side tools has enabled the development of rich internet applications (RIA) that provide interactive data exploration capabilities and an enhanced user experience within the web browser. Three projects involving time-series tsunami simulation data, potential human response in a tsunami evacuation scenario, and large sets of modeled time-series climate grids were conducted to explore automated web-based analysis, processing, and visualization of spatiotemporal data. Methods were developed for efficient handling of spatiotemporal data on the server side, as well as for interactive animation and visualization tools on the client side. The common web browser, particularly when combined with specialized server side code and client side RIA libraries, was found to be an effective platform for analysis and visualization tools that quickly interact with complex spatiotemporal data. Although specialized methods were developed to for each project, in most cases those methods can be generalized to other disciplines or computational domains where similar problem sets exist. === Graduation date: 2013
author2 Wright, Dawn J.
author_facet Wright, Dawn J.
Keon, Dylan B.
author Keon, Dylan B.
author_sort Keon, Dylan B.
title Automated web-based analysis and visualization of spatiotemporal data
title_short Automated web-based analysis and visualization of spatiotemporal data
title_full Automated web-based analysis and visualization of spatiotemporal data
title_fullStr Automated web-based analysis and visualization of spatiotemporal data
title_full_unstemmed Automated web-based analysis and visualization of spatiotemporal data
title_sort automated web-based analysis and visualization of spatiotemporal data
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1957/35789
work_keys_str_mv AT keondylanb automatedwebbasedanalysisandvisualizationofspatiotemporaldata
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