Open geographic modeling

IF 2.7 Q1 GEOGRAPHY Annals of GIS Pub Date : 2021-07-03 DOI:10.1080/19475683.2021.1959855
S. Yue, B. Croke, D. Ames
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On the technical side, ‘open’ can be interpreted as sharing modellingrelated knowledge via information means as openaccessible resources (web services, cloud computing, open-source platforms, etc.). On the scientific exploration side, ‘open’ generally describes that different environmental and social disciplines are involved in seeking better solutions. This special issue aims at a collection of state-of-theart research efforts that related to open modelling, including techniques, practices, and applications in the integration of data, models, and methods from geographic information science. The special issue starts with a research article titled ‘Design and development of a web-based EPANET Model catalog and execution environment’ by Tylor Bayer, Daniel P. Ames, and Theodore G Cleveland. This paper presents the design and implementation of a model-sharing repository and a model-viewing application, specifically for the EPANET modelling community using existing open-source cyberinfrastructure. HydroShare is used as the backend data store for the EPANET model programme, model instances, and metadata, and the Tethys Platform framework is used to create a web-based front-end for the repository and viewer. Natural features and human-made features interact with one another across time and space in human settlements, Jeeno Soa George, Saikat Kumar Paul, and Richa Dhawale, in their article ‘A cellular-automata model for assessing the sensitivity of the street network to natural terrain’, describe the influence of terrain, a natural feature, on the configuration of the street network, a human-made feature, by analysing the results of two transition states of cellular automata used to model street networks. Data from open-source projects and open-source applications are used for this study. In the next article on the ‘Machine learning for inference: using gradient-boosting decision tree to assess non-linear effects of bus rapid transit on house prices’, the authors Linchuan Yang, Yuan Liang, Qing Zhu, and Xiaoling Chu discussed the non-linear relationship between Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) and house prices. Using the Xiamen data, this study employs a machine learning technique to scrutinize the non-linear relationship between BRT and house prices. With the open consideration of measurements in the environment and human engineering, this article suggests a nonlinear relationship between BRT and house prices and indicates that GBDT has more substantial predictive power than hedonic pricing models. Habitat spatial distribution is essential to understand where to focus the protection of the seafloor resources. The article ‘Modelling of the reef benthic habitat distribution within the Cabrera National Park (Western Mediterranean Sea)’ by Dulce Mata, Jose Úbeda, and Adrián Fernández–Sánchez applied a semi-automated classification method with GIS techniques in a marine ANNALS OF GIS 2021, VOL. 27, NO. 3, i-iii https://doi.org/10.1080/19475683.2021.1959855","PeriodicalId":46270,"journal":{"name":"Annals of GIS","volume":"66 1","pages":"i - iii"},"PeriodicalIF":2.7000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Annals of GIS","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/19475683.2021.1959855","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"GEOGRAPHY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Various problems are occurring and evolving in the earth’s environment, for example, global warming, air/ water/soil pollution, floods, traffic congestion, and so forth. Moreover, decision-making and planning demands in industry and governance areas are also dependent on reasonable understandings of the environment. Geographic modelling (can also be expressed as environmental modelling as humans are living in a geographical environment) is an important approach in exploring solutions for solving problems and supporting decision-making. Climate models, air/water/soil quality assessment models, traffic management models, watershed models, urban explanation models, and other more different types of models have been and are being designed and developed. They can be applied in simulating the global/local environments and helping people formulate better solutions. However, modelling and simulating ability of a single model is limited. Interdisciplinary knowledge and collaborative exploration are generally required when solving complicated problems. With regard to this, integrated environmental modelling (Laniak et al. 2013), collaborative modelling (Hurrell et al. 2013; Chen et al. 2019), and participatory modelling (Bakhanova et al. 2020; Yue et al. 2020) are all effective approaches. In addition, studies on Future Earth (FE), Virtual Geographic Environment (VGE), and E-Science also promote modelling activities towards more comprehensive applications (Lin, Chen, and Lu 2013; Lü et al. 2019). The idea of implementing modelling work in an open style emerges as a communitybased approach to lower the barrier when collaborating among different modelling fields (Chen et al. 2020; Barton et al. 2020; Zhu et al. 2021). On the technical side, ‘open’ can be interpreted as sharing modellingrelated knowledge via information means as openaccessible resources (web services, cloud computing, open-source platforms, etc.). On the scientific exploration side, ‘open’ generally describes that different environmental and social disciplines are involved in seeking better solutions. This special issue aims at a collection of state-of-theart research efforts that related to open modelling, including techniques, practices, and applications in the integration of data, models, and methods from geographic information science. The special issue starts with a research article titled ‘Design and development of a web-based EPANET Model catalog and execution environment’ by Tylor Bayer, Daniel P. Ames, and Theodore G Cleveland. This paper presents the design and implementation of a model-sharing repository and a model-viewing application, specifically for the EPANET modelling community using existing open-source cyberinfrastructure. HydroShare is used as the backend data store for the EPANET model programme, model instances, and metadata, and the Tethys Platform framework is used to create a web-based front-end for the repository and viewer. Natural features and human-made features interact with one another across time and space in human settlements, Jeeno Soa George, Saikat Kumar Paul, and Richa Dhawale, in their article ‘A cellular-automata model for assessing the sensitivity of the street network to natural terrain’, describe the influence of terrain, a natural feature, on the configuration of the street network, a human-made feature, by analysing the results of two transition states of cellular automata used to model street networks. Data from open-source projects and open-source applications are used for this study. In the next article on the ‘Machine learning for inference: using gradient-boosting decision tree to assess non-linear effects of bus rapid transit on house prices’, the authors Linchuan Yang, Yuan Liang, Qing Zhu, and Xiaoling Chu discussed the non-linear relationship between Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) and house prices. Using the Xiamen data, this study employs a machine learning technique to scrutinize the non-linear relationship between BRT and house prices. With the open consideration of measurements in the environment and human engineering, this article suggests a nonlinear relationship between BRT and house prices and indicates that GBDT has more substantial predictive power than hedonic pricing models. Habitat spatial distribution is essential to understand where to focus the protection of the seafloor resources. The article ‘Modelling of the reef benthic habitat distribution within the Cabrera National Park (Western Mediterranean Sea)’ by Dulce Mata, Jose Úbeda, and Adrián Fernández–Sánchez applied a semi-automated classification method with GIS techniques in a marine ANNALS OF GIS 2021, VOL. 27, NO. 3, i-iii https://doi.org/10.1080/19475683.2021.1959855
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开放式地理建模
地球环境中的各种问题正在发生和演变,例如,全球变暖,空气/水/土壤污染,洪水,交通拥堵等等。此外,工业和治理领域的决策和规划需求也依赖于对环境的合理理解。地理建模(也可以表示为环境建模,因为人类生活在地理环境中)是探索解决问题和支持决策的解决方案的重要方法。气候模型、空气/水/土壤质量评价模型、交通管理模型、流域模型、城市解释模型以及其他更多不同类型的模型已经和正在设计和开发中。它们可以用于模拟全球/局部环境,并帮助人们制定更好的解决方案。然而,单一模型的建模和仿真能力有限。在解决复杂问题时,通常需要跨学科知识和协作探索。对此,综合环境建模(Laniak et al. 2013)、协作建模(Hurrell et al. 2013;Chen et al. 2019)和参与式建模(Bakhanova et al. 2020;Yue et al. 2020)都是有效的方法。此外,对未来地球(FE)、虚拟地理环境(VGE)和E-Science的研究也推动了建模活动向更全面的应用方向发展(Lin, Chen, and Lu 2013;Lü et al. 2019)。以开放风格实施建模工作的想法作为一种基于社区的方法出现,以降低不同建模领域之间合作时的障碍(Chen等人,2020;Barton et al. 2020;Zhu et al. 2021)。在技术方面,“开放”可以解释为通过信息手段共享建模相关知识,作为开放的可访问资源(web服务、云计算、开源平台等)。在科学探索方面,“开放”通常指的是不同的环境和社会学科参与寻找更好的解决方案。本期特刊旨在收集与开放建模相关的最新研究成果,包括地理信息科学数据、模型和方法集成方面的技术、实践和应用。本期特刊以一篇题为“基于web的EPANET模型目录和执行环境的设计和开发”的研究文章开始,作者是taylor Bayer、Daniel P. Ames和Theodore G Cleveland。本文介绍了模型共享存储库和模型查看应用程序的设计和实现,特别是针对使用现有开源网络基础设施的EPANET建模社区。HydroShare被用作EPANET模型程序、模型实例和元数据的后端数据存储,Tethys平台框架用于为存储库和查看器创建基于web的前端。Jeeno Soa George, Saikat Kumar Paul和Richa Dhawale在他们的文章“用于评估街道网络对自然地形敏感性的元细胞自动机模型”中,描述了地形(自然特征)对街道网络(人工特征)配置的影响。通过分析元胞自动机的两种过渡状态对街道网络建模的结果。本研究使用了来自开源项目和开源应用程序的数据。在下一篇关于“机器学习推理:使用梯度增强决策树评估快速公交对房价的非线性影响”的文章中,作者杨林川、梁元、朱青和褚晓玲讨论了快速公交(BRT)与房价之间的非线性关系。利用厦门的数据,本研究采用机器学习技术来考察BRT与房价之间的非线性关系。在开放考虑环境和人类工程测量的情况下,本文提出了BRT与房价之间的非线性关系,并表明GBDT比快乐定价模型具有更大的预测能力。栖息地的空间分布是了解海底资源保护重点的关键。Dulce Mata、Jose Úbeda和Adrián Fernández-Sánchez在《2021年海洋地理信息系统年鉴》(marine ANNALS of GIS, 2021, VOL. 27, NO. 1)中发表的文章《卡布雷拉国家公园(西地中海)内珊瑚礁底栖生物栖息地分布的建模》采用了GIS技术的半自动分类方法。3、i-iii https://doi.org/10.1080/19475683.2021.1959855
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来源期刊
Annals of GIS
Annals of GIS Multiple-
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
2.00%
发文量
31
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