Title: Serryn Eagleson
1Hierarchical Spatial Reasoning Applied to
Administrative Boundaries Using GIS
- Serryn Eagleson
- Francisco Escobar
- Ian Williamson
- Department of Geomatics
- The University of Melbourne
2Outline
- Background
- NSDI
- The problem uncovered
- Hierarchical Spatial Reasoning (HSR)
- Methods to solve the problem
- HSR - Applied to Administrative Boundaries
- Conclusion
3The Problem
- Throughout history boundaries have been used to
divide the space around us into administrative
units - In the majority of cases these boundaries have
been established to facilitate administrative,
political and economic purposes
4Examples of Different Spatial Boundaries in
Victoria
- Land market - Cadastre
- Collection of statistics - Collection district
- Facilitate mail delivery - Postcode
- Government - Local Government Areas
- Natural boundaries - DNRE
- Political boundaries - Electoral boundaries
- etc...
5East Gippsland
6North West Melbourne Health Division
7The Problem
8Research Objective
- To identify the principles of Spatial
- Hierarchical Reasoning and apply
- them to Administrative polygons in
- Victoria using GIS
9Possible Solutions
- Aggregation from point data to new boundaries
- Data Interpolation
- ?Reorganisation of Boundaries
10Point Aggregation
11Interpolation Process
- Data Interpolation
- Formula
- Vt ? Us(ast/?ast)
- Errors
12Interpolation Errors
13The Solution Boundaries Reorganised
14Hierarchy
- Hierarchies have been used to break
- down a number of complex problems
- Quadtrees, Route Planning
- Properties
- Janus Effect
- Whole Part
- Near decomposability
15Hierarchical Reasoning
Hierarchical Reasoning is based on the principle
to use the least detailed representation to
answer a question... (Timpf Frank 1997)
16- Example
- In theory country boundaries can be deduced
- by processing every parcel in the cadastre
- Hierarchical Reasoning implies this to be a
- slow and inappropriate method of determining
- the country boundary
- Therefore we require a Spatial Hierarchy on
- which to reason
- (Timpf Frank 1997)
17HSR Requirements
- Hierarchical structure and a method to
- transform the non hierarchical structure to
- the equivalent hierarchical one
- A set of rules on how to reason on the
- hierarchical structure
- (Car, 1997)
18Development of the Spatial Hierarchy
- Organisational Requirements
- Key layers in the Hierarchy
- Rules for establishing the layers
19Key Similarities Between Organisations
- Infrastructure Boundaries
- Railways
- Rivers
- Road Network
- Routing
- Identifiable on the ground
-
20How can this system be implemented using GIS?
Spatial Search Thematic Search
21Constraints to be considered
- Road Network
- Additional constraints
- contiguity
- shape
- area
- confidentiality
- density
- culture
22Spatial selection approach
Thiessen Polygons - ( Martin 1991, Openshaw,
1992)
23Thematic Selection
- Simplistically Algorithms determine the
selection process based on attributes - If (constraints are met) then
- add the Polygon to selection
- else
- Do Not
- end
- Union.Selected
24Results
25The ideal hierarchically ordered administration
system will enable
- Data Integration between organisations
- Rules for reasoning within the system
- Sufficiently precise information to the task at
minimum economical cost
26Conclusion
- The final objective will be a integrated
hierarchical network of boundaries, at
facilitating the collation of data into
information.
27Exam Questions
- Discuss the possibilities and issues of applying
Hierarchical Spatial Reasoning to spatial
boundaries - List and describe three different approaches to
solve the problem of data exchange amongst
non-coterminous boundaries