Title: Introduction to Geographic Information Systems
1Introduction to Geographic Information Systems
- Miles Logsdon
- mlog_at_u.washington.edu
http//sal.ocean.washington.edu/
2Spatial Information Technologies
- Geographic Information Systems GIS
- Global Positioning System GPS
- Remote Sensing and Image Processing - RS
Technologies to help answer
- What is here? give a position
- What is next to this? given some
description - Where are all of the ??? detecting or finding
- What is the spatial pattern of ???
- When X occurs here, does Y also occur?
3GIS
Geographic Information System
GIS - A system of hardware, software, data,
people, organizations and institutional
arrangements for collecting, storing, analyzing,
and disseminating information about areas of the
earth. (Dueker and Kjerne 1989, pp. 7-8)
- GIS - The organized activity by which people
- Measure aspects of geographic phenomena and
processes - Represent these measurements, usually in a
computer database - Operate upon these representations and
- Transform these representations. (Adapted from
Chrisman, 1997)
A KEY POINT Geo-referenced Data
4GIS - consists of
- Components
- People, organizational setting
- Procedures, rules, quality control
- Tools, hardware software
- Data, information
- Functions
- Data gathering
- Data distribution
5Common short hands
- CAM- Computer Aided Mapping
- AM - Automated mapping
- CAD - Computer-Aided Design
- LIS - Land Information Systems
- AM/FM - Automated Mapping/Facilities Management
Systems
- RS - Remote Sensing
- aerial Photography
- Photogrammetry
- Photo interpretation
- Thermal sensing
- Radar imaging
- Satellite Remote Sensing
- Meteorological
- Terrestrial
- Image Processing
6Geographic Data
- Spatial Data
- location
- shape
- relationship among features
- Descriptive Data
- attributes, or
- characteristics of the features
After Sinton, 1978 Components of spatial
information time, space, theme
(attribute) Sounds obvious. useful starting
point to remember Role of these Dimensions One
must be fixed, one controlled, one measured.
7Components of Spatial Data
Temporal examples Control Measure Time
(hour) Attribute (water level) strip chart
(stream guage) The Basic Spatial Data Structures
Control Measure Location
Attribute gt Raster (Location controlled by
grid) Attribute Location gt Categorical
coverage (Vector) Indirect measurement
Control Measure First Attribute
Location gt Categorical Coverage (eg. land use
category) Second Category Attribute gt
Estimate for category (eg. Corn
yeild) Composite Measurement Control
Measure First Attribute Location gt
Collection Zones (eg. counties) Second
Location Attribute gt Choropleth (eg. vote
for Initiative 187)
8DATA - more than one DATUM - only one item,
or record
- Three Attributes of Data
- Thematic (Value Variable)
- Nominal, name, label
- Ordinal, rank ordered
- Interval / Ratio, measurement on a scale
- Spatial (location)
- Temporal
Spatial Data the spatial attribute is
explicitly stated and linked to the thematic
attribute for each data item.
9Spatial - thematic value types
200
Sta. 94, DOC 4.9
Stream,3
Former Land Fill
100
FOREST
URBAN
Duvall, pop 1170
Brush Creek, 2
FOREST
AGRICULTURE
100
200
Snoqualmie River, 1
WELL
10Geographies
Layers, Coverages, Themes
Land use
Soils
Streets
Hydrology
Parcels
11Concept of Spatial Objects
12Spatial Encoding - RASTER
POINT
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
5
5
3
AREA
3
3
1
1
1
2
LINE
1
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
13Spatial Encoding - VECTOR
a single node with NO area
POINT
- x, y
- x1, y1 - x2, y2 . . - xN, yN
LINE
a connection of nodes (vertices)
beginning with a to and ending with a
from
(Arcs)
Area (Polygons)
a series of arc(s) that close around a
label point
- x1, y1 - x2, y2 . . - xN, yN (closure Point)
14Vector - Topology
Descriptive
Spatial
Object
VAR1 VAR2
1 2 3
x1,y1 x2,y2 x3,y3
1 2 3
VAR1 VAR2
Fnode Tnode x1y1, x2y2
1
1 2
1 2
1 2 xxyy, xxyy 2 3
xxyy,xxyy
3
2
2
1
VAR1 VAR2
2
3
1 2
1 2
10, 11, 12, 15 10, .
15
10
1
4
12
5
11
15Raster Data Model
16Set Selections
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Reduce Select - RESEL GT 5 6 7 8 9 10 Add
Select - ASEL EQ 5 5 6 7 8 9
10 Unselect - UNSEL GE 9 5 6 7 8
Null Select - NSEL 1 2 3 4 9 10
17AND, OR, XOR
18Spatial Overlay - UNION
1
1
2
1
3
6
2
4
5
2
3
7
8
11
3
12
9
10
4
5
13
14
16
17
15
A B C D
102 103
102 A
A 102 B
102
19Spatial Overlay - INTERSECT
1
1
1
2
2
2
3
3
4
5
3
6
7
4
5
8
9
A B C D
102 103
A 102 B
102 A 103 B
103
20Spatial Overlay - IDENTITY
1
1
1
2
5
2
3
4
2
3
6
7
3
8
9
4
5
10
11
12
13
A B C D
102 103
A A
102 B 103 B
21Spatial Poximity - BUFFER
Constant Width
Variable Width
22Spatial Poximity - NEAR
Assign a point to the nearest arc
23Spatial Proximity - Pointdistance
DISTANCE
2,045 1,899 1,743
1 2 3
1 2 3
24Spatial Proximity - Thiessen Polygons
25Map Algebra
- In a raster GIS, cartographic modeling is also
named Map Algebra. - Mathematical combinations of raster layers
- several types of functions
- Local functions
- Focal functions
- Zonal functions
- Global functions
- Functions can be applied to one or multiple layers
26Local Function
- Sometimes called layer functions -
- Work on every single cell in a raster layer
- Cells are processed without reference to
surrounding cells - Operations can be arithmetic, trigonometric,
exponential, logical or logarithmic functions
27Local Functions Example
- Multiply by constant value
2 0 1 1 2 3 0 4
1 1 2 3 2
6 0 3 3 6 9 0 12
3 3 6 9 6
X 3
2 0 2 2 3 3 3 3
2 2 2 1 1
4 0 2 2 6 9 0 12
2 2 4 3 2
2 0 1 1 2 3 0 4
1 1 2 3 2
X
28Focal Function
- Focal functions process cell data depending on
the values of neighbouring cells - We define a kernel to use as the neighbourhood
- for example, 2x2, 3x3, 4x4 cells
- Types of focal functions might be
- focal sum,
- focal mean,
- focal max,
- focal min,
- focal range
29Focal Function Examples
- Focal Sum (sum all values in a neighborhood)
2 0 1 1 2 3 0 4 2
1 1 2 2 3 3 2
(3x3)
16 13
17 19
- Focal Mean (moving average all values in a
neighborhood)
2 0 1 1 2 3 0 4 4
2 2 3 1 1 3 2
1.8 1.3 1.5 1.5 2.2 2.0 1.8 1.8 2.2 2.0
2.2 2.3 2.0 2.2 2.3 2.5
(3x3)
30Zonal Function
- Process and analyze cells on the basis of zones
- Zones define cells that share a common
characteristic - Cells in the same zone dont have to be
contiguous - A typical zonal function requites two grids
- a zone grid which defines the size, shape and
location of each zone - a value grid which is processed
- Typical zonal functions
- zonal mean,
- zonal max,
- zonal sum,
- zonal variety
31Zonal Function An Example
- Zonal maximum Identify the maximum in each zone
2 2 1 1 2 3 3 1
3 2 1 1 2 2
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
5 5 8 8 5 7 7 8
7 5 8 8 5 5
Useful when we have different regions
classified and wish to treat all grid cells of
each type as a single zone (ie. Forests, urban,
water, etc.)
32Global function
- In global functions -
- The output value of each cell is a function of
the entire grid - Typical global functions are distance measures,
flow directions, or weighting measures. - Useful when we want to work out how cells
relate to each other
33Golbal Function An Example
- Distance Measures Euclidean distance based upon
cell size
1 1 1
2
2 1 0 0 1.4 1 1 0 1
0 1 1 1.4 1 1.4 2
Or some function which must consider all cells
before determining the value of any cell
(cost associated with a path across the surface)
34Examples
outgrid zonalsum(zonegrid, valuegrid) outgrid
focalsum(ingrid1, rectangle, 3, 3) outgrid
(ingrid1 div ingrid2) ingrid3
35Spatial Modeling
- Spatial modeling is analytical procedures applied
with a GIS. Spatial modeling uses geographic data
to attempt to describe, simulate or predict a
real-world problem or system. - There are three categories of spatial modeling
functions that can be applied to geographic
features within a GIS - geometric models, such as calculating the
Euclidean distance between features, - coincidence models, such as topological overlay
- adjacency models (pathfinding, redistricting, and
allocation) - All three model categories support operations on
spatial data such as points, lines, polygons,
tins, and grids. Functions are organized in a
sequence of steps to derive the desired
information for analysis. - The following references are excellent
introductions to modeling in GIS - Goodchild, Parks, and Stegaert. Environmental
Modeling with GIS. Oxford University Press, 1993. - Tomlin, Dana C. Geographic Information Systems
and Catograhic Modeling. Prentice Hall, 1990.