Title: TEMPORAL GIS
1TEMPORAL GIS
Dr Francisco EscobarDept of Geospatial
ScienceRMIT University francisco.escobar_at_rmit.edu
.au
2Overview
- Introduction
- About time
- Temporal dimension and GIS
- Time-based GIS models
- Time Geography and spatio-temporal regions
- Approaches for the integration of TG with GIS
3Introduction
- Temporal variations are crucial in most GIS
applications - Versioning
- Dynamic phenomena
- Dynamic processes
- GIS search where? what? increasingly when?
4Time is always present in Geographic DataTime
makes Cartographydifferent to Geometry
5About time
- Scarce resource but endless
- Non stackable
- Non extendible
- Same pace for everyone
- Intersections on time related phenomena (what)
that merge in a particular place (where) at a
particular moment (when)
6Temporal dimensions and GIS
- Understanding and digitising time
- Conceptualisation and modelling
- What kind of time?
- Lineal or cyclical time?
- Calendar and watches or subjective time?
- Absolute or relative time?
7Temporal dimensions and GIS
Understanding and digitising time
- Should we register the changes or the successive
states? - What phenomena are considered relevant in a
continuous time line? - How to represent gradual changes?
- What distortions and imprecision are acceptable?
8Temporal dimensions and GIS
Understanding and digitising time
- Three different approaches
- Time as a Z attribute DEM
- Region-to-entity layers.
- Monitoring changes implies comparisons between
layers - Space-time entity agents
- The interest resides on entities behaviour
9Temporal dimensions and GIS
- Temporal registry of territorial changes
- At least implicitly all cartographic
representation includes time - A snapshot is not enough. To apprehend the
dynamics interpolation is needed - GIS made it possible to store historic records
TGIS. But unable to answer questions on dynamism
10Temporal dimensions and GIS
- Temporal registry of territorial changes
- Langrans 4 ways to understand and represent time
in GIS - Tetra-dimensional or hyper cube. Continuous
- Snapshots. Discrete. The only one available
- Only changes registered. Only applied to raster
- Spatio-temporal composition. State-map.
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12Tetra-dimensional or hypercube.Continuous
time-space
13Temporal dimensions and GIS
- Spatio-temporal representation of autonomous
entities agents - System situated within and a part of an
environment that senses that environment and acts
on it, over time, in pursuit of its own agenda
and so as to effect what it senses in the future
14Unsolved problems
- Temporal data models
- Commercial GIS still in the slice stage
- Temporal resolution and scale
- Storage and longevity of temporal data
- Changes distribution and updates without
compromising data integrity
15Spatio-temporal accessibility and GIS
- Another way to consider time in GIS consists on
accessibility analysis - Location-allocation models
- Median Scheduling Problem
16Time Budgets and Constraints
time
distance
17Spatio-temporal accessibility and GIS
- Potential Path Space
- Potential Path Area
18Minutes from red and green nodes we can spend at
different locations if departing from A and
arriving to B 120 minutes later
b
a
19Limited accessibility with iso-chrones
(OSullivan et al, 2000)
20Activity Diaries in GIS
2) Standardization and encoding ASCII files
21Data sources
- Field work GPS/diaries
- Existing databases
- RACV
- Public transport timetables
- Emergency Services
22Spatio-temporal accessibility and GIS
- http//divcom.otago.ac.nz/SIRC/GeoComp/GeoComp98/6
8/gc_68a.htm
23Time-Geography and the Spatio-Temporal Region
24Approaches for the integration of TG with GIS
- Accessibility
- School of Alcalá, Spain, Maria Salado
- School of Auckland, NZ, Otto Huisman
- Lifelines for health events
- NCGIA, David Mark
- Lifelines for individuals and events
- RMIT, Francisco Escobar
25Potential Accessibility
26Business hours within a distance
27Dynamic segmentation
- It has the potential to provide the means for a
time-GIS integration in a continuous manner - Analogies with lifelines
In dynamic segmentation each element presents
different attributes in each of its different
sectors but it is kept as an undivided unit
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29Time Geography
30http//www.as.rmit.edu.au/courses/geospatial/timed
istance/
MM applied to TG and GIS
31Types of animated mapping
- Types of changes (1)
- Shape
(Hayward, 1984)
32- Types of changes (2)
- Location
33t2
t1
- Types of changes (3)
- Rate
t2
t1
34- Types of changes (4)
- Structure or texture
35- Types of changes (5)
- Perspective (ArcView 3D Scene)
36- Types of changes (6)
- Colour
37- Types of changes (7)
- Size
38- Types of changes (9)
- Scene
39- Types of changes (10)
- Shot
40- Types of changes (11)
- Theme
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42Potential
- Utilisation of existing databases
- Time and space applications
- LBS
- Criminology
- Service planning
- Marketing
43Issues
- Privacy
- Static nature of GIS
- Limitations in multimedia software
- Data size
44The future