48 datasets found
  1. d

    Replication Data for: Mapping the landscape of geospatial data citations

    • search.dataone.org
    • borealisdata.ca
    Updated Dec 18, 2024
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    Leahey, Amber; Genzinger, Peter (2024). Replication Data for: Mapping the landscape of geospatial data citations [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5683/SP2/JDLRJP
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 18, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Borealis
    Authors
    Leahey, Amber; Genzinger, Peter
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2015 - Jan 1, 2018
    Description

    This data supports the paper entitled "Mapping the landscape of geospatial data citations". The dataset covers geospatial data-intensive research papers published between 2015-2018 retrieved using Scopus. The article's citations were assessed for data citation occurances, and coded using a data citation classification. Data were enhanced and linked to subject coverage and journal policy status information using Excel & SPSS. For more information about how the data were created and coded please review the 'Methodology' section of the paper. More information is provided below, including supplemental documentation and related publications. Abstract (paper) ABSTRACT Data citations, similar to article and other research citations, are important references to research data that underlie published research results. In support of open science directives, these citations must adhere to specific conventions in terms of consistency of both placement within an article, and the actual availability or access to research data. To better understand the level to which geospatial research data are currently cited, we undertook a study to analyse the rate of data citation within a set of data-intensive geospatial research articles. After analysing 1717 scholarly articles published between 2015 and 2018, we found that very few, or 78 (5%), meaningfully cited primary or secondary geospatial data sources in the cited references section of the article. Even fewer researchers, only 25 or 1.5%, were found to have cited data using a DOI. Given the relatively low data citation rate, a focus on contributing factors including barriers to citing geospatial data is needed. And while open sharing requirements for geospatial data may change over time, driving data citation as a result, understanding benchmarks for data citation for monitoring purposes is useful.

  2. Data from: MyGeoHub Geospatial Gateway

    • figshare.com
    • search.datacite.org
    pdf
    Updated Oct 26, 2017
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    Rajesh Kalyanam; Lan Zhao; Robert Campbell; Derrick Kearney; I Luk Kim; Jaewoo Shin; Larry Biehl; Wei Wan; Carol X. Song (2017). MyGeoHub Geospatial Gateway [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.5422825.v2
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    pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 26, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    Figsharehttp://figshare.com/
    Authors
    Rajesh Kalyanam; Lan Zhao; Robert Campbell; Derrick Kearney; I Luk Kim; Jaewoo Shin; Larry Biehl; Wei Wan; Carol X. Song
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    MyGeoHub is a science gateway for researchers working with geospatial data. Based on the HUBzero cyberinfrastructure framework, it provides general-purpose software modules enabling geospatial data management, processing and visualization. Termed “GABBs” (Geospatial Data Analysis Building Blocks), these modules can be leveraged to build geospatial data driven tools with minimal programming and construct dynamic workflows chaining both local and remote tools and data sources. We will present examples of such end-to-end workflows demonstrating the underlying software building blocks that have also found use beyond the MyGeoHub gateway in other science domains.

  3. d

    Data from: Spatial Data for Development Domain Analysis in East and Central...

    • search.dataone.org
    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    Updated Nov 21, 2023
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    HarvestChoice, International Food Policy Research Institute; Association for Strengthening Agricultural Research in Eastern and Central Africa (2023). Spatial Data for Development Domain Analysis in East and Central Africa [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/FB6ZHC
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 21, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    HarvestChoice, International Food Policy Research Institute; Association for Strengthening Agricultural Research in Eastern and Central Africa
    Description

    GIS dataset for constructing three-dimensional Development Domain for ASARECA's operation area in 12 East and Central Africa countries. Data layers of market accessibility, agricultural potential, and population density of 2010 at 5 arc-minute resolution were compiled from HarvestChoice.

  4. d

    Spatiotemporal Data Analysis with Codeless Visual Programming

    • search.dataone.org
    Updated Feb 21, 2024
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    Spatial Data Lab (2024). Spatiotemporal Data Analysis with Codeless Visual Programming [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/I0AWAM
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 21, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Spatial Data Lab
    Description

    This seminar will introduce the KNIME Analytics Platform and its Geospatial Analytics extension developed by the Spatial Data Lab (SDL) team at Harvard's Center for Geographic Analysis (CGA). The SDL team members will share the presentations, presenting the project's vision and demonstrating the new way of performing geospatial analysis in a codeless visual way with case studies.

  5. d

    Song - SUSTAINING A GEOSPATIAL SCIENCE GATEWAY TO SUPPORT FAIR SCIENCE...

    • search.dataone.org
    • hydroshare.org
    • +1more
    Updated Apr 15, 2022
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    Carol X. Song (2022). Song - SUSTAINING A GEOSPATIAL SCIENCE GATEWAY TO SUPPORT FAIR SCIENCE PRACTICES AND TRAINING [Dataset]. https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256%3Ab211ca9562d7eb6934684da7942ac723b18e212e7c67a9fb08e69eba2af7aad6
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 15, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Hydroshare
    Authors
    Carol X. Song
    Description

    SONG, Carol X., Rosen Center for Advanced Computing, Purdue University, 155 South Grant Street, Young Hall, West Lafayette, IN 47907

    Science gateways are becoming an integral component of modern collaborative research. They find widespread adoption by research groups to share data, code and tools both within a project and with the broader community. Sustainability beyond initial funding is a significant challenge for a science gateway to continue to operate, update and support the communities it serves. MyGeoHub.org is a geospatial science gateway powered by HUBzero. MyGeoHub employs a business model of hosting multiple research projects on a single HUBzero instance to manage the gateway operations more efficiently and sustainably while lowering the cost to individual projects. This model allows projects to share the gateway’s common capabilities and the underlying hardware and other connected computing resources, and continued maintenance of their sites even after the original funding has run out allowing time for acquiring new funding. MyGeoHub has hosted a number of projects, ranging from hydrologic modeling and data sharing, plant phenotyping, global and local sustainable development, climate variability impact on crops, and most recently, modeling of industry processes to improve reuse and recycling of materials. The shared need to manage, visualize and process geospatial data across the projects has motivated the Geospatial Data Building Blocks (GABBs) development funded by NSF DIBBs. GABBs provides a “File Explorer” type user interface for managing geospatial data (no coding is needed), a builder for visualizing and exploring geo-referenced data without coding, a Python map library and other toolkits for building geospatial analysis and computational tools without requiring GIS programming expertise. GABBs can be added to an existing or new HUBzero site, as is the case on MyGeoHub. Teams use MyGeoHub to coordinate project activities, share files and information, publish tools and datasets (with DOI) to provide not only easy access but also improved reuse and reproducibility of data and code as the interactive online tools and workflows can be used without downloading or installing software. Tools on MyGeoHub have also been used in courses, training workshops and summer camps. MyGeoHub is supporting more than 8000 users annually.

  6. Data from: GitHub users in Spain: an geospatial analysis

    • figshare.com
    pdf
    Updated Jun 2, 2023
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    Juan J. Merelo (2023). GitHub users in Spain: an geospatial analysis [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.1384884.v1
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    pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 2, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    figshare
    Authors
    Juan J. Merelo
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Spain
    Description

    Measuring and ranking the free software developers in a particular geographical space is a wayof knowing the existing community and also allows assessing the impact of certain policies inthe dynamics of such a community. Besides, it is interesting to try and find out why there aredifferences from one place to the next and how these differences evolve with time. In this paper,our main interest is to measure and rank the community of free software developers in Spain andalso check its geographical distribution. This paper measures differences by province, providing aclassification of provinces according to the number and type of developers present in each place.

  7. e

    Geospatial Data from the Alpine Treeline Warming Experiment (ATWE) on Niwot...

    • knb.ecoinformatics.org
    • search.dataone.org
    • +1more
    Updated Jun 26, 2023
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    Fabian Zuest; Cristina Castanha; Nicole Lau; Lara M. Kueppers (2023). Geospatial Data from the Alpine Treeline Warming Experiment (ATWE) on Niwot Ridge, Colorado, USA [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.15485/1804896
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 26, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    ESS-DIVE
    Authors
    Fabian Zuest; Cristina Castanha; Nicole Lau; Lara M. Kueppers
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2008 - Jan 1, 2012
    Area covered
    Description

    This is a collection of all GPS- and computer-generated geospatial data specific to the Alpine Treeline Warming Experiment (ATWE), located on Niwot Ridge, Colorado, USA. The experiment ran between 2008 and 2016, and consisted of three sites spread across an elevation gradient. Geospatial data for all three experimental sites and cone/seed collection locations are included in this package. ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– Geospatial files include cone collection, experimental site, seed trap, and other GPS location/terrain data. File types include ESRI shapefiles, ESRI grid files or Arc/Info binary grids, TIFFs (.tif), and keyhole markup language (.kml) files. Trimble-imported data include plain text files (.txt), Trimble COR (CorelDRAW) files, and Trimble SSF (Standard Storage Format) files. Microsoft Excel (.xlsx) and comma-separated values (.csv) files corresponding to the attribute tables of many files within this package are also included. A complete list of files can be found in this document in the “Data File Organization” section in the included Data User's Guide. Maps are also included in this data package for reference and use. These maps are separated into two categories, 2021 maps and legacy maps, which were made in 2010. Each 2021 map has one copy in portable network graphics (.png) format, and the other in .pdf format. All legacy maps are in .pdf format. .png image files can be opened with any compatible programs, such as Preview (Mac OS) and Photos (Windows). All GIS files were imported into geopackages (.gpkg) using QGIS, and double-checked for compatibility and data/attribute integrity using ESRI ArcGIS Pro. Note that files packaged within geopackages will open in ArcGIS Pro with “main.” preceding each file name, and an extra column named “geom” defining geometry type in the attribute table. The contents of each geospatial file remain intact, unless otherwise stated in “niwot_geospatial_data_list_07012021.pdf/.xlsx”. This list of files can be found as an .xlsx and a .pdf in this archive. As an open-source file format, files within gpkgs (TIFF, shapefiles, ESRI grid or “Arc/Info Binary”) can be read using both QGIS and ArcGIS Pro, and any other geospatial softwares. Text and .csv files can be read using TextEdit/Notepad/any simple text-editing software; .csv’s can also be opened using Microsoft Excel and R. .kml files can be opened using Google Maps or Google Earth, and Trimble files are most compatible with Trimble’s GPS Pathfinder Office software. .xlsx files can be opened using Microsoft Excel. PDFs can be opened using Adobe Acrobat Reader, and any other compatible programs. A selection of original shapefiles within this archive were generated using ArcMap with associated FGDC-standardized metadata (xml file format). We are including these original files because they contain metadata only accessible using ESRI programs at this time, and so that the relationship between shapefiles and xml files is maintained. Individual xml files can be opened (without a GIS-specific program) using TextEdit or Notepad. Since ESRI’s compatibility with FGDC metadata has changed since the generation of these files, many shapefiles will require upgrading to be compatible with ESRI’s latest versions of geospatial software. These details are also noted in the “niwot_geospatial_data_list_07012021” file.

  8. H

    Leveraging the Schema.org Vocabulary to Create an Actionable Metadata...

    • beta.hydroshare.org
    • hydroshare.org
    zip
    Updated Dec 12, 2023
    + more versions
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    Irene Garousi-Nejad; Anthony M. Castronova; Jeffery S. Horsburgh; Scott Black; Pabitra Dash; Mauriel Ramirez (2023). Leveraging the Schema.org Vocabulary to Create an Actionable Metadata Representation for Geospatial Data and Computing Resources [Dataset]. https://beta.hydroshare.org/resource/5010e0734107401693158d16b9dc6842/
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    zip(1.8 MB)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 12, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    HydroShare
    Authors
    Irene Garousi-Nejad; Anthony M. Castronova; Jeffery S. Horsburgh; Scott Black; Pabitra Dash; Mauriel Ramirez
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This resource contains slides for the AGU Fall Meeting 2023 presentation (#IN23A-07) in San Francisco on Dec 12. Session: IN23A: Advancing Open Science: Emerging Techniques in Knowledge Management and Discovery II Oral

    Effective response to global crises relies on universal access to scientific data and models, understanding their attributes, and representing their interconnectivity to facilitate collaborative research and decision making. In the age of distributed data, geospatial researchers frequently invest significant time searching for, accessing, and working to understand scientific data. This often leads to the recreation of existing datasets as well as challenges in determining methods for accessing, using, and ultimately establishing connections between resources. In recent years, following FAIR and CARE principles, there is an emerging practice to leverage structured and robust metadata to accelerate the discovery of web-based scientific resources and products. This practice assists users in not only discovery, but also in understanding the context, quality, and provenance of data, as well as the rights and responsibilities of data owners and consumers. It also empowers organizations to leverage their data more effectively and derive meaningful insights from them. Doing so, however, can be difficult, especially when diverse resources needed for scientific applications may be spread across multiple repositories or locations. We present a solution for leveraging the Schema.org vocabulary along with various web encodings such as the Resource Description Framework (RDF) with JSON-LD to create an actionable, curated catalog of scientific resources ranging from spatio-temporal data to software source code. We explore how resources of various types and common scientific formats, such as multidimensional, software containers, source code, and spatial features, which are stored across various repositories and distributed cloud storage, can be described and cataloged. Recognizing the impracticality of manually cataloging metadata, we have developed generic capabilities to automatically extract metadata for such resources, while empowering scientists to provide additional context. By incorporating comprehensive metadata, the exploration of diverse data relationships can be realized to gain insight into gaps and opportunities to improve the connectivity between science communities.

  9. f

    Data from: Detecting Geospatial Location Descriptions in Natural Language...

    • figshare.com
    txt
    Updated Sep 24, 2021
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    Kristin Stock; Christopher B. Jones; Shaun Russell; Mansi Radke; Prarthana Das; Niloofar Aflaki (2021). Detecting Geospatial Location Descriptions in Natural Language Text [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.12561983.v1
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    txtAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 24, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    figshare
    Authors
    Kristin Stock; Christopher B. Jones; Shaun Russell; Mansi Radke; Prarthana Das; Niloofar Aflaki
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Dataset and code used in a journal paper entitled Detecting Geospatial Location Descriptions in Natural Language Text, published in the International Journal of Geographical Information Science. Abstract:References to geographic locations are common in text data sources including social media and web pages. They take different forms, from simple place names to relative expressions that describe location through a spatial relationship to a reference object (e.g. the house beside the Waikato River). Often complex, multi-word phrases are employed (e.g. the road and railway cross at right angles; the road in line with the canal) where spatial relationships are communicated with various parts of speech including prepositions, verbs, adverbs and adjectives. We address the problem of automatically detecting relative geospatial location descriptions, which we define as those that include spatial relation terms referencing geographic objects, and distinguishing them from non-geographical descriptions of location (e.g. the book on the table). We experiment with several methods for automated classification of text expressions, using features for machine learning that include bag of words that detect distinctive words; word embeddings that encode meanings of words; and manually identified language patterns that characterise geospatial expressions. Using three data sets created for this study, we find that ensemble and meta-classifier approaches, that variously combine predictions from several other classifiers with data features, provide the best F-measure of 0.90 for detecting geospatial expressions.

  10. Data from: Toward open science at the European scale: Geospatial Semantic...

    • figshare.com
    • search.datacite.org
    pdf
    Updated Oct 18, 2016
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    Daniele de Rigo; Paolo Corti; Giovanni Caudullo; Daniel McInerney; Margherita Di Leo; Jesús San-Miguel-Ayanz (2016). Toward open science at the European scale: Geospatial Semantic Array Programming for integrated environmental modelling [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.155703.v5
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    pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 18, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    Figsharehttp://figshare.com/
    Authors
    Daniele de Rigo; Paolo Corti; Giovanni Caudullo; Daniel McInerney; Margherita Di Leo; Jesús San-Miguel-Ayanz
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    de Rigo, D., Corti, P., Caudullo, G., McInerney, D., Di Leo, M., San Miguel-Ayanz, J., 2013. Toward open science at the European scale: Geospatial Semantic Array Programming for integrated environmental modelling. Geophysical Research Abstracts 15, 13245+. ISSN 1607-7962, European Geosciences Union (EGU).

    This is the authors’ version of the work. The definitive version is published in the Vol. 15 of Geophysical Research Abstracts (ISSN 1607-7962) and presented at the European Geosciences Union (EGU) General Assembly 2013, Vienna, Austria, 07-12 April 2013http://www.egu2013.eu/

    Toward open science at the European scale: Geospatial Semantic Array Programming for integrated environmental modelling

    Daniele de Rigo ¹ ², Paolo Corti ¹ ³, Giovanni Caudullo ¹, Daniel McInerney ¹, Margherita Di Leo ¹, Jesús San-Miguel-Ayanz ¹ ¹ European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Institute for Environment and Sustainability,Via E. Fermi 2749, I-21027 Ispra (VA), Italy ² Politecnico di Milano, Dipartimento di Elettronica e Informazione,Via Ponzio 34/5, I-20133 Milano, Italy ³ United Nations World Food Programme,Via C.G.Viola 68 Parco dei Medici, I-00148 Rome, Italy

    Excerpt: Interfacing science and policy raises challenging issues when large spatial-scale (regional, continental, global) environmental problems need transdisciplinary integration within a context of modelling complexity and multiple sources of uncertainty. This is characteristic of science-based support for environmental policy at European scale, and key aspects have also long been investigated by European Commission transnational research. Approaches (either of computational science or of policy-making) suitable at a given domain-specific scale may not be appropriate for wide-scale transdisciplinary modelling for environment (WSTMe) and corresponding policy-making. In WSTMe, the characteristic heterogeneity of available spatial information and complexity of the required data-transformation modelling (D-TM) appeal for a paradigm shift in how computational science supports such peculiarly extensive integration processes. In particular, emerging wide-scale integration requirements of typical currently available domain-specific modelling strategies may include increased robustness and scalability along with enhanced transparency and reproducibility. This challenging shift toward open data and reproducible research (open science) is also strongly suggested by the potential - sometimes neglected - huge impact of cascading effects of errors within the impressively growing interconnection among domain-specific computational models and frameworks. Concise array-based mathematical formulation and implementation (with array programming tools) have proved helpful in supporting and mitigating the complexity of WSTMe when complemented with generalized modularization and terse array-oriented semantic constraints. This defines the paradigm of Semantic Array Programming (SemAP) where semantic transparency also implies free software use (although black-boxes - e.g. legacy code - might easily be semantically interfaced). A new approach for WSTMe has emerged by formalizing unorganized best practices and experience-driven informal patterns. The approach introduces a lightweight (non-intrusive) integration of SemAP and geospatial tools - called Geospatial Semantic Array Programming (GeoSemAP). GeoSemAP exploits the joint semantics provided by SemAP and geospatial tools to split a complex D-TM into logical blocks which are easier to check by means of mathematical array-based and geospatial constraints. Those constraints take the form of precondition, invariant and postcondition semantic checks. This way, even complex WSTMe may be described as the composition of simpler GeoSemAP blocks. GeoSemAP allows intermediate data and information layers to be more easily and formally semantically described so as to increase fault-tolerance, transparency and reproducibility of WSTMe. This might also help to better communicate part of the policy-relevant knowledge, often diffcult to transfer from technical WSTMe to the science-policy interface. [...]

  11. d

    Data for: Downscaling of Satellite Remote Sensing Soil Moisture Products

    • search.dataone.org
    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    Updated Nov 22, 2023
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    Chen, Qingqing (2023). Data for: Downscaling of Satellite Remote Sensing Soil Moisture Products [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/1D7BNH
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 22, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Chen, Qingqing
    Description

    This dataset contains the data for Downscaling of Satellite Remote Sensing Soil Moisture Products in the Tibetan Plateau Based on the Random Forest Algorithm. Data includes shapefile of the TP(qzgy.zip),SMAP(SMAP_L3_SM_P_20171018_R16010_001.h5,SMAP_L3_SM_P_20171019_R16010_001.h5), MODIS(MCD12Q1,MOD13A2,MYD11A1), CLDAS(Z_NAFP_C_BABJ_20171019192333_P_CLDAS_RT_ASI_0P0625_HOR-SM000005-2017101918.nc), GLDAS(GLDAS_NOAH025_3H.A20171019.1800.021.nc4) , observation of soil moisture(SWC-010-17101918.000) and DEM data (1KM_qzgy_dem.tif),in which the DEM data is after preprocessing because its original is too large and others are original. The data is download from the NASA’s Land Processes Distributed Active Archive Center (LP DAAC), National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center (GES DISC) ,Geospatial Data Cloud site in Computer Network Information Center of Chinese Academy of Sciences ,China National Meteorological Information Center and CMA.

  12. Heard Island Vegetation GIS Dataset

    • researchdata.edu.au
    • data.aad.gov.au
    • +3more
    Updated Oct 7, 1999
    + more versions
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    HARRIS, URSULA (1999). Heard Island Vegetation GIS Dataset [Dataset]. https://researchdata.edu.au/heard-island-vegetation-gis-dataset/701104
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 7, 1999
    Dataset provided by
    Australian Antarctic Divisionhttps://www.antarctica.gov.au/
    Australian Antarctic Data Centre
    Authors
    HARRIS, URSULA
    Time period covered
    Jan 9, 1988 - Dec 1, 2000
    Area covered
    Description

    Heard Island and McDonald Islands, vegetation layer. This is a polygon dataset stored in the Geographical Information System (GIS). The data represents approximately the areas of vegetation cover on these islands.

  13. r

    International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology FAQ -...

    • researchhelpdesk.org
    Updated May 28, 2022
    + more versions
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    Research Help Desk (2022). International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology FAQ - ResearchHelpDesk [Dataset]. https://www.researchhelpdesk.org/journal/faq/552/international-journal-of-engineering-and-advanced-technology
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    Dataset updated
    May 28, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Research Help Desk
    Description

    International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology FAQ - ResearchHelpDesk - International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology (IJEAT) is having Online-ISSN 2249-8958, bi-monthly international journal, being published in the months of February, April, June, August, October, and December by Blue Eyes Intelligence Engineering & Sciences Publication (BEIESP) Bhopal (M.P.), India since the year 2011. It is academic, online, open access, double-blind, peer-reviewed international journal. It aims to publish original, theoretical and practical advances in Computer Science & Engineering, Information Technology, Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Electronics and Telecommunication, Mechanical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Textile Engineering and all interdisciplinary streams of Engineering Sciences. All submitted papers will be reviewed by the board of committee of IJEAT. Aim of IJEAT Journal disseminate original, scientific, theoretical or applied research in the field of Engineering and allied fields. dispense a platform for publishing results and research with a strong empirical component. aqueduct the significant gap between research and practice by promoting the publication of original, novel, industry-relevant research. seek original and unpublished research papers based on theoretical or experimental works for the publication globally. publish original, theoretical and practical advances in Computer Science & Engineering, Information Technology, Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Electronics and Telecommunication, Mechanical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Textile Engineering and all interdisciplinary streams of Engineering Sciences. impart a platform for publishing results and research with a strong empirical component. create a bridge for a significant gap between research and practice by promoting the publication of original, novel, industry-relevant research. solicit original and unpublished research papers, based on theoretical or experimental works. Scope of IJEAT International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology (IJEAT) covers all topics of all engineering branches. Some of them are Computer Science & Engineering, Information Technology, Electronics & Communication, Electrical and Electronics, Electronics and Telecommunication, Civil Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Textile Engineering and all interdisciplinary streams of Engineering Sciences. The main topic includes but not limited to: 1. Smart Computing and Information Processing Signal and Speech Processing Image Processing and Pattern Recognition WSN Artificial Intelligence and machine learning Data mining and warehousing Data Analytics Deep learning Bioinformatics High Performance computing Advanced Computer networking Cloud Computing IoT Parallel Computing on GPU Human Computer Interactions 2. Recent Trends in Microelectronics and VLSI Design Process & Device Technologies Low-power design Nanometer-scale integrated circuits Application specific ICs (ASICs) FPGAs Nanotechnology Nano electronics and Quantum Computing 3. Challenges of Industry and their Solutions, Communications Advanced Manufacturing Technologies Artificial Intelligence Autonomous Robots Augmented Reality Big Data Analytics and Business Intelligence Cyber Physical Systems (CPS) Digital Clone or Simulation Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) Manufacturing IOT Plant Cyber security Smart Solutions – Wearable Sensors and Smart Glasses System Integration Small Batch Manufacturing Visual Analytics Virtual Reality 3D Printing 4. Internet of Things (IoT) Internet of Things (IoT) & IoE & Edge Computing Distributed Mobile Applications Utilizing IoT Security, Privacy and Trust in IoT & IoE Standards for IoT Applications Ubiquitous Computing Block Chain-enabled IoT Device and Data Security and Privacy Application of WSN in IoT Cloud Resources Utilization in IoT Wireless Access Technologies for IoT Mobile Applications and Services for IoT Machine/ Deep Learning with IoT & IoE Smart Sensors and Internet of Things for Smart City Logic, Functional programming and Microcontrollers for IoT Sensor Networks, Actuators for Internet of Things Data Visualization using IoT IoT Application and Communication Protocol Big Data Analytics for Social Networking using IoT IoT Applications for Smart Cities Emulation and Simulation Methodologies for IoT IoT Applied for Digital Contents 5. Microwaves and Photonics Microwave filter Micro Strip antenna Microwave Link design Microwave oscillator Frequency selective surface Microwave Antenna Microwave Photonics Radio over fiber Optical communication Optical oscillator Optical Link design Optical phase lock loop Optical devices 6. Computation Intelligence and Analytics Soft Computing Advance Ubiquitous Computing Parallel Computing Distributed Computing Machine Learning Information Retrieval Expert Systems Data Mining Text Mining Data Warehousing Predictive Analysis Data Management Big Data Analytics Big Data Security 7. Energy Harvesting and Wireless Power Transmission Energy harvesting and transfer for wireless sensor networks Economics of energy harvesting communications Waveform optimization for wireless power transfer RF Energy Harvesting Wireless Power Transmission Microstrip Antenna design and application Wearable Textile Antenna Luminescence Rectenna 8. Advance Concept of Networking and Database Computer Network Mobile Adhoc Network Image Security Application Artificial Intelligence and machine learning in the Field of Network and Database Data Analytic High performance computing Pattern Recognition 9. Machine Learning (ML) and Knowledge Mining (KM) Regression and prediction Problem solving and planning Clustering Classification Neural information processing Vision and speech perception Heterogeneous and streaming data Natural language processing Probabilistic Models and Methods Reasoning and inference Marketing and social sciences Data mining Knowledge Discovery Web mining Information retrieval Design and diagnosis Game playing Streaming data Music Modelling and Analysis Robotics and control Multi-agent systems Bioinformatics Social sciences Industrial, financial and scientific applications of all kind 10. Advanced Computer networking Computational Intelligence Data Management, Exploration, and Mining Robotics Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Computer Architecture and VLSI Computer Graphics, Simulation, and Modelling Digital System and Logic Design Natural Language Processing and Machine Translation Parallel and Distributed Algorithms Pattern Recognition and Analysis Systems and Software Engineering Nature Inspired Computing Signal and Image Processing Reconfigurable Computing Cloud, Cluster, Grid and P2P Computing Biomedical Computing Advanced Bioinformatics Green Computing Mobile Computing Nano Ubiquitous Computing Context Awareness and Personalization, Autonomic and Trusted Computing Cryptography and Applied Mathematics Security, Trust and Privacy Digital Rights Management Networked-Driven Multicourse Chips Internet Computing Agricultural Informatics and Communication Community Information Systems Computational Economics, Digital Photogrammetric Remote Sensing, GIS and GPS Disaster Management e-governance, e-Commerce, e-business, e-Learning Forest Genomics and Informatics Healthcare Informatics Information Ecology and Knowledge Management Irrigation Informatics Neuro-Informatics Open Source: Challenges and opportunities Web-Based Learning: Innovation and Challenges Soft computing Signal and Speech Processing Natural Language Processing 11. Communications Microstrip Antenna Microwave Radar and Satellite Smart Antenna MIMO Antenna Wireless Communication RFID Network and Applications 5G Communication 6G Communication 12. Algorithms and Complexity Sequential, Parallel And Distributed Algorithms And Data Structures Approximation And Randomized Algorithms Graph Algorithms And Graph Drawing On-Line And Streaming Algorithms Analysis Of Algorithms And Computational Complexity Algorithm Engineering Web Algorithms Exact And Parameterized Computation Algorithmic Game Theory Computational Biology Foundations Of Communication Networks Computational Geometry Discrete Optimization 13. Software Engineering and Knowledge Engineering Software Engineering Methodologies Agent-based software engineering Artificial intelligence approaches to software engineering Component-based software engineering Embedded and ubiquitous software engineering Aspect-based software engineering Empirical software engineering Search-Based Software engineering Automated software design and synthesis Computer-supported cooperative work Automated software specification Reverse engineering Software Engineering Techniques and Production Perspectives Requirements engineering Software analysis, design and modelling Software maintenance and evolution Software engineering tools and environments Software engineering decision support Software design patterns Software product lines Process and workflow management Reflection and metadata approaches Program understanding and system maintenance Software domain modelling and analysis Software economics Multimedia and hypermedia software engineering Software engineering case study and experience reports Enterprise software, middleware, and tools Artificial intelligent methods, models, techniques Artificial life and societies Swarm intelligence Smart Spaces Autonomic computing and agent-based systems Autonomic computing Adaptive Systems Agent architectures, ontologies, languages and protocols Multi-agent systems Agent-based learning and knowledge discovery Interface agents Agent-based auctions and marketplaces Secure mobile and multi-agent systems Mobile agents SOA and Service-Oriented Systems Service-centric software engineering Service oriented requirements engineering Service oriented architectures Middleware for service based systems Service discovery and composition Service level agreements (drafting,

  14. Heard Island Ice Coverage GIS Dataset

    • data.aad.gov.au
    • researchdata.edu.au
    • +3more
    Updated May 1, 2000
    + more versions
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    HARRIS, URSULA (2000). Heard Island Ice Coverage GIS Dataset [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.26179/5b7235e25f1fc
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    Dataset updated
    May 1, 2000
    Dataset provided by
    Australian Antarctic Divisionhttps://www.antarctica.gov.au/
    Australian Antarctic Data Centre
    Authors
    HARRIS, URSULA
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Apr 7, 1991 - Sep 9, 1991
    Area covered
    Description

    Heard Island, ice layer. This is a polygon dataset stored in the Geographical Information System (GIS). The ice layer shows ice/snow as depicted on the Heard Island satellite image map, published in 1991. The amount of ice/snow is as captured on the SPOT image 9 Jan 1988.

  15. Heard and McDonald Islands - Data Sourced from 1:50 000 map (ED3 1985) GIS...

    • researchdata.edu.au
    • devweb.dga.links.com.au
    • +3more
    Updated Feb 25, 2004
    + more versions
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    HARRIS, URSULA (2004). Heard and McDonald Islands - Data Sourced from 1:50 000 map (ED3 1985) GIS Dataset [Dataset]. https://researchdata.edu.au/heard-mcdonald-islands-gis-dataset/701070
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 25, 2004
    Dataset provided by
    Australian Antarctic Divisionhttps://www.antarctica.gov.au/
    Australian Antarctic Data Centre
    Authors
    HARRIS, URSULA
    Time period covered
    Apr 7, 1985 - Jan 1, 1998
    Area covered
    Description

    This layer is stored as three datasets (polygon, line and point) in the Geographical Information System (GIS). Polygon data represents lakes and reefs. Line data represents reef boundaries. Point data represents spotheights, volcanic cones, refuges and a grave.

    All the data in this dataset was sourced from the Heard Island 1:50 000 map, edition 3, published in 1985. The data conforms to the Australian Antarctic Spatial Data Model which includes Data Quality Indicators.

  16. p

    DFHI-ISFATES - cross-border study programme: Computer Science (M.Sc.)

    • data.public.lu
    Updated Jan 15, 2025
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    SIG-GR @ Ministère du Logement et de l'Aménagement du territoire - Département de l’aménagement du territoire (2025). DFHI-ISFATES - cross-border study programme: Computer Science (M.Sc.) [Dataset]. https://data.public.lu/en/datasets/dfhi-isfates-cross-border-study-programme-computer-science-m-sc-1/
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    application/geopackage+sqlite3(90112), zip(1673), application/geo+json(1608)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 15, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    SIG-GR @ Ministère du Logement et de l'Aménagement du territoire - Département de l’aménagement du territoire
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    UniGR cross-border study DFHI-ISFATES: Computer Science (M.Sc.) Source: DFHI-ISFATES Link to interactive map: https://map.gis-gr.eu/theme/main?version=3&zoom=8&X=708580&Y=6429642&lang=fr&rotation=0&layers=2273&opacities=1&bgLayer=basemap_2015_global Link to Geocatalog: https://geocatalogue.gis-gr.eu/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/0214a3be-688b-4bac-b174-724c62857ff8 This dataset is published in the view service (WMS) available at: https://ws.geoportail.lu/wss/service/GR_Cross_border_programmes_science_mathematics_computing_2023_WMS/guest with layer name(s): -DFHI_ISFATES_Computer_Science_MSc

  17. d

    GeoFileReader

    • search.dataone.org
    Updated Sep 24, 2024
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    HU, Tao (2024). GeoFileReader [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/U5C8DP
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 24, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    HU, Tao
    Description

    The GeoFileReader is a component designed to facilitate the reading and processing of geospatial data files. It supports various formats commonly used in Geographic Information Systems (GIS), such as Shapefiles, GeoJSON, and others, enabling users to easily access and manipulate geospatial data for analysis and visualization. The component can be integrated into workflows to streamline data preparation tasks, including loading, filtering, and transforming geospatial data, which is essential for spatial analysis and mapping projects.

  18. r

    Scullin and Murray Monoliths 1:25000 Topographic GIS Dataset

    • researchdata.edu.au
    • data.aad.gov.au
    • +1more
    Updated Oct 7, 1999
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    HARRIS, URSULA (1999). Scullin and Murray Monoliths 1:25000 Topographic GIS Dataset [Dataset]. https://researchdata.edu.au/scullin-murray-monoliths-gis-dataset/701533
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 7, 1999
    Dataset provided by
    Australian Antarctic Data Centre
    Authors
    HARRIS, URSULA
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 1995 - Present
    Area covered
    Description

    Scullin and Murray Monoliths 1:25000 Topographic GIS Dataset. Features include coastline, areas of exposed rock, melt lakes, spot heights and 100 metre interval contours.

  19. r

    International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology Impact Factor...

    • researchhelpdesk.org
    Updated Feb 23, 2022
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    Research Help Desk (2022). International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology Impact Factor 2024-2025 - ResearchHelpDesk [Dataset]. https://www.researchhelpdesk.org/journal/impact-factor-if/552/international-journal-of-engineering-and-advanced-technology
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 23, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Research Help Desk
    Description

    International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology Impact Factor 2024-2025 - ResearchHelpDesk - International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology (IJEAT) is having Online-ISSN 2249-8958, bi-monthly international journal, being published in the months of February, April, June, August, October, and December by Blue Eyes Intelligence Engineering & Sciences Publication (BEIESP) Bhopal (M.P.), India since the year 2011. It is academic, online, open access, double-blind, peer-reviewed international journal. It aims to publish original, theoretical and practical advances in Computer Science & Engineering, Information Technology, Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Electronics and Telecommunication, Mechanical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Textile Engineering and all interdisciplinary streams of Engineering Sciences. All submitted papers will be reviewed by the board of committee of IJEAT. Aim of IJEAT Journal disseminate original, scientific, theoretical or applied research in the field of Engineering and allied fields. dispense a platform for publishing results and research with a strong empirical component. aqueduct the significant gap between research and practice by promoting the publication of original, novel, industry-relevant research. seek original and unpublished research papers based on theoretical or experimental works for the publication globally. publish original, theoretical and practical advances in Computer Science & Engineering, Information Technology, Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Electronics and Telecommunication, Mechanical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Textile Engineering and all interdisciplinary streams of Engineering Sciences. impart a platform for publishing results and research with a strong empirical component. create a bridge for a significant gap between research and practice by promoting the publication of original, novel, industry-relevant research. solicit original and unpublished research papers, based on theoretical or experimental works. Scope of IJEAT International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology (IJEAT) covers all topics of all engineering branches. Some of them are Computer Science & Engineering, Information Technology, Electronics & Communication, Electrical and Electronics, Electronics and Telecommunication, Civil Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Textile Engineering and all interdisciplinary streams of Engineering Sciences. The main topic includes but not limited to: 1. Smart Computing and Information Processing Signal and Speech Processing Image Processing and Pattern Recognition WSN Artificial Intelligence and machine learning Data mining and warehousing Data Analytics Deep learning Bioinformatics High Performance computing Advanced Computer networking Cloud Computing IoT Parallel Computing on GPU Human Computer Interactions 2. Recent Trends in Microelectronics and VLSI Design Process & Device Technologies Low-power design Nanometer-scale integrated circuits Application specific ICs (ASICs) FPGAs Nanotechnology Nano electronics and Quantum Computing 3. Challenges of Industry and their Solutions, Communications Advanced Manufacturing Technologies Artificial Intelligence Autonomous Robots Augmented Reality Big Data Analytics and Business Intelligence Cyber Physical Systems (CPS) Digital Clone or Simulation Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) Manufacturing IOT Plant Cyber security Smart Solutions – Wearable Sensors and Smart Glasses System Integration Small Batch Manufacturing Visual Analytics Virtual Reality 3D Printing 4. Internet of Things (IoT) Internet of Things (IoT) & IoE & Edge Computing Distributed Mobile Applications Utilizing IoT Security, Privacy and Trust in IoT & IoE Standards for IoT Applications Ubiquitous Computing Block Chain-enabled IoT Device and Data Security and Privacy Application of WSN in IoT Cloud Resources Utilization in IoT Wireless Access Technologies for IoT Mobile Applications and Services for IoT Machine/ Deep Learning with IoT & IoE Smart Sensors and Internet of Things for Smart City Logic, Functional programming and Microcontrollers for IoT Sensor Networks, Actuators for Internet of Things Data Visualization using IoT IoT Application and Communication Protocol Big Data Analytics for Social Networking using IoT IoT Applications for Smart Cities Emulation and Simulation Methodologies for IoT IoT Applied for Digital Contents 5. Microwaves and Photonics Microwave filter Micro Strip antenna Microwave Link design Microwave oscillator Frequency selective surface Microwave Antenna Microwave Photonics Radio over fiber Optical communication Optical oscillator Optical Link design Optical phase lock loop Optical devices 6. Computation Intelligence and Analytics Soft Computing Advance Ubiquitous Computing Parallel Computing Distributed Computing Machine Learning Information Retrieval Expert Systems Data Mining Text Mining Data Warehousing Predictive Analysis Data Management Big Data Analytics Big Data Security 7. Energy Harvesting and Wireless Power Transmission Energy harvesting and transfer for wireless sensor networks Economics of energy harvesting communications Waveform optimization for wireless power transfer RF Energy Harvesting Wireless Power Transmission Microstrip Antenna design and application Wearable Textile Antenna Luminescence Rectenna 8. Advance Concept of Networking and Database Computer Network Mobile Adhoc Network Image Security Application Artificial Intelligence and machine learning in the Field of Network and Database Data Analytic High performance computing Pattern Recognition 9. Machine Learning (ML) and Knowledge Mining (KM) Regression and prediction Problem solving and planning Clustering Classification Neural information processing Vision and speech perception Heterogeneous and streaming data Natural language processing Probabilistic Models and Methods Reasoning and inference Marketing and social sciences Data mining Knowledge Discovery Web mining Information retrieval Design and diagnosis Game playing Streaming data Music Modelling and Analysis Robotics and control Multi-agent systems Bioinformatics Social sciences Industrial, financial and scientific applications of all kind 10. Advanced Computer networking Computational Intelligence Data Management, Exploration, and Mining Robotics Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Computer Architecture and VLSI Computer Graphics, Simulation, and Modelling Digital System and Logic Design Natural Language Processing and Machine Translation Parallel and Distributed Algorithms Pattern Recognition and Analysis Systems and Software Engineering Nature Inspired Computing Signal and Image Processing Reconfigurable Computing Cloud, Cluster, Grid and P2P Computing Biomedical Computing Advanced Bioinformatics Green Computing Mobile Computing Nano Ubiquitous Computing Context Awareness and Personalization, Autonomic and Trusted Computing Cryptography and Applied Mathematics Security, Trust and Privacy Digital Rights Management Networked-Driven Multicourse Chips Internet Computing Agricultural Informatics and Communication Community Information Systems Computational Economics, Digital Photogrammetric Remote Sensing, GIS and GPS Disaster Management e-governance, e-Commerce, e-business, e-Learning Forest Genomics and Informatics Healthcare Informatics Information Ecology and Knowledge Management Irrigation Informatics Neuro-Informatics Open Source: Challenges and opportunities Web-Based Learning: Innovation and Challenges Soft computing Signal and Speech Processing Natural Language Processing 11. Communications Microstrip Antenna Microwave Radar and Satellite Smart Antenna MIMO Antenna Wireless Communication RFID Network and Applications 5G Communication 6G Communication 12. Algorithms and Complexity Sequential, Parallel And Distributed Algorithms And Data Structures Approximation And Randomized Algorithms Graph Algorithms And Graph Drawing On-Line And Streaming Algorithms Analysis Of Algorithms And Computational Complexity Algorithm Engineering Web Algorithms Exact And Parameterized Computation Algorithmic Game Theory Computational Biology Foundations Of Communication Networks Computational Geometry Discrete Optimization 13. Software Engineering and Knowledge Engineering Software Engineering Methodologies Agent-based software engineering Artificial intelligence approaches to software engineering Component-based software engineering Embedded and ubiquitous software engineering Aspect-based software engineering Empirical software engineering Search-Based Software engineering Automated software design and synthesis Computer-supported cooperative work Automated software specification Reverse engineering Software Engineering Techniques and Production Perspectives Requirements engineering Software analysis, design and modelling Software maintenance and evolution Software engineering tools and environments Software engineering decision support Software design patterns Software product lines Process and workflow management Reflection and metadata approaches Program understanding and system maintenance Software domain modelling and analysis Software economics Multimedia and hypermedia software engineering Software engineering case study and experience reports Enterprise software, middleware, and tools Artificial intelligent methods, models, techniques Artificial life and societies Swarm intelligence Smart Spaces Autonomic computing and agent-based systems Autonomic computing Adaptive Systems Agent architectures, ontologies, languages and protocols Multi-agent systems Agent-based learning and knowledge discovery Interface agents Agent-based auctions and marketplaces Secure mobile and multi-agent systems Mobile agents SOA and Service-Oriented Systems Service-centric software engineering Service oriented requirements engineering Service oriented architectures Middleware for service based systems Service discovery and composition Service level

  20. d

    Datasets for Computational Methods and GIS Applications in Social Science

    • search.dataone.org
    Updated Sep 25, 2024
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    Fahui Wang; Lingbo Liu (2024). Datasets for Computational Methods and GIS Applications in Social Science [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/4CM7V4
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 25, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Fahui Wang; Lingbo Liu
    Description

    Dataset for the textbook Computational Methods and GIS Applications in Social Science (3rd Edition), 2023 Fahui Wang, Lingbo Liu Main Book Citation: Wang, F., & Liu, L. (2023). Computational Methods and GIS Applications in Social Science (3rd ed.). CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.1201/9781003292302 KNIME Lab Manual Citation: Liu, L., & Wang, F. (2023). Computational Methods and GIS Applications in Social Science - Lab Manual. CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.1201/9781003304357 KNIME Hub Dataset and Workflow for Computational Methods and GIS Applications in Social Science-Lab Manual Update Log If Python package not found in Package Management, use ArcGIS Pro's Python Command Prompt to install them, e.g., conda install -c conda-forge python-igraph leidenalg NetworkCommDetPro in CMGIS-V3-Tools was updated on July 10,2024 Add spatial adjacency table into Florida on June 29,2024 The dataset and tool for ABM Crime Simulation were updated on August 3, 2023, The toolkits in CMGIS-V3-Tools was updated on August 3rd,2023. Report Issues on GitHub https://github.com/UrbanGISer/Computational-Methods-and-GIS-Applications-in-Social-Science Following the website of Fahui Wang : http://faculty.lsu.edu/fahui Contents Chapter 1. Getting Started with ArcGIS: Data Management and Basic Spatial Analysis Tools Case Study 1: Mapping and Analyzing Population Density Pattern in Baton Rouge, Louisiana Chapter 2. Measuring Distance and Travel Time and Analyzing Distance Decay Behavior Case Study 2A: Estimating Drive Time and Transit Time in Baton Rouge, Louisiana Case Study 2B: Analyzing Distance Decay Behavior for Hospitalization in Florida Chapter 3. Spatial Smoothing and Spatial Interpolation Case Study 3A: Mapping Place Names in Guangxi, China Case Study 3B: Area-Based Interpolations of Population in Baton Rouge, Louisiana Case Study 3C: Detecting Spatiotemporal Crime Hotspots in Baton Rouge, Louisiana Chapter 4. Delineating Functional Regions and Applications in Health Geography Case Study 4A: Defining Service Areas of Acute Hospitals in Baton Rouge, Louisiana Case Study 4B: Automated Delineation of Hospital Service Areas in Florida Chapter 5. GIS-Based Measures of Spatial Accessibility and Application in Examining Healthcare Disparity Case Study 5: Measuring Accessibility of Primary Care Physicians in Baton Rouge Chapter 6. Function Fittings by Regressions and Application in Analyzing Urban Density Patterns Case Study 6: Analyzing Population Density Patterns in Chicago Urban Area >Chapter 7. Principal Components, Factor and Cluster Analyses and Application in Social Area Analysis Case Study 7: Social Area Analysis in Beijing Chapter 8. Spatial Statistics and Applications in Cultural and Crime Geography Case Study 8A: Spatial Distribution and Clusters of Place Names in Yunnan, China Case Study 8B: Detecting Colocation Between Crime Incidents and Facilities Case Study 8C: Spatial Cluster and Regression Analyses of Homicide Patterns in Chicago Chapter 9. Regionalization Methods and Application in Analysis of Cancer Data Case Study 9: Constructing Geographical Areas for Mapping Cancer Rates in Louisiana Chapter 10. System of Linear Equations and Application of Garin-Lowry in Simulating Urban Population and Employment Patterns Case Study 10: Simulating Population and Service Employment Distributions in a Hypothetical City Chapter 11. Linear and Quadratic Programming and Applications in Examining Wasteful Commuting and Allocating Healthcare Providers Case Study 11A: Measuring Wasteful Commuting in Columbus, Ohio Case Study 11B: Location-Allocation Analysis of Hospitals in Rural China Chapter 12. Monte Carlo Method and Applications in Urban Population and Traffic Simulations Case Study 12A. Examining Zonal Effect on Urban Population Density Functions in Chicago by Monte Carlo Simulation Case Study 12B: Monte Carlo-Based Traffic Simulation in Baton Rouge, Louisiana Chapter 13. Agent-Based Model and Application in Crime Simulation Case Study 13: Agent-Based Crime Simulation in Baton Rouge, Louisiana Chapter 14. Spatiotemporal Big Data Analytics and Application in Urban Studies Case Study 14A: Exploring Taxi Trajectory in ArcGIS Case Study 14B: Identifying High Traffic Corridors and Destinations in Shanghai Dataset File Structure 1 BatonRouge Census.gdb BR.gdb 2A BatonRouge BR_Road.gdb Hosp_Address.csv TransitNetworkTemplate.xml BR_GTFS Google API Pro.tbx 2B Florida FL_HSA.gdb R_ArcGIS_Tools.tbx (RegressionR) 3A China_GX GX.gdb 3B BatonRouge BR.gdb 3C BatonRouge BRcrime R_ArcGIS_Tools.tbx (STKDE) 4A BatonRouge BRRoad.gdb 4B Florida FL_HSA.gdb HSA Delineation Pro.tbx Huff Model Pro.tbx FLplgnAdjAppend.csv 5 BRMSA BRMSA.gdb Accessibility Pro.tbx 6 Chicago ChiUrArea.gdb R_ArcGIS_Tools.tbx (RegressionR) 7 Beijing BJSA.gdb bjattr.csv R_ArcGIS_Tools.tbx (PCAandFA, BasicClustering) 8A Yunnan YN.gdb R_ArcGIS_Tools.tbx (SaTScanR) 8B Jiangsu JS.gdb 8C Chicago ChiCity.gdb cityattr.csv ...

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Leahey, Amber; Genzinger, Peter (2024). Replication Data for: Mapping the landscape of geospatial data citations [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5683/SP2/JDLRJP

Replication Data for: Mapping the landscape of geospatial data citations

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Dataset updated
Dec 18, 2024
Dataset provided by
Borealis
Authors
Leahey, Amber; Genzinger, Peter
Time period covered
Jan 1, 2015 - Jan 1, 2018
Description

This data supports the paper entitled "Mapping the landscape of geospatial data citations". The dataset covers geospatial data-intensive research papers published between 2015-2018 retrieved using Scopus. The article's citations were assessed for data citation occurances, and coded using a data citation classification. Data were enhanced and linked to subject coverage and journal policy status information using Excel & SPSS. For more information about how the data were created and coded please review the 'Methodology' section of the paper. More information is provided below, including supplemental documentation and related publications. Abstract (paper) ABSTRACT Data citations, similar to article and other research citations, are important references to research data that underlie published research results. In support of open science directives, these citations must adhere to specific conventions in terms of consistency of both placement within an article, and the actual availability or access to research data. To better understand the level to which geospatial research data are currently cited, we undertook a study to analyse the rate of data citation within a set of data-intensive geospatial research articles. After analysing 1717 scholarly articles published between 2015 and 2018, we found that very few, or 78 (5%), meaningfully cited primary or secondary geospatial data sources in the cited references section of the article. Even fewer researchers, only 25 or 1.5%, were found to have cited data using a DOI. Given the relatively low data citation rate, a focus on contributing factors including barriers to citing geospatial data is needed. And while open sharing requirements for geospatial data may change over time, driving data citation as a result, understanding benchmarks for data citation for monitoring purposes is useful.

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