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Geospatial Information Infrastructures

2019 19 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sven Schade, Arzu Çöltekin, Amy L. Griffin, Carlos Granell, Min Chen Glenn Vancauwenberghe, Aidan Slingsby, Min Chen Anthony Robinson, Carsten Keßler, Danny Vandenbroucke, Min Chen Sidonie Christophe, Victoria Rautenbach, Ian Masser, Michael Gould, Min Chen

Summary

This chapter provides an overview of geospatial information infrastructures — the technological and organizational systems that allow geographic data to be shared and used across institutions. It covers the history, current state, and future directions of these data-sharing frameworks.

Abstract Geospatial information infrastructures (GIIs) provide the technological, semantic, organizational and legal structure that allow for the discovery, sharing, and use of geospatial information (GI). In this chapter, we introduce the overall concept and surrounding notions such as geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial data infrastructures (SDI). We outline the history of GIIs in terms of the organizational and technological developments as well as the current state-of-art, and reflect on some of the central challenges and possible future trajectories. We focus on the tension between increased needs for standardization and the ever-accelerating technological changes. We conclude that GIIs evolved as a strong underpinning contribution to implementation of the Digital Earth vision. In the future, these infrastructures are challenged to become flexible and robust enough to absorb and embrace technological transformations and the accompanying societal and organizational implications. With this contribution, we present the reader a comprehensive overview of the field and a solid basis for reflections about future developments.

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