Driven by the recent trends in the GIS domain including Volunteered Geographic Information, geo-crowdsourcing and citizen science, and fostered by the constant technological advances, collection and dissemination of geospatial information by ordinary people has become commonplace. However, applications involving user-generated geospatial content show dramatically diversified patterns in terms of incentive, type and level of participation, purpose of the activity, data/metadata provided and data quality. This study contributes to this heterogeneous context by investigating public participation in GIS within the field of mobile-based applications. Results not only show examples of how to technically build GIS applications enabling user collec...
The last few years has seen the use of mobile technology become ubiquituos. Many millions of citizen...
The dawn of GeoWeb 2.0, the geographic extension of Web 2.0, has opened new possibilities in terms o...
The dawn of GeoWeb 2.0, the geographic extension of Web 2.0, has opened new possibilities in terms o...
Driven by the recent trends in the GIS domain including Volunteered Geographic Information, geo-crow...
In recent years, citizens have become an important source of geographic information and, therefore, ...
Web 2.0 and the non-stop diffusion of mobile devices have recently opened unprecedented opportunitie...
Citizens are increasingly becoming an important source of geographic information, sometimes entering...
Citizens are increasingly becoming an important source of geographic information, sometimes entering...
The availability of new mobile devices (tablets and smartphones) equipped with many sensors is chang...
Driven by the rise of Web 2.0 and the non-stop spread of mobile device sensors, the concept of Publi...
This chapter highlights two types of georeferenced User-Generated Content (geo-UGC) that show consid...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 61-62).This thesis focuses on developing a shared system cal...
"This book focuses on the study of the remarkable new source of geographic information that has beco...
Driven by the rise of Web 2.0 and the non-stop spread of mobile device sensors, the concept of PGIS ...
The last few years has seen the use of mobile technology become ubiquituos. Many millions of citizen...
The dawn of GeoWeb 2.0, the geographic extension of Web 2.0, has opened new possibilities in terms o...
The dawn of GeoWeb 2.0, the geographic extension of Web 2.0, has opened new possibilities in terms o...
Driven by the recent trends in the GIS domain including Volunteered Geographic Information, geo-crow...
In recent years, citizens have become an important source of geographic information and, therefore, ...
Web 2.0 and the non-stop diffusion of mobile devices have recently opened unprecedented opportunitie...
Citizens are increasingly becoming an important source of geographic information, sometimes entering...
Citizens are increasingly becoming an important source of geographic information, sometimes entering...
The availability of new mobile devices (tablets and smartphones) equipped with many sensors is chang...
Driven by the rise of Web 2.0 and the non-stop spread of mobile device sensors, the concept of Publi...
This chapter highlights two types of georeferenced User-Generated Content (geo-UGC) that show consid...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 61-62).This thesis focuses on developing a shared system cal...
"This book focuses on the study of the remarkable new source of geographic information that has beco...
Driven by the rise of Web 2.0 and the non-stop spread of mobile device sensors, the concept of PGIS ...
The last few years has seen the use of mobile technology become ubiquituos. Many millions of citizen...
The dawn of GeoWeb 2.0, the geographic extension of Web 2.0, has opened new possibilities in terms o...
The dawn of GeoWeb 2.0, the geographic extension of Web 2.0, has opened new possibilities in terms o...