Parks and protected areas provide a wide range of benefits, but methods to evaluate their importance to society are often ad hoc and limited. In this study, the quality of crowdsourced information from Public Participation GIS (PPGIS) and Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) sources (Flickr, OpenStreetMap (OSM), and Wikipedia) was compared with visitor counts that are presumed to reflect social importance. Using the state of Victoria, Australia as a case study, secondary crowdsourced VGI data, primary crowdsourced (PPGIS data) and visitor statistics were examined for their correspondence and differences, and to identify spatial patterns in park popularity. Data completeness—the percent of protected areas with data—varied between sources...
This paper describes research to evaluate the use of a public participation geographic information s...
Protected area management and marketing require real-time information on visitors’ behavior and pref...
For centuries, philosophers, policy-makers and urban planners have debated whether aesthetically ple...
Parks and protected areas provide a wide range of benefits, but methods to evaluate their importance...
Crowdsourced data can provide spatially explicit data on the contribution of nature to people. Spat...
This paper analyses public use in the Ebro Delta Natural Park using PPGIS (public participation geog...
The concept of crowdsourcing sounds like a potentially useful method to gather information collectiv...
Humanity benefits immensely from nature, including through cultural ecosystem services; geotagged cr...
Humanity benefits immensely from nature, including through cultural ecosystem services; geotagged cr...
Humanity benefits immensely from nature, including through cultural ecosystem services; geotagged cr...
Wikimapia is a major privately-owned volunteered geographic information (VGI) project to collect inf...
A significant barrier to the use of public participation GIS (PPGIS) and crowd-sourcing for conserva...
The number of visitors and the diversity of users at national parks is increasing. To cope with this...
This paper describes research to evaluate the use of a public participation geographic information s...
Protected area management and marketing require real-time information on visitors’ behavior and pref...
This paper describes research to evaluate the use of a public participation geographic information s...
Protected area management and marketing require real-time information on visitors’ behavior and pref...
For centuries, philosophers, policy-makers and urban planners have debated whether aesthetically ple...
Parks and protected areas provide a wide range of benefits, but methods to evaluate their importance...
Crowdsourced data can provide spatially explicit data on the contribution of nature to people. Spat...
This paper analyses public use in the Ebro Delta Natural Park using PPGIS (public participation geog...
The concept of crowdsourcing sounds like a potentially useful method to gather information collectiv...
Humanity benefits immensely from nature, including through cultural ecosystem services; geotagged cr...
Humanity benefits immensely from nature, including through cultural ecosystem services; geotagged cr...
Humanity benefits immensely from nature, including through cultural ecosystem services; geotagged cr...
Wikimapia is a major privately-owned volunteered geographic information (VGI) project to collect inf...
A significant barrier to the use of public participation GIS (PPGIS) and crowd-sourcing for conserva...
The number of visitors and the diversity of users at national parks is increasing. To cope with this...
This paper describes research to evaluate the use of a public participation geographic information s...
Protected area management and marketing require real-time information on visitors’ behavior and pref...
This paper describes research to evaluate the use of a public participation geographic information s...
Protected area management and marketing require real-time information on visitors’ behavior and pref...
For centuries, philosophers, policy-makers and urban planners have debated whether aesthetically ple...