IJGI 2018: ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information - Special Issue "Spatial Stream Processing" |
| Submission deadline | September 30, 2018 |
CALL FOR PAPERS
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
Special Issue: Spatial Stream Processing
http://www.mdpi.com/journal/ijgi/special_issues/Spatial_Stream_Processing
Introduction
Over the past four decades, the field of geographic information science has developed an impressive arsenal of techniques, technologies, and tools for capturing, storing, managing, processing, and using spatial information (de Smith et al. 2009). These tools take some data as inputs, and perform a variety of spatial operators (or computational processes) on that data to produce new data as result. Such spatial operators can be vector-based (geoprocessing) or raster-based (map algebra). Several vector-based and raster-based spatial operators may be arranged together, in the form of geospatial workflows, to produce desired results. Research work (e.g. Granell et al., 2010; Granell, 2014; Bernard et al., 2014; Yue et al., 2016) has made substantial progress over the past years to go well beyond desktop-based environments to bring geospatial workflows to the cloud and distributed computing environments, contributing to the emerging field of the Geoprocessing Web (Zhao et al., 2012; Hofer et al., 2018).
Geospatial web-based workflows are characterized by a query-driven, pull-based processing model: Dynamic “queries” are specified (i.e., spatial operators and/or geospatial services) and processed once over relatively static input data. In other words, all input data must be available before running a geospatial workflow. Spatial operators and algorithms devised since the late 1980s were designed to address the “all-data-available-before-process” processing model. To this regard, leading researchers recently called for an entirely new brand of geospatial algorithms and techniques to analyze and process real-time data streams (Batty et al., 2016; Jiang et al., 2015; Miller & Goodchild, 2014; Goodchild, 2016; Li et al., 2016). To put it simply, the world today is real time; what served in the past, and still serves for traditional, non-real-time scenarios, does not fit well with scenarios that handle data streams, i.e., real-time, time-varying sequences of data items or tuples.
Contrary to traditional geospatial workflows, stream processing is characterized by a data-driven, push-based processing model, in that static “queries” are processed continuously over transient, dynamic, frequently changing data. That is, analytical operators are defined once and run continuously over input data streams to put results into output data streams; what really changes are the input and output streams. State-of-the-art research in stream processing is ongoing, but is in its infancy when it comes to dealing with the spatial and spatiotemporal dimensions of data streams, due partly to (Galic, 2016):
- The inherent complexity of spatial data and spatiotemporal relationship makes traditional data stream techniques less useful for efficiently processing spatiotemporal data streams.
- Existing spatial operators, geoprocessing algorithms and spatial analytical techniques were initially conceived, designed and implemented following the query-driven, pull-based processing model in mind (i.e., “all-data-available-before-process”), which limits the usefulness of such well-known spatial operators for stream processing.
Topics
This Special Issue encourages the submission of both basic research papers and application-oriented contributions in the area of spatial stream processing. Our interest is in papers that cover a wide spectrum of methodological and domain-specific topics where spatial (and/or spatiotemporal) data streaming and spatial stream computing are central, including, but not limited to, the following:
- Spatio-temporal stream systems
- Novel streaming algorithms for spatial data
- Location-aware stream systems
- Real-time spatial data visualization
- Participatory spatiotemporal data streams and Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI)
- The use of stream processing in urban oriented applications such as traffic management, mobility, etc.
Submission deadline: 30 September 2018
For further reading, please follow the link to the Special Issue Website at: http://www.mdpi.com/journal/ijgi/special_issues/Spatial_Stream_Processing
Manuscripts should be submitted online at http://susy.mdpi.com/user/manuscripts/upload?journal=ijgi by selecting the “special issue” option from the drop-‐down list. We also encourage authors to send a short abstract or tentative title to the Editorial Office in advance (ijgi@mdpi.com).
