In recent years many Spatial Data Infrastructures (SDI) have been built or are under construction in several European countries and geographical data have been collected in many different ways, sometimes following tra-ditional approaches (like, remote sensing techniques of photogrammetry and topography) or more “up to date” methods (like, GPS or others). How-ever, regardless of the used methods, the geometries resulting from the surveying process describe the geographic object according to the consid-ered accuracy level; therefore, in some cases such geometries, usually modeled as surfaces, are collapsed to set of curves and/or points.In this paper we propose a methodology which aims to handle this col-lapsed behavior of surfaces by preserving the conceptual schema of the da-tabase, which means that we preserve the geometric types (i.e., the surface type) of the spatial attributes even if their values can collapse. Moreover, we extend the semantics of integrity constraints included in the conceptual model in order to handle during data validation the collapsed surfaces as much as possible as real surfaces.

Managing Collapsed Surfaces in Spatial Constraints Validation

BELUSSI, Alberto;MIGLIORINI, Sara;
2010-01-01

Abstract

In recent years many Spatial Data Infrastructures (SDI) have been built or are under construction in several European countries and geographical data have been collected in many different ways, sometimes following tra-ditional approaches (like, remote sensing techniques of photogrammetry and topography) or more “up to date” methods (like, GPS or others). How-ever, regardless of the used methods, the geometries resulting from the surveying process describe the geographic object according to the consid-ered accuracy level; therefore, in some cases such geometries, usually modeled as surfaces, are collapsed to set of curves and/or points.In this paper we propose a methodology which aims to handle this col-lapsed behavior of surfaces by preserving the conceptual schema of the da-tabase, which means that we preserve the geometric types (i.e., the surface type) of the spatial attributes even if their values can collapse. Moreover, we extend the semantics of integrity constraints included in the conceptual model in order to handle during data validation the collapsed surfaces as much as possible as real surfaces.
2010
9783642123252
Spatial database; collapsed geometry; spatial integrity constraints validation
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11562/342465
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