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Original Articles

Towards a knowledge base to support geoprocessing workflow development

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Pages 694-716 | Received 22 Mar 2016, Accepted 04 Aug 2016, Published online: 11 Sep 2016
 

ABSTRACT

The spatial analysis functionalities of geographic information systems (GIS) are increasingly used across the web. Interface specifications of geoprocessing web services define the syntactic properties of the services (number and type of parameters) and provide textual descriptions of the operations. The discovery and reuse of web services based on these syntactic properties is restricted and has led to the quest for extended operation descriptions. A number of extended operation descriptions have been proposed and are reviewed in this article. The reviewed descriptions focus on particular steps of the workflow development process. In this article we analyse all phases of the development process of a spatial analysis workflow regarding the requirements of operation descriptions. These requirements are translated into a knowledge base that contains information about spatial analysis operations for the operations’ discovery, selection and composition. The knowledge base also foresees the automated discovery of operations in well-defined application contexts such as the transformation of data types or coordinate reference systems. The knowledge base combines the geooperator approach with elements of ontology-based approaches. The geooperator browser is the implementation of the discovery and selection of geoprocessing operations based on the knowledge base. A draft formalization of the knowledge base demonstrates its use and the support it provides during the composition of operations.

Acknowledgements

We thank the anonymous reviewers and the editor for their suggestions and comments that helped to improve the quality of the paper. Barbara Hofer was partly funded by a DRESDEN Junior Fellowship by Technische Universität Dresden.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by a DRESDEN Junior Fellowship by Technische Universität Dresden.

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