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Using Reverse Viewshed Analysis to Assess the Location Correctness of Visually Generated VGI
Author(s) -
Senaratne Hansi,
Bröring Arne,
Schreck Tobias
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
transactions in gis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.721
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1467-9671
pISSN - 1361-1682
DOI - 10.1111/tgis.12039
Subject(s) - correctness , computer science , volunteered geographic information , visibility , credibility , thumbnail , metadata , viewshed analysis , information retrieval , point of interest , point (geometry) , data mining , computer vision , artificial intelligence , geography , world wide web , cartography , data science , image (mathematics) , mathematics , algorithm , meteorology , political science , law , geometry
With the increased availability of user generated data, assessing the quality and credibility of such data becomes important. In this article, we propose to assess the location correctness of visually generated Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) as a quality reference measure. The location correctness is determined by checking the visibility of the point of interest from the position of the visually generated VGI (observer point); as an example we utilize F lickr photographs. Therefore we first collect all F lickr photographs that conform to a certain point of interest through their textual labelling. Then we conduct a reverse viewshed analysis for the point of interest to determine if it lies within the area of visibility of the observer points. If the point of interest lies outside the visibility of a given observer point, the respective geotagged image is considered to be incorrectly geotagged. In this way, we analyze sample datasets of photographs and make observations regarding the dependency of certain user/photo metadata and (in)correct geotags and labels. In future the dependency relationship between the location correctness and user/photo metadata can be used to automatically infer user credibility. In other words, attributes such as profile completeness, together with location correctness, can serve as a weighted score to assess credibility.