Title
A framework for evaluating geographical information.
Abstract
This paper introduces a framework for the evaluation of geographic information (GI), divided into representational and communicative aspects. The representational component is concerned with how 'real-world' phenomena situated in space and time come to be represented or modelled in GI, considered at ontological, modelling and system levels. The communicative component of GI is concerned with how representations of GI are understood by the users of the information, considered at relevance, commodification, exploration and management levels. This paper attempts to bring together the previous work in all these areas into an evaluative framework so that creators and users can assess the validity and success of the representational and communicative process overall. This paper also outlines the architecture of a client-server geolibrary designed for information sharing. This kind of architecture provides a distributed and open platform for the development of GI networks, upon which more productive use of GI can be built in future.
Year
DOI
Venue
2002
10.1177/016555150202800105
JOURNAL OF INFORMATION SCIENCE
DocType
Volume
Issue
Journal
28.0
1
ISSN
Citations 
PageRank 
0165-5515
4
0.47
References 
Authors
6
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Jonathan Raper1161.11
Jason Dykes277360.75
Jo Wood339629.05
David M. Mountain440.80
Anton Krause540.47
David Rhind65330.44