Title
Position Validation in Crowdsourced Accessibility Mapping
Abstract
We live in a society in which instant gratification is expected: we demand constantly up-to-date information, which is reflected in our reliance on maps for navigation. Volunteered geographical information (VGI) and geocrowdsourcing make this demand attainable, with popular examples being Waze and OpenStreetMap, where maps are updated quickly by citizen contributors with current base data and features. At George Mason University (in Fairfax, Virginia), the Office of Disability Services releases a traditional paper accessibility map once annually. Owing to its production methods and format, this accessibility map does not capture the transient obstacles that occur frequently throughout campus, rendering it less useful to disabled pedestrians. To fix this dilemma and establish a more useful accessibility system, we have created an application in which contributors report transient obstacles that may impede pedestrian navigation, including sidewalk obstructions, construction detours, and other obstacles that may affect pathway walkability. One of the concerns associated with VGI and geocrowdsourced information is quality assurance, which is imperative when the usage scenarios (including blind, visually impaired, and mobility-impaired navigation) depend on positional accuracy. This study attempts to address the concerns related to the quality assurance of VGI, specifically quality assessment of the positional accuracy of the geocrowdsourced spatial data. We present our quality assessment techniques and novel methods for assessing the consistency of positional characteristics of geocrowdsourced spatial data related to accessibility. These methods rely on moderated positional assessments, geotags extracted from contributed images, and gazetteer-based geoparsing of location descriptions. Finally, we base our methods and approaches on research contributions and best practices from past and current efforts in accessibility mapping.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.3138/cart.51.2.3143
CARTOGRAPHICA
Keywords
Field
DocType
accessibility mapping,crowdsourcing,quality assessment,VGI,position validation
Pedestrian navigation,Volunteered geographic information,Accident prevention,Geography,Cartography
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
51
2
0317-7173
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
0
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Rebecca M. Rice110.69
Ahmad O. Aburizaiza281.54
Matt Rice3221.51
Han Qin481.84