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Les SIG et la cartographie à l’ère du géoweb : Vers une nouvelle génération de SIG participatifs / Boris Mericskay in Espace géographique, vol 40 n° 2 (avril - juin 2011)
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Titre : Les SIG et la cartographie à l’ère du géoweb : Vers une nouvelle génération de SIG participatifs Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Boris Mericskay, Auteur Année de publication : 2011 Article en page(s) : pp 142 - 153 Note générale : Bibliographie Langues : Français (fre) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Géomatique web
[Termes IGN] approche participative
[Termes IGN] carte sur mesure
[Termes IGN] concertation
[Termes IGN] données localisées des bénévoles
[Termes IGN] géomatique web
[Termes IGN] GeoWeb
[Termes IGN] participation du public
[Termes IGN] SIG participatifRésumé : (Auteur) La convergence des systèmes d’information géographique et du Web se traduit aujourd’hui par l’émergence du géoweb lequel permet au grand public de lire et d’écrire les cartes. Dans la continuité des recherches sur les systèmes d’information géographique participatifs, cette démocratisation de la cartographie en ligne pose de nombreuses questions quant aux usages des technologies d’information géographique dans les processus de participation publique (diffusion d’information, cartographie participative, formalisation des propositions citoyennes, etc.). C’est l’objectif de cet article, lequel s’attache à analyser les potentialités participatives du géoweb pour encourager la concertation territoriale en termes de techniques, pratiques et contenus. Numéro de notice : A2011-249 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : GEOMATIQUE/SOCIETE NUMERIQUE Nature : Article DOI : 10.3917/eg.402.0142 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.3917/eg.402.0142 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=31027
in Espace géographique > vol 40 n° 2 (avril - juin 2011) . - pp 142 - 153[article]
contenu dans Advances in cartography and GIScience: selection from ICC [International Cartographic Conference] 2011, Volume 1. Conference proceedings / Anne Ruas (2011)
Titre : On-demand cartography for trekkers Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Catherine Dominguès , Auteur ; Charlotte Hoarau , Auteur Editeur : Berlin, Heidelberg, Vienne, New York, ... : Springer Année de publication : 2011 Collection : Lecture notes in Geoinformation and Cartography, ISSN 1863-2246 Conférence : ICC 2011, 25th International Cartographic Conference and 15th ICA General Assembly 03/07/2011 08/07/2011 Paris France OA Proceedings Importance : pp 183 - 203 Note générale : Bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Cartographie
[Termes IGN] carte sur mesure
[Termes IGN] conception cartographique
[Termes IGN] données localisées des bénévoles
[Termes IGN] langage naturel (informatique)
[Termes IGN] randonnée
[Termes IGN] spécification de contenuRésumé : (Auteur) In this paper, we introduce a method for identifying the specific needs of a community from a user survey, and adapting maps accordingly. This method was applied to four different groups of trekkers: walkers, road cyclists, cross-country bikers, and recreational trekkers. Relevant concepts, criticisms and expectations for each group were identified using natural language processing and lexicometry methods and tools. Suggestions for adapting maps focus on data selection and graphic representation. Pedes-trian trails were emphasized using trail-marking signs as graphical symbols and adding numbers which refer to additional information. Specific trails were added to the cross-country hiking map using the difficulty level indi-cation of ski maps. Moreover, contour lines were highlighted for cross-country bikers to help them to understand relief. The road cyclist map was designed at a 1/50 000 scale with generalized data. The slope of cycling paths was indicated by a diverging color scheme to convey the difficulty of different sections of road. This paper describes part of an on-demand map making process and illustrates it for a specific community, trekkers. It has been shown that it is possible to select data and define radical graphic choices as long as the community is targeted enough to have the same needs and wishes. Numéro de notice : C2011-001 Affiliation des auteurs : COGIT (1988-2011) Thématique : GEOMATIQUE/SOCIETE NUMERIQUE Nature : Communication nature-HAL : ComAvecCL&ActesPubliésIntl DOI : 10.1007/978-3-642-19143-5_11 Date de publication en ligne : 09/04/2011 En ligne : http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-19143-5_11 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=65072 The map reader / Martin Dodge (2011)
Titre : The map reader : Theories of mapping practice and cartographic representation Type de document : Monographie Auteurs : Martin Dodge, Éditeur scientifique ; R. Kitchin, Éditeur scientifique ; C. Perkins, Éditeur scientifique Editeur : Chichester : Wiley-Blackwell Année de publication : 2011 Importance : 478 p. Format : 20 x 27 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-470-74283-9 Note générale : Bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Cartographie
[Termes IGN] cartographie par internet
[Termes IGN] cartographie statistique
[Termes IGN] données localisées des bénévoles
[Termes IGN] données spatiotemporelles
[Termes IGN] lecture de carte
[Termes IGN] représentation cartographique
[Termes IGN] sémiologie graphique
[Termes IGN] système d'information géographiqueRésumé : (Editeur) The Map Reader provides, for the first time, a single source of all the important literature on maps. It is a comprehensive and coherent edited compendium of key writing about the nature of mapping practices from the last hundred years. The editorial selection of fifty classic and thought provoking texts demonstrates how cartography works as a powerful representational form and also explores how different mapping practices have been conceptualised. Themes covered include paradigms, politics, people, aesthetics and technology. Excerpts are drawn from leading scholars and researchers in a range of cognate fields, including, cartography, architecture, art, media theory and graphic design. The editors provide original thematic essays that set the literature into intellectual context. The Map Reader is also illustrated with colour plates of significant maps and the all readings are helpfully integrated with a unified bibliography and comprehensive keyword and author index. The Map Reader will bring together in a single authoritative source classic and hard to find articles relating to mapping, and introduce the changing significance of the field by situating these pieces with carefully crafted interpretative essay from the editors. Note de contenu : Colour Plate One: Cartographic Production
SECTION 1 Conceptualising Mapping
1.1 Introductory Essay: Conceptualising Mapping (Rob Kitchin, Martin Dodge and Chris Perkins)
1.2 General Theory, from Semiology of Graphics (Jacques Bertin)
1.3 On Maps and Mapping, from The Nature of Maps: Essays Toward Understanding Maps and Mapping (Arthur H. Robinson and Barbara B. Petchenik)
1.4 The Science of Cartography and its Essential Processes (Joel L. Morrison)
1.5 Analytical Cartography (Waldo R. Tobler)
1.6 Cartographic Communication (Christopher Board)
1.7 Design on Signs / Myth and Meaning in Maps (Denis Wood and John Fels)
1.8 Deconstructing the Map (J.B. Harley)
1.9 Drawing Things Together (Bruno Latour)
1.10 Cartography Without 'Progress': Reinterpreting the Nature and Historical Development of Mapmaking (Matthew H. Edney)
1.11 Exploratory Cartographic Visualisation: Advancing the Agenda (Alan M. MacEachren and Menno-Jan Kraak)
1.12 The Agency of Mapping: Speculation, Critique and Invention (James Corner)
1.13 Beyond the 'Binaries': A Methodological Intervention for Interrogating Maps as Representational Practices (Vincent J. Del Casino Jr. and Stephen P. Hanna)
1.14 Rethinking Maps (Rob Kitchin and Martin Dodge)
Colour Plate Two: Mapping the Internet
SECTION 2 Technologies of Mapping
2.1 Introductory Essay: Technologies of Mapping (Martin Dodge, Rob Kitchin and Chris Perkins)
2.2 A Century of Cartographic Change, from Technological Transition in Cartography (Mark S. Monmonier)
2.3 Manufacturing Metaphors: Public Cartography, the Market, and Democracy (Patrick H. McHaffie)
2.4 Maps and Mapping Technologies of the Persian Gulf War (Keith C. Clarke)
2.5 Automation and Cartography (Waldo R. Tobler)
2.6 Cartographic Futures on a Digital Earth (Michael F. Goodchild)
2.7 Cartography and Geographic Information Systems (Phillip C. Muehrcke)
2.8 Remote Sensing of Urban/Suburban Infrastructure and Socio-Economic Attributes (John R. Jensen and Dave C. Cowen)
2.9 Emergence of Map Projections, from Flattening the Earth: Two Thousand Years of Map Projections (John P. Synder)
2.10 Mobile Mapping: An Emerging Technology for Spatial Data Acquisition (Rongxing Li)
2.11 Extending the Map Metaphor Using Web Delivered Multimedia (William Cartwright)
2.12 Imaging the World: The State of Online Mapping (Tom Geller)
Colour Plate Three: Pictorial Mapping
SECTION 3 Cartographic Aesthetics and Map Design
3.1 Introductory Essay: Cartographic Aesthetics and Map Design (Chris Perkins, Martin Dodge and Rob Kitchin)
3.2 Interplay of Elements, from Cartographic Relief Presentation (Eduard Imhof)
3.3 Cartography as a Visual Technique, from The Look of Maps (Arthur H. Robinson)
3.4 Generalisation in Statistical Mapping (George F. Jenks)
3.5 Strategies for the Visualisation of Geographic Time-Series Data (Mark Monmonier)
3.6 The Roles of Maps, from Some Truth with Maps: A Primer on Symbolization and Design (Alan M. MacEachren)
3.7 Area Cartograms: Their Use and Creation (Daniel Dorling)
3.8 ColorBrewer.org: An Online Tool for Selecting Colour Schemes for Maps (Mark Harrower and Cynthia A. Brewer)
3.9 Maps, Mapping, Modernity: Art and Cartography in the Twentieth Century (Denis Cosgrove)
3.10 Affective Geovisualisations (Stuart Aitken and James Craine)
3.11 Egocentric Design of Map-Based Mobile Services (Liqiu Meng)
3.12 The Geographic Beauty of a Photographic Archive (Jason Dykes and Jo Wood)
Colour Plate Four: Visualising Cartographic Colour Schemes and Mapping Spatial Information Space
SECTION 4 Cognition and Cultures of Mapping
4.1 Introductory Essay: Cognition and Cultures of Mapping (Chris Perkins, Rob Kitchin and Martin Dodge)
4.2 Map Makers are Human: Comments on the Subjective in Maps (John K. Wright)
4.3 Cognitive Maps and Spatial Behaviour: Process and Products (Roger M. Downs and David Stea)
4.4 Natural Mapping (James M. Blaut)
4.5 The Map as Biography: Thoughts on Ordnance Survey Map, Six-Inch Sheet Devonshire CIX, SE, Newton Abbot (J.B. Harley)
4.6 Reading Maps (Eileen Reeves)
4.7 Mapping Reeds and Reading Maps: The Politics of Representation in Lake Titicaca (Benjamin S. Orlove)
4.8 Refiguring Geography: Parish Maps of Common Ground (David Crouch and David Matless)
4.9 Understanding and Learning Maps (Robert Lloyd)
4.10 Citizens as Sensors: The World of Volunteered Geography (Michael F. Goodchild)
4.11 Usability Evaluation of Web Mapping Sites (Annu-Maaria Nivala, Stephen Brewster and L. Tiina Sarjakoski)
Colour Plate Five: Visualising the Efforts of Volunteer Cartographers
SECTION 5 Power and Politics of Mapping
5.1 Introductory Essay: Power and Politics of Mapping (Rob Kitchin, Martin Dodge and Chris Perkins)
5.2 The Time and Space of the Enlightenment Project, from The Condition of Postmodernity (David Harvey)
5.3 Texts, Hermeneutics and Propaganda Maps (John Pickles)
5.4 Mapping: A New Technology of Space; Geo-Body, from Siam Mapped: A History of the Geo-Body of a Nation (Thongchai Winichakul)
5.5 First Principles of a Literary Cartography, from Territorial Disputes: Maps and Mapping Strategies in Contemporary Canadian and Australian Fiction (Graham Huggan)
5.6 Whose Woods are These? Counter-Mapping Forest Territories in Kalimantan, Indonesia (Nancy Lee Peluso)
5.7 A Map that Roared and an Original Atlas: Canada, Cartography, and the Narration of Nation (Matthew Sparke)
5.8 Cartographic Rationality and the Politics of Geosurveillance and Security (Jeremy W. Crampton)
5.9 Affecting Geospatial Technologies: Toward a Feminist Politics of Emotion (Mei-Po Kwan)
5.10 Queering the Map: The Productive Tensions of Colliding Epistemologies (Michael Brown and Larry Knopp)
5.11 Mapping the Digital Empire: Google Earth and the Process of Postmodern Cartography (Jason Farman)
Colour Plate Six: Cartographies of ProtestNuméro de notice : 20565 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : GEOMATIQUE Nature : Recueil / ouvrage collectif Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=41809 Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 20565-01 39.10 Livre Centre de documentation Cartographie Disponible 20565-02 DEP-TRS Livre LASTIG Dépôt en unité Exclu du prêt Evaluating selected visualization methods for exploring VGI / Rob Feick in Geomatica, vol 64 n° 4 (December 2010)
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Titre : Evaluating selected visualization methods for exploring VGI Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Rob Feick, Auteur ; Vivian Deparday, Auteur Année de publication : 2010 Article en page(s) : pp 427 - 437 Note générale : Bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Géomatique web
[Termes IGN] données localisées des bénévoles
[Termes IGN] données localisées libres
[Termes IGN] filtrage d'information
[Termes IGN] logiciel de cartographie
[Termes IGN] utilisateur civil
[Termes IGN] visualisation cartographiqueRésumé : (Auteur) The increasing prevalence of user-generated, or volunteered, geographic information is changing established practices of spatial data production and use in ways that were largely unanticipated in nature or in scope. This paper investigates one dimension of VGI use that has received relatively little attention to date, namely the influence of different cartographic visualisation methods on citizens' ability to explore and understand VGI. Following a brief review of key challenges related to VGI use, the paper describes a web-based software prototype that was designed to allow users to compare several simple geovisualisation and data filtering techniques for VGI exploration. Next, attention is directed to a specific study context where citizens used the software tool to explore a rich data set of locally-produced VGI related to community assets. The paper concludes with a discussion of the results from this experiment. Numéro de notice : A2010-574 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : GEOMATIQUE/SOCIETE NUMERIQUE Nature : Article DOI : 10.5623/geomat-2010-0045 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.5623/geomat-2010-0045 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=30765
in Geomatica > vol 64 n° 4 (December 2010) . - pp 427 - 437[article]Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 035-2010041 RAB Revue Centre de documentation En réserve L003 Disponible Integrating discrete and continuous data in an OpenGeospatial-compliant specification / L. Paolino in Transactions in GIS, vol 14 n° 6 (December 2010)
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Titre : Integrating discrete and continuous data in an OpenGeospatial-compliant specification Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : L. Paolino, Auteur ; G. Tortora, Auteur ; M. Sebillo, Auteur ; G. Vitiello, Auteur Année de publication : 2010 Article en page(s) : pp 731 - 753 Note générale : Bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Systèmes d'information géographique
[Termes IGN] classe d'objets
[Termes IGN] données hétérogènes
[Termes IGN] données localisées des bénévoles
[Termes IGN] intégration de données
[Termes IGN] logiciel libre
[Termes IGN] quantité continue
[Termes IGN] quantité discrète
[Termes IGN] système de gestion de base de donnéesRésumé : (Auteur) The integrated management of heterogeneous spatial data, such as continuous fields and discrete data, is an important issue for the Geographic Information (GI) community. Indeed, GI users are forced to navigate among and operate with several tools in order to solve their spatial problems, due to the lack of systems capable of integrating different components, each meant to provide a specific solution. The aim of this article is to propose an OpenGeospatial-compliant solution which supports expert users in handling problems involving heterogeneous data by means of a seamless approach. A class hierarchy modeling spatial discrete objects, continuous data, relationships, and operations, is described, whereby data are organized in agreement with the binary representation. A running example is illustrated to support readers' understanding of the proposed solution. Finally, some guidelines about an implementation modality are given, to demonstrate the applicability of the proposal to an existing DBMS. Numéro de notice : A2010-514 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : GEOMATIQUE/INFORMATIQUE/SOCIETE NUMERIQUE Nature : Article nature-HAL : ArtAvecCL-RevueIntern DOI : 10.1111/j.1467-9671.2010.01231.x Date de publication en ligne : 07/12/2010 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9671.2010.01231.x Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=30706
in Transactions in GIS > vol 14 n° 6 (December 2010) . - pp 731 - 753[article]Potential of VGI as a resource for SDIS in the north/south context / E. Genovese in Geomatica, vol 64 n° 4 (December 2010)PermalinkUser-friendly web mapping : lessons from a citizen science website / G. Newman in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS, vol 24 n°11-12 (december 2010)PermalinkEn un combat douteux / Françoise de Blomac in SIG la lettre, n° 121 (novembre 2010)PermalinkCrowdsourcing geospatial data / Christian Heipke in ISPRS Journal of photogrammetry and remote sensing, vol 65 n° 6 (November - December 2010)PermalinkHow many volunteers does it take to map an area well? The validity of Linus' law to volunteered geographic information / Muki M. Haklay in Cartographic journal (the), vol 47 n° 4 (November 2010)PermalinkQuality assessment of voluntered geographic information / H. Stark in Geoinformatics, vol 13 n° 7 (01/10/2010)PermalinkQuality assessment of the French OpenStreetMap dataset / Jean-François Girres in Transactions in GIS, vol 14 n° 4 (August 2010)Permalinkvol 64 n° 2 - June 2010 (Bulletin de Geomatica) / Canadian institute of geomatics = Association canadienne des sciences géomatiques (Canada)PermalinkThe potential and early limitations of volunteered geographic information / David Coleman in Geomatica, vol 64 n° 2 (June 2010)Permalinkvol 64 n° 1 - March 2010 (Bulletin de Geomatica) / Canadian institute of geomatics = Association canadienne des sciences géomatiques (Canada)Permalink