TY - GEN AU - Sui,Daniel Z. AU - Elwood,Sarah AU - Goodchild,Michael F. TI - Crowdsourcing geographic knowledge : : volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) in Theory and Practice SN - 9789400745865 (pbk.) U1 - 910.285 CRO 23 PY - 2013/// CY - Dordrecht PB - Springer KW - Geographic information systems KW - Human computation KW - Data mining N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Chapter 1: VGI, the exaflood, and the growing digital divide. Section I. Public Participation and Citizen Science.- Chapter 2: Understanding the value of VGI. Chapter 3: To volunteer or to contribute locational information? Towards truth in labeling for crowd-sourced geographic information. Chapter 4: Metadata squared: Enhancing its usability for volunteered geographic information and the GeoWeb. Chapter 5: Situating the adoption of VGI by government. Chapter 6: When Web 2.0 meets public participation GIS (PPGIS): VGI and spaces of participatory mapping in China. Chapter 7: Citizen science and volunteered geographic information: Overview and typology of participation. Section II. Geographic Knowledge Production and Place Inference.- Chapter 8: Volunteered geographic information and computational geography: New perspectives. Chapter 9: The evolution of geo-crowdsourcing: Bringing volunteered geographic information to the third dimension. Chapter 10: From volunteered geographic information to volunteered geographic services. Chapter 11: The geographic nature of Wikipedia authorship. Chapter 12: Inferring thematic places from spatially referenced natural language observations. Chapter 13: “I don't come from anywhere:" Exploring the role of VGI and the Geoweb in rediscovering a sense of place in a dispersed Aboriginal community. Section III. Emerging Applications and New Challenges. Chapter 14: Potential contributions and challenges of VGI for conventional topographic base-mapping programs. Chapter 15: “We know who you are and we know where you live:”A research agenda for web demographics. Chapter 16: Volunteered geographic information, actor-network theory, and severe storm reports. Chapter 17: VGI as a compilation tool for navigation map databases. Chapter 18: VGI and public health: Possibilities and pitfalls. Chapter 19: VGI in education: From K-12 to graduate studies. Chapter 20: The prospects VGI research and the emerging fourth paradigm. N2 - "The phenomenon of volunteered geographic information is part of a profound transformation in how geographic data, information, and knowledge are produced and circulated. By situating volunteered geographic information (VGI) in the context of big-data deluge and the data-intensive inquiry, the 20 chapters in this book explore both the theories and applications of crowdsourcing for geographic knowledge production with three sections focusing on 1). VGI, Public Participation, and Citizen Science; 2). Geographic Knowledge Production and Place Inference; and 3). Emerging Applications and New Challenges. This book argues that future progress in VGI research depends in large part on building strong linkages with diverse geographic scholarship. Contributors of this volume situate VGI research in geography's core concerns with space and place, and offer several ways of addressing persistent challenges of quality assurance in VGI. This book positions VGI as part of a shift toward hybrid epistemologies, and potentially a fourth paradigm of data-intensive inquiry across the sciences.It also considers the implications of VGI and the exaflood for further time-space compression and new forms, degrees of digital inequality, the renewed importance of geography, and the role of crowdsourcing for geographic knowledge production"--Provided by publisher UR - http://openisbn.com/isbn/9400745869/ ER -