International Conference on Spatial Information Theory

1995 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 21-22
Author(s):  
Andreas Dieberger
Author(s):  
Z. Li

Abstract. Map is an effective communication means. It carries and transmits spatial information about spatial objects and phenomena, from map makers to map users. Therefore, cartography can be regarded as a communication system. Efforts has been made on the application of Shannon Information theory developed in digital communication to cartography to establish an information theory of cartography, or simply cartographic information theory (or map information theory). There was a boom during the period from later 1960s to early 1980s. Since later 1980s, researcher have almost given up the dream of establishing the information theory of cartography because they met a bottleneck problem. That is, Shannon entropy is only able to characterize the statistical information of map symbols but not capable of characterizing the spatial configuration (patterns) of map symbols. Fortunately, break-through has been made, i.e. the building of entropy models for metric and thematic information as well as a feasible computational model for Boltzmann entropy. This paper will review the evolutional processes, examine the bottleneck problems and the solutions, and finally propose a framework for the information theory of cartography. It is expected that such a theory will become the most fundamental theory of cartography in the big data era.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Hong Zhang ◽  
Peichao Gao ◽  
Zhilin Li

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Spatial information is fundamentally important to our daily life. It has been estimated by many scholars that almost 80 percent or more of all information in this world are spatially referenced and can be regarded as spatial information. Given such importance, a discipline called spatial information theory has been formed since the late 20th century. In addition, international conferences on spatial information have been frequently held. For example, COSIT (Conference on Spatial Information Theory) was established in 1993 and are held every two years all over the world.</p><p>In spatial information theory, one fundamental question is how to measure the amount of information (i.e., information content) of a spatial dataset. A widely used method is to employ entropy, which is proposed by the American mathematician Claude Shannon in 1948 and usually referred to as Shannon entropy or information entropy. This information entropy was originally designed to measure the statistical information content of a telegraph message. However, a spatial dataset such as a map or a remote sensing image contains not only statistical information but also spatial information, which cannot be measured by using the information entropy.</p><p>As a consequence, considerable efforts have been made to improve the information entropy for spatial datasets in either a vector format of a raster format. There are two basic lines of thought. The first is to improve the information entropy by defining how to calculate its probability parameters, and the other is to introduce new parameters into the formula of the information entropy. The former results in a number of improved information entropies, while the latter leads to a series of variants of the information entropy. Both seem to be capable of distinguishing different spatial datasets, but there is a lack of comprehensive evaluation of their performance in measuring spatial information.</p><p>This study first presents a state-of-the-art review of the improvements to the information entropy for the information content of spatial datasets in a raster format (i.e., raster spatial data, such as a grey image and a digital elevation model). Then, it presents a comprehensive evaluation of the resultant measures (either improved information entropies or variants of the information entropy) according to the Second Law of Thermodynamics. A set of evaluation criteria were proposed, as well as corresponding measures. All resultant measures were ranked accordingly.</p><p>The results reported in this study should be useful for entropic spatial data analysis. For example, in image fusion, a crucial question is how to evaluate the performance of a fusion algorithm. This evaluation is usually achieved by using the information entropy to measure the increase in the information content during the fusion. It can now be performed by the best-improved information entropy reported in this study.</p>


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