Authors
Laura Díaz, Carlos Granell, Michael Gould, Joaquín Huerta
Publication date
2011/3/1
Journal
Future Generation Computer Systems
Volume
27
Issue
3
Pages
304-314
Publisher
North-Holland
Description
Information systems built using standards-based distributed services have become the default computing paradigm adopted by the geospatial community for building information infrastructures also known as Spatial Data Infrastructures (SDIs). Government mandates such as the INSPIRE European Directive recommend standards for sharing resources (e.g., data and processes) with the goal of improving environmental (and related) decision making. Although SDIs present benefits to data providers in terms of data sharing and management, most geospatial infrastructures have been built following a top-down approach in which official providers (most commonly mapping agencies) are permitted to deploy and maintain resources. Because the mechanisms to deploy resources in these infrastructures are technologically complex, there has been limited participation from users, resulting in a scarcity of deployed …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
L Díaz, C Granell, M Gould, J Huerta - Future Generation Computer Systems, 2011