
doi: 10.3390/fi4030807
Although the integration of sensor-based information into analysis and decision making has been a research topic for many years, semantic interoperability has not yet been reached. The advent of user-generated content for the geospatial domain, Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI), makes it even more difficult to establish semantic integration. This paper proposes a novel approach to integrating conventional sensor information and VGI, which is exploited in the context of detecting forest fires. In contrast to common logic-based semantic descriptions, we present a formal system using algebraic specifications to unambiguously describe the processing steps from natural phenomena to value-added information. A generic ontology of observations is extended and profiled for forest fire detection in order to illustrate how the sensing process, and transformations between heterogeneous sensing systems, can be represented as mathematical functions and grouped into abstract data types. We discuss the required ontological commitments and a possible generalization.
SSN Ontology, observation, algebraic specification, functional programming, integration, Information technology, semantic interoperability, Volunteered Geographic Information, T58.5-58.64, ADLIB-ART-4741, Haskell, DOLCE UltraLite, ontological commitment
SSN Ontology, observation, algebraic specification, functional programming, integration, Information technology, semantic interoperability, Volunteered Geographic Information, T58.5-58.64, ADLIB-ART-4741, Haskell, DOLCE UltraLite, ontological commitment
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