Towards GeoSpatial Semantic Data Management: Strengths, Weaknesses, and Challenges Ahead Full text

Kostas Patroumpas, Giorgos Giannopoulos, Spiros Athanasiou
ACM SIGSPATIAL 2014
2014
Conference/Workshop
Abstract. An immense wealth of data is already accessible through the Semantic Web and an increasing part of it also has geospatial context or relevance. Although existing technology is mature enough to integrate a variety of information from heterogeneous sources into interlinked features, it still falls behind when it comes to representation and reasoning on spatial characteristics. It is only lately that several RDF stores have begun to accommodate geospatial entities and to enable some kind of processing on them. To address interoperability, the OGC has recently adopted the GeoSPARQL standard, which defines a vocabulary for representing geometric types in RDF and an extension to the SPARQL language for formulating queries. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive review of the current state-of-the-art in geospatially-enabled semantic data management. Apart from an insightful analysis of the available architectures in industry and academia, we conduct an evaluation study on prominent RDF stores with geospatial support. We also compare their performance and attested capabilities to renowned DBMSs widely used in geospatial applications. We introduce a methodology suitable to assess RDF stores for robustness against large geospatial datasets, and also for expressiveness on a variety of queries involving both spatial and thematic criteria. As our findings demonstrate, the potential for query optimization, advanced indexing schemes, and spatio-semantic extensions is significant. Towards this goal, we point out several challenging issues for joint research by the GIS and Semantic Web communities