Journal of Spatial Information Science (May 2011)

The semantics of similarity in geographic information retrieval

  • Krzysztof Janowicz,
  • Martin Raubal,
  • Werner Kuhn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5311/JOSIS.2011.2.3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2011, no. 2
pp. 29 – 57

Abstract

Read online

Similarity measures have a long tradition in fields such as information retrieval, artificial intelligence, and cognitive science. Within the last years, these measures have been extended and reused to measure semantic similarity; i.e., for comparing meanings rather than syntactic differences. Various measures for spatial applications have been developed, but a solid foundation for answering what they measure; how they are best applied in information retrieval; which role contextual information plays; and how similarity values or rankings should be interpreted is still missing. It is therefore difficult to decide which measure should be used for a particular application or to compare results from different similarity theories. Based on a review of existing similarity measures, we introduce a framework to specify the semantics of similarity. We discuss similarity-based information retrieval paradigms as well as their implementation in web-based user interfaces for geographic information retrieval to demonstrate the applicability of the framework. Finally, we formulate open challenges for similarity research.

Keywords