Abstract

Abstract. Many geoportals such as ArcGIS Online are established with the goal of improving geospatial data reusability and achieving intelligent knowledge discovery. However, according to previous research, most of the existing geoportals adopt Lucene-based techniques to achieve their core search functionality, which has a limited ability to capture the user’s search intentions. To better understand a user’s search intention, query expansion can be used to enrich the user’s query by adding semantically similar terms. In the context of geoportals and geographic information retrieval, we advocate the idea of semantically enriching a user’s query from both geospatial and thematic perspectives. In the geospatial aspect, we propose to enrich a query by using both place partonomy and distance decay. In terms of the thematic aspect, concept expansion and embedding-based document similarity are used to infer the implicit information hidden in a user’s query. This semantic query expansion framework is implemented as a semantically-enriched search engine using ArcGIS Online as a case study. A benchmark dataset is constructed to evaluate the proposed framework. Our evaluation results show that the proposed semantic query expansion framework is very effective in capturing a user’s search intention and significantly outperforms a well-established baseline – Lucene’s practical scoring function – with more than 3.0 increments in DCG@K (K=3,5,10).

Highlights

  • The increasing growth of geospatial data poses a great challenge to data discovery, access, and maintenance [12]

  • 4.1 Semantically-Enriched Search Engine Based on the presented semantic query expansion framework in Section 3, we developed a semantically-enriched search engine prototype for ArcGIS Online on top of the established Elasticsearch index

  • The first 10 queries are obtained from Hu et al [7], while we manually generate another 10 queries based on the topics and geographic coverage of the collected ArcGIS Online items

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The increasing growth of geospatial data poses a great challenge to data discovery, access, and maintenance [12]. In order to increase data reusability and facilitate geospatial knowledge discovery, many geoportals have been established to provide. User Input Query Place Name Recognition GeoEnrichment.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call