cobweb summit at the ogc tc dublin, 2016
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COBWEB Summit
OGC TC Dublin,21st June, 2016
Chris Higginschris.higgins@ed.ac.uk
Sta
Agenda
Time Who Slot NotesTues 21st June, 2016 1245-1300
Arrival
1300-1330
Chris
Welcome, context
1330-1400
MichaelK/AndreasM
German demonstrator
1400-1445
Barnard/UCD
Semantics the UCD way
1445-1515 Coffee 1515-1600
Ingo/Rob
Modelling progress
1600-1630
AndreasM
Privacy and security
1630-1700
Mike/UNOTT
Quality Assurance
Objectives
• Inform participants of the work undertaken under COBWEB
• Stimulate discussion around the more problematic and challenging areas
• Identify requirements for future work in respect of interoperability and standardisation
• Help me distill some takeaway lessons from COBWEB for the TC
Introduction to COBWEB
• Research Project: Funded (EUR6.5M) under the European Commission’s Framework Programme 7
• SME Targeted Collaborative project• Required to work within GEOSS
framework• Started Nov 2012, ends Oct 31st 2016 (4
years)
Big Picture #1
• Explosion in availability of smartphones and tablets equals great potential for “citizens as sensors”
• How to make the data gathered usable and reusable?
• What quality measures are needed?
• How to reduce uncertainty?
• How can crowdsourced environmental data aid decision making?
• How can our crowdsourced data be conflated with reference data and be deployed in standards based Spatial Data Infrastructures?
Big Picture #2
• COBWEB set out to research and develop a “generic crowdsourcing infrastructure platform”
• toolkit which can be downloaded and used in multiple scenarios
• Use and reuse potential of these data (cit sci) is significant but currently compromised by a lack of interoperability
• Large volumes of data are being created but exist in silos
• Useable standards either don’t exist, are neglected, poorly understood or tooling is unavailable
Project Partners
UNESCO World Network of Biosphere Reserves
Sites of excellence to foster harmonious integration of people and nature for sustainable development through participation, knowledge sharing, poverty reduction and human well-being improvements, cultural values and society's ability to cope with change, thus contributing to the Millennium Development Goals
COBWEB Biosphere Reserves
Biosffer Dyfi Biosphere
Mount OlympusGorge of Samaria
Wadden See & Hallig islands
COBWEB is not a collection of Apps…
A number of demonstrator mobile phone applications
– Exactly what, deliberately left open and subject to discussion with community
3 pilot case study areas:1. Validating earth
observation products2. Biological monitoring3. Flooding
Co-design
COBWEB Framework
Technology Readiness Levels (TRL)
TRL Definition1 basic principles observed2 technology concept formulated3 experimental proof of concept4 technology validated in lab5 technology validated in relevant environment (industrially
relevant environment in the case of key enabling technologies)6 technology demonstrated in relevant environment (industrially
relevant environment in the case of key enabling technologies)7 system prototype demonstration in operational environment8 system complete and qualified9 actual system proven in operational environment (competitive
manufacturing in the case of key enabling technologies; or in space)
Project characteristics
Mainly medium to high TRLs
High TRLs
By definition, lower TRLs
1. Commission wants production strength outputs that contribute to GEOSS development
2. An “SME Targeted Collaborative” project• 30% EU contribution to SMEs
3. Develop 'citizens' observatories’• Mobilise citizens
• Emphasised during Grant Negotiation
• “Co-design” fund established
4. A research project doing innovative work• Crowdsourced environmental data to aid decision
making
High TRLs
Key components at different TRL’s
• QA workflow editor• QA WPS/services• Conflation• Sensor networks• GeoNetwork/Portal• Middleware• Authoring tool/Survey designer• Apps• User management and privacy• Access control• Authentication
View COBWEB Portal
COBWEB Framework
The COBWEB version of GeoNetwork
• Open source implementation of the OGC Catalogue Services for the Web
• Input and storage schemas:– ISO19139, ISO199115-1
• Alternative output schemas available:– Dublin core– SensorML– DCAT– PPSR_CORE
• Supports registration of ‘surveys’ or ‘citizen science projects’
FieldtripOpen
FieldtripOpen - Customise your own app for your survey
FieldtripOpen - Customise your own app for your survey
FieldtripOpen - Customise your own app for your survey
Citizen captures data on their phone
COBWEB Framework
Classifying quality: Seven pillarsPillar Example Test NotesPillar 1 – Location Based services
Assessment of spatial accuracy – estimate from a mobile device and number of satellites
Tests often carried out on the mobile device
Pillar 2 – Cleaning Removal of junk data via an attribute text check
Very lightweight, can flag or remove malicious entries
Pillar 3 – Automatic validation
Analysis whether an image is blurry
Higher level testing, often used to assess ranges
Pillar 4 – Comparison with authoritative data
Use of a set of boundary polygons to check whether an observation is in or out
Wide variety of tests that involve comparison with what it known
Pillar 5 – Model based validation
Running a flood model Can be complex, and may also include question based modeling
Pillar 6 – Big/Linked data Querying Twitter via a hashtag for similar phenomena
Tapping into large databases such as sensor records and social media
Pillar 7 – Semantic harmonisation
Rationalisation of entries via an ontology
Attempts to recognise multiple entries of the same observation
Quality process web editor
COBWEB Framework
Conflation
• Combination of spatial data from multiple sources to produce a combined view that contains the most valuable data from the inputs
• Used in Quality Assurance • Used for data enrichment, eg, from sensors• OGC Web Processing Service interface used
SWE4CS
PublishingData
SWE4CS – introduces semantics
SWE4CS – Why bother?
• If a significant amount of Cit Sci data can be published to this standard
• It becomes more useful; its immediately understood by people who understand the standard
• The same tooling can be used and reused• Integration costs decrease
Sustainability #1
• Intending to open source as many of the COBWEB components as possible
• FieldtripOpen into OSGeo one option and looking at the incubation process
• SME’s leading this aspect of COBWEB
Sustainability #2
• Creation of a Citizen Science DWG would be / will be a significant output– as long as has community support
• Reliant upon new projects picking up on outputs, eg, followon citizen observatory’s
• Would like to, eg, via a hackathon, make benefits demonstrable and broadcast, but– SWE4CS currently a moving target– can we conclude with something like a v1 in
association with the Best Practice paper in Sept 2016?
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