Sensor data are increasingly used in monitoring spatiotemporal phenomena for diverse applications such as flood management, urban traffic, air quality control, forest fire management, etc. Real-time modelling and representation of such evolving phenomena is fundamental for efficient and near-real-time decision-making processes. In addition to simple and local alerts about occurring changes over time at a given location, as is the case in Sensor Event Service (SES), the decision-making process may require more global spatial information, such as knowing if the monitored phenomenon is expanding or contracting around a given spot or if it is moving from one spot to another, especially for non-punctual spatial features. For such cases, spatiotemporal information should be computed over the whole set of distributed data from which the geometry of monitored phenomena can be assessed. This paper proposes an event-driven fuzzy rule-based decentralized spatial reasoning approach to compute spatiotemporal changes occurring in vague shape phenomena from distributed sensor data streams. Inferring local and partial spatial changes from individual nodes over the sensor network is prior to the computation of developing changes that the monitored phenomenon undergoes over the whole area covered by the sensor network. In this approach, we suggest a Fuzzy-Extended Spatiotemporal Change Pattern (FESTCP) to compute spatiotemporal changes about fuzzy regions. To evaluate our method, simulated case studies of ambient air pollution in Quebec City are carried out. The results reveal that the proposed method could provide satisfactory information about spatiotemporal changes in real-world phenomena monitored by a sensor network for a real-time decision-making process.
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Njila et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7f65bfa21ec5bbf07e71 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi15050194
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context:
Roger Ntankouo Njila
Mir Abolfazl Mostafavi
Jean Brodeur
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
Université Laval
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