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  2. Spatial analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatial_analysis

    Geospatial and hydrospatial analysis, or just spatial analysis, [70] is an approach to applying statistical analysis and other analytic techniques to data which has a geographical or spatial aspect.

  3. Geographic data and information - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geographic_data_and...

    [1] [2] It is also called geospatial data and information, [citation needed] georeferenced data and information, [citation needed] as well as geodata and geoinformation. [ citation needed ] Location information (known by the many names mentioned here) is stored in a geographic information system (GIS).

  4. Geospatial intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geospatial_intelligence

    Spatial thinking as applied in Geospatial Intelligence can synthesize any intelligence or other data that can be conceptualized in a geographic spatial context. Geospatial Intelligence can be derived entirely independent of any satellite or aerial imagery and can be clearly differentiated from IMINT (imagery intelligence). Confusion and ...

  5. Location intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Location_intelligence

    In business intelligence, location intelligence (LI), or spatial intelligence, is the process of deriving meaningful insight from geospatial data relationships to solve a particular problem. [1] It involves layering multiple data sets spatially and/or chronologically, for easy reference on a map, and its applications span industries, categories ...

  6. Data model (GIS) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_model_(GIS)

    Because the world is much more complex than can be represented in a computer, all geospatial data are incomplete approximations of the world. [9] Thus, most geospatial data models encode some form of strategy for collecting a finite sample of an often infinite domain, and a structure to organize the sample in such a way as to enable interpolation of the nature of the unsampled portion.

  7. GIS in geospatial intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GIS_in_geospatial_intelligence

    GIS is thus a critical infrastructure for the GEOINT and national security community in manipulating and interpreting spatial knowledge in an information system. GIS extracts real world geographic or other information into datasets, maps, metadata, data models, and workflow models within a geodatabase that is used to solve GEOINT-related ...

  8. Geomatics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geomatics

    The location is the primary factor used to integrate a very wide range of data for spatial analysis and visualization. Geomatics engineers design, develop, and operate systems for collecting and analyzing spatial information about the land, the oceans, natural resources, and manmade features. [18] [19]

  9. Geospatial metadata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geospatial_metadata

    Geospatial metadata (also geographic metadata) is a type of metadata applicable to geographic data and information.Such objects may be stored in a geographic information system (GIS) or may simply be documents, data-sets, images or other objects, services, or related items that exist in some other native environment but whose features may be appropriate to describe in a (geographic) metadata ...