Geographical Information Systems An Overview
Geographical Information Systems An Overview
Abstract
For every question that the business world has asked there are answers in the
shape of information systems (IS for data mining, for statistical analysis, for
decisions support and many others). For the question “where?” the geographical
information systems appeared. GIS are a distinct class of information systems that
collect, store, process, analyze, create and display data that are identified starting
from its geographical location.
Key words: GIS, geographical, system, information
Introduction to GIS concepts
It seems that the literature does not offer a standard definition for the
Geographical Information System (GIS) concept. The Handling Geographic
Information Report (which is a standard creation body) describes GIS as an
information system where data has a geographical dimension [Hawkins, 1994, p.4].
What we can understand from this idea is that data can be bound to a very specific
point from a geographical map.
An interesting way to define this concept is offered by Meeks and Dasgupta
[Meeks and Dasgupta, 2005, p.179]. In their opinion GIS is a system that include
components as hardware, software, data, connectivity, procedures and operators.
GIS = f {Hardware, Software, Date, Connectivity, Procedures, Operators} where,
- Hardware – all the hardware components of a system;
- Software – operation systems, applications and tools;
- Date – all kind of data;
- Connectivity – component that connect GIS with data sources and other support
application;
- Procedures – processes, algorithms, methods necessary in order to use a GIS;
- Operators – annalists, researchers, users of GIS.
GIS are systems used for storage, extraction, mapping and analyzing geographical
data. GIS are metaphorical described as the 21st Century’s datasheets. These systems
became extremely important in many fields: starting with geography and geology,
continuing with business, healthcare or criminology and finishing (but not ending) with
governing (GIS is an important component of a e-Government plan).
The main advantage of a GIS system is that all the complex data that have been
displayed in tables, datasheets, balance scorecard and other technical reports until now,
are displayed in graphical manner very easy to understand and interpret. If we think just
for a moment as a risk manager we understand that such a system would help me to
simulate and understand whether conditions in order to better identify nature risks for a
project.
Modus operandi – the system, its strengths and limitations
We have seen that a GIS is a system based on the utilization of the electronic
calculation techniques in order to collect, manage, process, analyze and display data
spatially (geo-)referenced. With other words, a GIS can be described as a system able to
memorize and use data that describes zones from a geographical map. Actually, this is
its novelty: the possibility to work with spatial data (data that can be referred through
geographical coordinates – latitude, longitude).
The table below present the way that a spatial data can be referred in a data base:
Table 1 An example of a data base with spatial components
Client Name Address City Postal Latitude Longitude
cod code (fictive) (fictive)
001 Alfa Carol 1 Iaşi 700505 -84.1234 34.5678
002 Beta Catargi 4 Suceava 725500 -84.2345 35.6789
Although there are many such definitions, GIS has to perform at least four
functions [Kropla, 2005, p.25]:
- Data manipulation;
- Analytical capabilities;
- Spatially referencing the data;
- The possibility to store and to extract geographical information.
GIS works with three types of data entity: points, lines and zones. The way that
these entities are represented in a geographical information system is presented in the
figure below:
Points – e.g. peaks, entrance on caves
Lines – e.g. rivers, streets
Zones – e.g. land properties, delimitation of types of forests