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Spatial Decision Support Systems : Principles and Practices - John  Degroote

Spatial Decision Support Systems

Principles and Practices

By: John Degroote, Ramanathan Sugumaran

Paperback | 30 September 2020 | Edition Number 1

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Although interest in Spatial Decision Support Systems (SDSS) continues to grow rapidly in a wide range of disciplines, students, planners, managers, and the research community have lacked a book that covers the fundamentals of SDSS along with the advanced design concepts required for building SDSS.





Filling this need, Spatial Decision Support Systems: Principles and Practices provides a comprehensive examination of the various aspects of SDSS evolution, components, architecture, and implementation. It integrates research from a variety of disciplines, including the geosciences, to supply a complete overview of SDSS technologies and their application from an interdisciplinary perspective.





This groundbreaking reference provides thorough coverage of the roots of SDSS. It explains the core principles of SDSS, how to use them in various decision making contexts, and how to design and develop them using readily available enabling technologies and commercial tools. The book consists of four major parts, each addressing different topic areas in SDSS:









  1. Presents an introduction to SDSS and the evolution of SDSS


  2. Covers the essential and optional components of SDSS


  3. Focuses on the design and implementation of SDSS


  4. Reviews SDSS applications from various domains and disciplines-investigating current challenges and future directions






The text includes numerous detailed case studies, example applications, and methods for tailoring SDSS to your work environment. It also integrates sample code segments throughout. Addressing the technical and organizational challenges that affect the success or failure of SDSS, the book concludes by considering future directions of this rapidly emerging field of study.



Industry Reviews

This timely book begins with coverage of basic geospatial data handling concepts, methods, and materials. ... places the development of SDSS concepts within a historical framework of development and treats important system components with a level of detail that is appropriate for students who may have different backgrounds or be at different stages of intellectual development. Coverage then moves on to demonstrate how these components can be assembled into flexible collections that are used to address particular types of applications. It is here, with the illustration of different component assemblages, that the book coheres by demonstrating how an SDSS can be implemented in the form of a traditional desktop system or using distributed, web-based services. This is done in a way that should prove instructive to both students and their teachers. I sincerely hope that you enjoy reading and learning from this book and that it will lead you to contribute new insights. I came away from it wishing that the book had been available to me many years ago when I was beginning to struggle with the SDSS concepts that now seem rather straightforward after having read these chapters.-Marc P. Armstrong, Professor and Chair, Department of Geography, University of Iowa

Sugumaran (geography) and DeGroote (geo-informatics, both U. of Northern Iowa) explain systems that are designed to help decision makers solve complex spatially related problems and provide a framework for integrating analytical and spatial modeling capabilities, spatial and non-spatial data management, domain knowledge, spatial display capabilities, and reporting capabilities. They cover evolution and trends in spatial decision support systems, geographical information systems and other components, software and building it, building a desktop system and a web-based system, applications, and challenges and future directions.-In Research Book News, booknews.com, February 2011

The major strength of this book is the wide range of references cited, and every part of the text is supported by references to a wide literature. ... [The book] provides readers with several relevant building frameworks and food for thought, especially in the fields of public engagement, planning, and GIS development.-Cindy Regalado, Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geomatic Engineering, University College London, in Environment and Planning


This timely book begins with coverage of basic geospatial data handling concepts, methods, and materials. ... places the development of SDSS concepts within a historical framework of development and treats important system components with a level of detail that is appropriate for students who may have different backgrounds or be at different stages of intellectual development. Coverage then moves on to demonstrate how these components can be assembled into flexible collections that are used to address particular types of applications. It is here, with the illustration of different component assemblages, that the book coheres by demonstrating how an SDSS can be implemented in the form of a traditional desktop system or using distributed, web-based services. This is done in a way that should prove instructive to both students and their teachers. I sincerely hope that you enjoy reading and learning from this book and that it will lead you to contribute new insights. I came away from it wishing that the book had been available to me many years ago when I was beginning to struggle with the SDSS concepts that now seem rather straightforward after having read these chapters.-Marc P. Armstrong, Professor and Chair, Department of Geography, University of Iowa

Sugumaran (geography) and DeGroote (geo-informatics, both U. of Northern Iowa) explain systems that are designed to help decision makers solve complex spatially related problems and provide a framework for integrating analytical and spatial modeling capabilities, spatial and non-spatial data management, domain knowledge, spatial display capabilities, and reporting capabilities. They cover evolution and trends in spatial decision support systems, geographical information systems and other components, software and building it, building a desktop system and a web-based system, applications, and challenges and future directions.-In Research Book News, booknews.com, February 2011

The major strength of this book is the wide range of references cited, and every part of the text is supported by references to a wide literature. ... [The book] provides readers with several relevant building frameworks and food for thought, especially in the fields of public engagement, planning, and GIS development.-Cindy Regalado, Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geomatic Engineering, University College London, in Environment and Planning

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