Artículos de revistas
Development of a spatial decision support system for flood risk management in Brazil that combines volunteered geographic information with wireless sensor networks
Fecha
2015-07Registro en:
Computers and Geosciences,Amsterdam : Elsevier,v.80, p.84-94, Jul. 2015
0098-3004
10.1016/j.cageo.2015.04.001
Autor
Horita, Flavio Eduardo Aoki
Pereira, João Porto de Albuquerque
Degrossi, Livia Castro
Mendiondo, Eduardo Mario
Ueyama, Jo
Institución
Resumen
Effective flood risk management requires updated information to ensure that the correct decisions can be
made. This can be provided by Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) which are a low-cost means of collecting
updated information about rivers. Another valuable resource is Volunteered Geographic Information
(VGI) which is a comparatively new means of improving the coverage of monitored areas
because it is able to supply supplementary information to the WSN and thus support decision-making in
flood risk management. However, there still remains the problem of how to combine WSN data with VGI.
In this paper, an attempt is made to investigate AGORA-DS, which is a Spatial Decision Support System
(SDSS) that is able to make flood risk management more effective by combining these data sources, i.e.
WSN with VGI. This approach is built over a conceptual model that complies with the interoperable
standards laid down by the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) – e.g. Sensor Observation Service (SOS)
and Web Feature Service (WFS) – and seeks to combine and present unified information in a web-based
decision support tool. This work was deployed in a real scenario of flood risk management in the town of
São Carlos in Brazil. The evidence obtained from this deployment confirmed that interoperable standards
can support the integration of data from distinct data sources. In addition, they also show that VGI is able
to provide information about areas of the river basin which lack data since there is no appropriate station
in the area. Hence it provides a valuable support for the WSN data. It can thus be concluded that AGORADS
is able to combine information provided by WSN and VGI, and provide useful information for supporting
flood risk management.