An Empirical Study on the Names of Points of Interest and Their Changes with Geographic Distance

Authors Yingjie Hu, Krzysztof Janowicz



PDF
Thumbnail PDF

File

LIPIcs.GISCIENCE.2018.5.pdf
  • Filesize: 0.56 MB
  • 15 pages

Document Identifiers

Author Details

Yingjie Hu
  • GSDA Lab, Department of Geography, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
Krzysztof Janowicz
  • STKO Lab, Department of Geography, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA

Cite AsGet BibTex

Yingjie Hu and Krzysztof Janowicz. An Empirical Study on the Names of Points of Interest and Their Changes with Geographic Distance. In 10th International Conference on Geographic Information Science (GIScience 2018). Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), Volume 114, pp. 5:1-5:15, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2018)
https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.GISCIENCE.2018.5

Abstract

While Points Of Interest (POIs), such as restaurants, hotels, and barber shops, are part of urban areas irrespective of their specific locations, the names of these POIs often reveal valuable information related to local culture, landmarks, influential families, figures, events, and so on. Place names have long been studied by geographers, e.g., to understand their origins and relations to family names. However, there is a lack of large-scale empirical studies that examine the localness of place names and their changes with geographic distance. In addition to enhancing our understanding of the coherence of geographic regions, such empirical studies are also significant for geographic information retrieval where they can inform computational models and improve the accuracy of place name disambiguation. In this work, we conduct an empirical study based on 112,071 POIs in seven US metropolitan areas extracted from an open Yelp dataset. We propose to adopt term frequency and inverse document frequency in geographic contexts to identify local terms used in POI names and to analyze their usages across different POI types. Our results show an uneven usage of local terms across POI types, which is highly consistent among different geographic regions. We also examine the decaying effect of POI name similarity with the increase of distance among POIs. While our analysis focuses on urban POI names, the presented methods can be generalized to other place types as well, such as mountain peaks and streets.

Subject Classification

ACM Subject Classification
  • Information systems → Language models
Keywords
  • Place names
  • points of interest
  • geographic information retrieval
  • semantic similarity
  • geospatial semantics

Metrics

  • Access Statistics
  • Total Accesses (updated on a weekly basis)
    0
    PDF Downloads

References

  1. Derek H Alderman. A street fit for a King: Naming places and commemoration in the American South. The Professional Geographer, 52(4):672-684, 2000. Google Scholar
  2. Derek H Alderman. Street names as memorial arenas: The reputational politics of commemorating Martin Luther King in a Georgia county. Historical Geography, 30:99-120, 2002. Google Scholar
  3. Derek H Alderman. Place, naming and the interpretation of cultural landscapes. Heritage and Identity, edited by Brian Graham and Peter Howard, pages 195-213, 2016. Google Scholar
  4. Einat Amitay, Nadav Har'El, Ron Sivan, and Aya Soffer. Web-a-where: geotagging web content. In Proceedings of the 27th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval, pages 273-280. ACM, 2004. Google Scholar
  5. Maoz Azaryahu. Street names and political identity: the case of East Berlin. Journal of Contemporary History, 21(4):581-604, 1986. Google Scholar
  6. Maoz Azaryahu. Renaming the past: Changes in "city text" in Germany and Austria, 1945-1947. History and Memory, 2(2):32-53, 1990. Google Scholar
  7. Maoz Azaryahu. The power of commemorative street names. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 14(3):311-330, 1996. Google Scholar
  8. Daniel L Baggio. The dawn of a new Iraq: the story Americans almost missed. US Army War College, 2006. Google Scholar
  9. Davide Buscaldi and Paulo Rosso. A conceptual density-based approach for the disambiguation of toponyms. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 22(3):301-313, 2008. Google Scholar
  10. Paul Carter and Lawrie McKenzie. The road to Botany Bay: an essay in spatial history. Faber &Faber London, 1987. Google Scholar
  11. James A Cheshire and Paul A Longley. Identifying spatial concentrations of surnames. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 26(2):309-325, 2012. Google Scholar
  12. Judith Gelernter and Nikolai Mushegian. Geo-parsing messages from microtext. Transactions in GIS, 15(6):753-773, 2011. Google Scholar
  13. Michael F Goodchild and Linda L Hill. Introduction to digital gazetteer research. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 22(10):1039-1044, 2008. Google Scholar
  14. Milan Gritta, Mohammad Taher Pilehvar, Nut Limsopatham, and Nigel Collier. What’s missing in geographical parsing? Language Resources and Evaluation, pages 1-21, 2017. Google Scholar
  15. Christian Grothe and Jochen Schaab. Automated footprint generation from geotags with kernel density estimation and support vector machines. Spatial Cognition &Computation, 9(3):195-211, 2009. Google Scholar
  16. Linda L Hill. Core elements of digital gazetteers: placenames, categories, and footprints. In International Conference on Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries, pages 280-290. Springer, 2000. Google Scholar
  17. Yingjie Hu, Krzysztof Janowicz, and Sathya Prasad. Improving Wikipedia-based place name disambiguation in short texts using structured data from DBpedia. In Proceedings of the 8th workshop on geographic information retrieval, pages 1-8. ACM, 2014. Google Scholar
  18. Suradej Intagorn and Kristina Lerman. Learning boundaries of vague places from noisy annotations. In Proceedings of the 19th ACM SIGSPATIAL international conference on advances in geographic information systems, pages 425-428. ACM, 2011. Google Scholar
  19. Krzysztof Janowicz and Carsten Keßler. The role of ontology in improving gazetteer interaction. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 22(10):1129-1157, 2008. Google Scholar
  20. Christopher B Jones and Ross S Purves. Geographical information retrieval. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 22(3):219-228, 2008. Google Scholar
  21. Christopher B Jones, Ross S Purves, Paul D Clough, and Hideo Joho. Modelling vague places with knowledge from the Web. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 22(10):1045-1065, 2008. Google Scholar
  22. Yiting Ju, Benjamin Adams, Krzysztof Janowicz, Yingjie Hu, Bo Yan, and Grant McKenzie. Things and strings: improving place name disambiguation from short texts by combining entity co-occurrence with topic modeling. In European Knowledge Acquisition Workshop, pages 353-367. Springer, 2016. Google Scholar
  23. Morteza Karimzadeh, Wenyi Huang, Siddhartha Banerjee, Jan Oliver Wallgrün, Frank Hardisty, Scott Pezanowski, Prasenjit Mitra, and Alan M MacEachren. GeoTxt: a web API to leverage place references in text. In Proceedings of the 7th workshop on geographic information retrieval, pages 72-73. ACM, 2013. Google Scholar
  24. Robin A Kearns and J Ross Barnett. To boldly go? Place, metaphor, and the marketing of Auckland’s Starship Hospital. Environment and planning D: Society and space, 17(2):201-226, 1999. Google Scholar
  25. Robin A Kearns and Lawrence D Berg. Proclaiming place: Towards a geography of place name pronunciation. Social &Cultural Geography, 3(3):283-302, 2002. Google Scholar
  26. Carsten Keßler, Patrick Maué, Jan Heuer, and Thomas Bartoschek. Bottom-up gazetteers: Learning from the implicit semantics of geotags. GeoSpatial semantics, pages 83-102, 2009. Google Scholar
  27. Jochen L Leidner. Toponym resolution in text: Annotation, evaluation and applications of spatial grounding of place names. Universal-Publishers, 2008. Google Scholar
  28. Linna Li and Michael F Goodchild. Constructing places from spatial footprints. In Proceedings of the 1st ACM SIGSPATIAL international workshop on crowdsourced and volunteered geographic information, pages 15-21. ACM, 2012. Google Scholar
  29. Michael D Lieberman, Hanan Samet, and Jagan Sankaranarayanan. Geotagging with local lexicons to build indexes for textually-specified spatial data. In 2010 IEEE 26th International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE), pages 201-212. IEEE, 2010. Google Scholar
  30. Duncan Light. Street names in bucharest, 1990-1997: exploring the modern historical geographies of post-socialist change. Journal of Historical Geography, 30(1):154-172, 2004. Google Scholar
  31. Paul A Longley, James A Cheshire, and Pablo Mateos. Creating a regional geography of Britain through the spatial analysis of surnames. Geoforum, 42(4):506-516, 2011. Google Scholar
  32. Christopher D Manning and Hinrich Schütze. Foundations of statistical natural language processing. MIT press, 1999. Google Scholar
  33. Grant McKenzie, Krzysztof Janowicz, Song Gao, Jiue-An Yang, and Yingjie Hu. POI pulse: A multi-granular, semantic signature-based information observatory for the interactive visualization of big geosocial data. Cartographica: The International Journal for Geographic Information and Geovisualization, 50(2):71-85, 2015. Google Scholar
  34. Tomas Mikolov, Ilya Sutskever, Kai Chen, Greg S Corrado, and Jeff Dean. Distributed representations of words and phrases and their compositionality. In Advances in neural information processing systems, pages 3111-3119, 2013. Google Scholar
  35. Catherine Nash. Irish placenames: Post-colonial locations. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 24(4):457-480, 1999. Google Scholar
  36. Tessio Novack, Robin Peters, and Alexander Zipf. Graph-based strategies for matching points-of-interests from different vgi sources. In AGILE 2017, pages 1-6, 2017. Google Scholar
  37. Simon Overell and Stefan Rüger. Using co-occurrence models for placename disambiguation. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 22(3):265-287, 2008. Google Scholar
  38. Kari Palonen. Reading street names politically. na, 1993. Google Scholar
  39. Pauliina Raento and William A Douglass. The naming of gaming. Names, 49(1):1-35, 2001. Google Scholar
  40. Reuben Rose-Redwood, Derek Alderman, and Maoz Azaryahu. Geographies of toponymic inscription: new directions in critical place-name studies. Progress in Human Geography, 34(4):453-470, 2010. Google Scholar
  41. Reuben S Rose-Redwood. From number to name: symbolic capital, places of memory and the politics of street renaming in New York City. Social &Cultural Geography, 9(4):431-452, 2008. Google Scholar
  42. Reuben S Rose-Redwood. "sixth avenue is now a memory": Regimes of spatial inscription and the performative limits of the official city-text. Political Geography, 27(8):875-894, 2008. Google Scholar
  43. João Santos, Ivo Anastácio, and Bruno Martins. Using machine learning methods for disambiguating place references in textual documents. GeoJournal, 80(3):375-392, 2015. Google Scholar
  44. Rui Santos, Patricia Murrieta-Flores, Pável Calado, and Bruno Martins. Toponym matching through deep neural networks. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 32(2):324-348, 2018. Google Scholar
  45. Yi-Fu Tuan. Space and place: The perspective of experience. U of Minnesota Press, 1977. Google Scholar
  46. Florian A Twaroch and Christopher B Jones. A web platform for the evaluation of vernacular place names in automatically constructed gazetteers. In Proceedings of the 6th Workshop on Geographic Information Retrieval, page 14. ACM, 2010. Google Scholar
  47. Maria Vasardani, Stephan Winter, and Kai-Florian Richter. Locating place names from place descriptions. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 27(12):2509-2532, 2013. Google Scholar
  48. Thaddeus Vincenty. Direct and inverse solutions of geodesics on the ellipsoid with application of nested equations. Survey review, 23(176):88-93, 1975. Google Scholar
  49. Jan Oliver Wallgrün, Morteza Karimzadeh, Alan M MacEachren, and Scott Pezanowski. GeoCorpora: building a corpus to test and train microblog geoparsers. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 32(1):1-29, 2018. Google Scholar
  50. John Kirtland Wright. The study of place names recent work and some possibilities. Geographical Review, 19(1):140-144, 1929. Google Scholar
  51. Bo Yan, Krzysztof Janowicz, Gengchen Mai, and Song Gao. From ITDL to Place2Vec-Reasoning About Place Type Similarity and Relatedness by Learning Embeddings From Augmented Spatial Contexts. Proceedings of 2017 ACM SIGSPATIAL Conference, 17:7-10, 2017. Google Scholar
  52. Wilbur Zelinsky. Along the frontiers of name geography. The Professional Geographer, 49(4):465-466, 1997. Google Scholar
Questions / Remarks / Feedback
X

Feedback for Dagstuhl Publishing


Thanks for your feedback!

Feedback submitted

Could not send message

Please try again later or send an E-mail