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Overview of National Standards

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Title: Overview of National Standards


1
Overview of National Standards
  • CGSB Standards Seminar
  • C D O'Brien, Chair CGSB - COG
  • 24 January 2008

2
Why Standards?
  • Geographic information is a valuable commodity,
    and as such there is a market for this
    information. But the market can only survive if
    the recipient can use the geographic data.
  • Incompatibility can result from market forces
    that lock users to particular manufacturers
    systems, legacy systems and other causes.

3
Spatial Data Infrastructure Standards
  • A Spatial Data Infrastructure endeavours to
    bridge across application areas.
  • A high level of interoperability is required for
    both
  • data and
  • services
  • An SDI requires mature broadly scoped standards.

4
Explosion of growth
  • The field of Geographic Information Systems is
    poised for an explosion of growth.
  • Almost everything is in some way geospatial.
  • Conventional databases are including spatial
    referencing, and everything from accounting
    systems to word processors are including "Map"
    type data.

5
Too many incompatible domain specific Standards
  • There are only two standard voltages globally
    (100-120) and (220 to 240) so there is only a
    need for two electrical plugs.
  • However many countries have different plug
    designs. This was originally intended to protect
    markets, but it ended up limiting trade.
  • Geospatial standards need to be flexibleto
    accommodate diversity and generalenough to
    promote interoperability.

6
Underlying incompatibility
  • The difficulty is that very little mapping data
    is actually compatible at its core.
  • This stems from the different approaches taken to
    model the earth.
  • Data fusion from multiple sources only works in
    constrained situations.
  • This is a fundamental problem for a Spatial Data
    Infrastructure.
  • When an SDI goes beyond discovery,data
    compatibility is a major issue.

7
Data and Services
  • There are two broad areas of standardization
  • Standards for Services
  • Standards for Data
  • Both are equally important, but the data
    standards are more long term in nature than the
    service standards.
  • Services evolve more quickly than data.

8
Data Standards
  • Data standards describe the method by which we
    represent the earth.
  • The decisions we make in collecting data,
    establishing feature catalogues, geometry and
    metadata define the content.
  • The same data can be exchanged using different
    encapsulations into bits and bytes.

9
Representing the earth
  • There are three basic methods by which we
    describe the earth.
  • Imagery
  • Boundary (vector data) and
  • Sets of measurements (e.g. a grid coverage)
  • All three approaches share many aspects such as
    spatial referencing, metadata and a feature
    model.

10
The Last Generation of Standards
  • The CGSB-COG has been developing geospatial
    standards for over 15 years.
  • The initial standards were
  • a unique Canadian metadata standard
  • a map library standard
  • endorsement of the DIGEST military mapping
    standard and
  • endorsement of the BC SAIF geospatial modelling
    standard
  • These are all now obsolete and have evolved or
    been replaced

11
International Standards through ISO
  • Canada has been a participant in the ISO TC/211
    geographic information committee since its
    beginning.
  • ISO is developing a standards framework that can
    be used throughout the world.
  • But it is very general and needs to be adapted
    through profiles.
  • ISO standards are being endorsed and national
    (bi-national) profiles developed.

12
Geospatial Standards Development in Canada
  • The public standardization process in Canada is
    managed by the Standards Council of Canada (SCC).
  • The Standards Council of Canada is a federal
    Crown corporation operating under act of
    parliament, reporting through the Minister of
    Industry.
  • Actual standards are prepared by standards
    writing organizations such as the Canadian
    General Standards Board (CGSB) or the Canadian
    Standards Association (CSA) who are independent
    bodies accredited by the SCC for the development
    of standards in particular disciplines.
  • The area of Geographic Information is assigned to
    the CGSB.

13
National Standards
  • Accredited standards-development organizations
    may submit standards to the SCC for approval as
    National Standards of Canada.
  • A National Standard must be developed by
    consensus of a balanced committee representing
    producers, consumers and other relevant
    interests.
  • It must undergo a public review process and be
    available in both official languages.
  • It must also be consistent with or incorporate
    appropriate international standards and other
    relevant national standards.
  • The national standards committee for Geographic
    Information is the CGSB-COG (CGSB 171/1)

14
Geographic Information Standards Activities in
Canada/GeoConnections CGDI
Is P-member of
ISO
Is a Technical Committee of
ISO Technical Committee (TC) 211
OGC/TC 211 Joint Advisory Group (JAG)
Accredits CAC ISO/TC211 as Canada TWG to
CGDI Development Network
Standards Council of Canada
Is accredited by
Canadian Advisory Committee to ISO/TC 211 (CAC
ISO/TC 211)
CGDI Architecture Advisory Committee
Consortia and Academia
Is Harmonized with
Recommends Standards For
Canadian General Standards Board Committee on
Geomatics (CGSB CoG)
Participate in CGDI development
Open Geospatial Consortium
OMG W3C OASIS etc.
GeoConnections
Is a voting member of
Federal/Territorial Provinces Municipalities Priva
te Academia NGOs
Is strategic member of
Federal Standards
Other Standards Development Organizations
ANSI Accredited Standards Development
Organization
15
Areas of Interest for International Geospatial
standards
  • There are six areas of international interest
    with respect to the standardization of geographic
    information of concern to the CGDI. These are
  • ISO TC211 - Geographic Information/Geomatics,
    represented by the Canadian Advisory Committee
    (CAC) on TC211 through the Canadian General
    Standards Board - Committee 171/3
  • ISO TC204 - Transportation Information and
    Control Systems --- represented by the Canadian
    Advisory Committee (CAC) on TC204 through the
    Canadian Standards Association.
  • ISO JTC1/SC24 - Computer Graphics and Image
    Processing --- represented by the Canadian
    Advisory Committee (CAC) on TCJTC1/SC24 through
    the Canadian Standards Association.

16
Areas of Interest for International Geospatial
standards
  • Continued
  • ISO JTC1/SC32 - Data Management and Interchange
    --- represented by the Canadian Advisory
    Committee (CAC) on TCJTC1/SC32 through the
    Canadian Standards Association.
  • DGIWG - The NATO affiliated Digital Geographic
    Information Working Group (DGIWG) operating
    through the international Military Agency for
    Standardization (MAS) represented by the
    Department of National Defence,
  • IHO - The International Hydrographic Organization
    represented through the Canadian Hydrographic
    Service of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans

17
International Standards Status
  • ISO TC/211 suite of standards consists of a
    series of base standards. 24 standards, 3
    technical specifications and 3 reports have been
    completed.
  • ISO TC204 has developed the Geographic Data Files
    (GDF) for Transportation Information Control
    Systems in 2004, and 51 other standards.
  • ISO JTC1/SC24 has developed the Basic Image
    Interchange Format (BIIF) (ISO/IEC IS 12087-5).
    BIFF is based on the US work on the Imagery
    Transmission Format Standard (NITFS). SC24 is
    also involved in Simulation and Modeling that
    uses geographic information.
  • ISO JTC1/SC32 has developed the SQL/MM Spatial
    standard for handling of geospatial information
    in SQL databases.
  • DGIWG - DIGEST has been available since June
    1991. DGIWG has revised its suite of standards to
    align with ISO TC/211.
  • IHO S-57 has been available since 1992. It is
    referenced by the IMO for safe navigation at sea.
    S-100 will align with TC/211.

18
Canadian General Standards Board - Committee on
Geomatics (CGSB-COG)
  • Canadian Standards in the field of geomatics are
    developed through the Canadian General Standards
    Board - Committee on Geomatics .
  • Three associated committees
  • CGSB 171/1 which deals with National standards,
  • CGSB 171/1.2 which deals with Map Library
    Cataloguing (sub-committee to 171/1),
  • CGSB 171/3 which is a Canadian Advisory Committee
    on ISO TC211, and which advises the Standards
    Council of Canada on Canadian positions with
    respect to ISO TC211 standards developments.
  • The next joint meeting is planned for the fall of
    2008.

19
Types of TC211 standards
  • There are too many ISO standards to go through in
    detail. They have been organized by type
  • Guidance - Intended for the standards writer on
    how to produce a standard in line with the ISO
    TC211 concepts
  • Rules - Intended for the developer to build or
    customise information components (schema,
    registers)
  • Information Components - Description of
    information components and schema for use in
    systems or data products.
  • Services - Intended for service developers to
    build compatible services.
  • Reports

20
ISO TC211 Standards
Guidance 19101 Reference model 19101-2 Reference
model- Imagery 19103 Conceptual schema
language 19104 Terminology 19105 Conformance and
testing 19106 Profiles 19132 Location based
services - Reference model
Information Components 6709 Standard
representation of latitude, longitude 19107
Spatial schema 19108 Temporal schema 19111
Spatial referencing by coordinates 19112 Spatial
referencing by geographic identifiers 19115
Metadata 19115-2 Metadata- Imagery 19123 Schema
for coverage geometry functions 19127 Geodetic
Codes and Parameters 19129 Imagery, Gridded and
Coverage framework 19130 Sensor Models 19133
Location based services Tracking
navigation 19134 Multimodal location based
services 19136 Generally used profiles of the
spatial schema 19137 Geography Markup
Language 19138 Data quality measures 19139
Metadata - Implementation specification 19141
Schema for moving features 19144 Classification
Systems LCCS 19145 Registry geographic point
location
Rules 19109 Rules for application schema 19110
Methodology for feature cataloguing 19113 Quality
principles 19114 Quality evaluation
procedures 19126 Profile - Data Dictionary 19131
Product Specifications 19135 Procedures for
registration
Services 19116 Positioning services 19117
Portrayal 19118 Encoding 19119 Services 19125
Simple Feature Access - SQL 19128 Web Map server
interface 19142 Web Feature Service 19143 Filter
encoding
Reports 19120 Functional standards 19121 Imagery
and gridded data 19122 Qualifications/certificatio
n of personnel 19124 Imagery gridded
data components
21
Guidance
19101 Reference model 19101-2 Reference model-
Imagery 19103 Conceptual schema language 19104
Terminology 19105 Conformance and testing 19106
Profiles 19132 Location based services -
Reference model
  • The Reference Model gives the overall concept of
    the ISO suite of standards, including a new part
    on imagery, and a separate reference model for
    location based services.
  • The Conceptual Schema Language indicated that
    most of the TC211 standards are written in UML.
    It also defines some basic data types.
  • Terminology, Conformance and Testing (conformance
    clauses) and Profiles describe the form of
    standards.

22
Rules
19109 Rules for application schema 19110
Methodology for feature cataloguing 19113 Quality
principles 19114 Quality evaluation
procedures 19126 Profile - Data Dictionary 19131
Product Specifications 19135 Procedures for
registration
  • The rules standards describe how the TC211 suite
    of standards are to be used
  • The most important is 19109 Rules for
    Application Schema which defines the general
    feature model upon which all the TC211 standards
    are based.
  • The 19110 Methodology for Feature Cataloguing and
    the 19126 Data Dictionary standard define how to
    handle features.
  • 19135 describes how to build Registers.
  • 19131 describes how to build Product
    Specifications.
  • These are important to data producers within the
    CGDI. National registers will be needed.

23
Information Components
6709 Standard representation of latitude,
longitude 19107 Spatial schema 19108 Temporal
schema 19111 Spatial referencing by
coordinates 19112 Spatial referencing by
geographic identifiers 19115 Metadata 19115-2
Metadata- Imagery 19123 Schema for coverage
geometry functions 19127 Geodetic Codes and
Parameters 19129 Imagery, Gridded and Coverage
framework 19130 Sensor Models 19133 Location
based services Tracking navigation 19134
Multimodal location based services 19136
Generally used profiles of the spatial schema
19137 Geography Markup Language 19138 Data
quality measures 19139 Metadata - Implementation
specification 19141 Schema for moving
features 19144 Classification Systems
LCCS 19145 Registry geographic point location
  • Description of information components and schema
    for use in systems or data products.
  • Most elements will exist in schema or in
    registers
  • There will need to be national registers as part
    of the CGDI for elements such as metadata in the
    North American Profile (NAP) of Metadata.
  • There will also need to be cross
    registerauthoritative referencing.

24
Services
19116 Positioning services 19117 Portrayal 19118
Encoding 19119 Services 19125 Simple Feature
Access - SQL 19128 Web Map server
interface 19142 Web Feature Service 19143 Filter
encoding
  • Since the CGDI is an infrastructure it is largely
    service based, so at one level the ISO service
    standards are the most important for the CGDI.
  • However, the Open Geospatial Consortia (OGC) acts
    as the primary interface to ISO on services.
  • Services evolve much more quickly than do data
    standards. ISO defines some overall principles on
    Services, Portrayal and Encoding, and
    organizations such as OGC define specific
    services.
  • The OGC specifications, when they are mature, are
    processed as ISO standards.

25
Reports
  • Most of the reports that have been developed in
    ISO have been used as part of the standards
    development process to gather information on the
    initial status of an industry before a standard
    was written. In general they are of little
    interest to implementers or users of standards.
  • One report is of a very different kind. It
    addresses how qualifications and certification of
    geospatial professionals is addressed in
    different jurisdictions.

26
Industrial Consortia
  • The Open GIS Consortia (OGC) is a broadly based
    organization dedicated to open systems
    geoprocessing, primarily from an application
    point of view.
  • Produces Implementation Specifications based on
    an RFP proposal process.
  • OGC is currently introducing several of its
    Implementation Specifications to ISO TC211 to be
    processed as standards.
  • OGC has also adopted several ISO TC211 standards
    as abstract specifications.

27
Industrial Consortia
  • There are other industrial consortia in other
    related application areas
  • Transportation. Association of Canada which
    addresses the Intelligent Transportation System
    (ITS).
  • Synthetic Environment Data Representation
    Interchange Specification (SEDRIS) which
    addresses Simulation and Modelling.

28
Approach to National Standards
  • Endorse relevant ISO TC/211 standards.
  • The information component, and service standards
    are of the highest priority.
  • The rules standards are of secondary priority
  • The general guidance and reports are not directly
    needed except for standards writers.
  • (Endorsed standards can be obtained through the
    Standards Council of Canada or from ISO.)
  • Develop national profiles of important content
    elements
  • Develop national application schema and service
    specifications.

29
Implementation through Profiles
  • A profile is a subset of one or more standards
    that narrows the choice of options. The narrower
    the choice of options the more focused the
    profile is to a particular application.
  • A simple profile is a selection of options from
    just one base standard.

30
Complex profile
  • A more complex profile is a selection of elements
    from several base standards. For example an IHO
    S-101 ENC data set specification might select
    elements of metadata, cataloguing, spatial
    referencing, and a common spatial schema from the
    options allowed in the base standards.

31
International Profiles and National Profiles
  • The hierarchy of profiles is illustrated below.
    Internationally Standardized Profiles are the
    responsibility of ISO TC211. National Profiles
    are the responsibility of individual national
    bodies, who may establish their own national
    registration authorities. Private or industrial
    sub-sub-domains are the responsibility of
    individual nations.
  • Many profiles will consist of registers of
    information elements tailored to a national or
    industrial need.

32
Canadian Geospatial Standards
  • The CGSB-COG has recommended that Canada endorse
    the entire suite of TC211 standards, and develop
    its own profiles and implementation
    specifications.
  • The proposed set of national base profiles are
  • Metadata Profile
  • A national feature catalogue taxonomy
  • A set of predefined spatial schema
  • Quality measures specifications
  • Several predefined sets of Portrayal Symbology
    for specific application areas such as public
    safety.

33
North American Profiles
  • The CGSB-COG has engaged in discussions with its
    US equivalent organization ANSI INCITS L1 to
    develop common Canada/US standards.
  • This is allowed under an SCC/ANSI agreement under
    NAFTA.
  • Standards are parallel - identical text adopted
    in both countries.
  • The first topic for joint work is a Metadata
    profile of ISO 19115 (NAP).

34
Relation to the CGDI priorities
  • The four priorities of the CGDI are
  • Public Health,
  • Public Safety,
  • Environment and Sustainable Development
  • Relationship to Aboriginal Peoples
  • Standards issues exist in all of these domains.
  • Service standards should be general and cover all
    application areas, which means that capabilities
    such as Cultural and Linguistic Adaptability
    needs to be built-in.
  • Registers are need of information components that
    can be tailored to include information specific
    to application areas.

35
Standardized Data Products
  • Compatibility is greatly increased by the
    establishment of application schema for a set of
    base data products.
  • The schema for the Geobase data sets can be
    defined as a national standard.
  • In addition, other provincial, municipal or other
    common data schema can be established.

36
Standardized Registers
  • Registration provides an alternate, more
    flexible,manner of standardisation.
  • ISO TC/211 provides a registration mechanism and
    defines the approach to register many instances
    of information elements.
  • National registers are needed for
  • metadata
  • spatial referencing
  • feature definitions, and catalogues
  • portrayal symbols and rules
  • application schema (including neutral encoding
    such as GML schema)

37
  • Additional -
  • The Information Elements

38
The Feature Catalogue
  • The most fundamental element in a geospatial data
    standard is the feature catalogue.
  • Data that share common feature types can
    interoperate.
  • Often there is a dictionary of feature types used
    to build compatible feature catalogues.
  • An ontology describes relationships between
    features and makes it possible to bridge
    definitions

39
Spatial Referencing
  • The next most fundamental geographic standards
    element is Spatial Referencing.
  • This includes information about
  • ellipsoids,
  • datums,
  • projections, and
  • grids.
  • Tables of parameters for predefined reference
    systems are a common approach.
  • Alternately positions can be given by reference
    such as postal code.

40
Geometry
  • Geometry defines the structure of a set of
    geospatial data including the relationship
    between features.
  • This makes up the spatial schema.
  • The geometry of an image is a grid or other
    coverage type.

41
Metadata
  • Metadata is information about information.
  • It is needed to be able to discover and interpret
    data.
  • Metadata also drives services and is a shared
    element between most service interfaces and the
    data that is served.

42
Service Standards
  • Service standards address how data is
  • encoded and exchanged,
  • discovered,
  • accessed,
  • portrayed, and
  • utilised in applications

43
Encoding
  • A basic principle is the separation of "carrier"
    and "content".
  • The same data may be carried as different streams
    of bits and bytes over different media.
  • Certain encoding standards are appropriate for
    different applications, such as bit efficient
    binary, or self describing archive formats.
  • Some are more efficient, others are easier to
    process.
  • GML is becoming the "neutral" exchange format
    not too efficient, but flexible, easy to process
    and widely implemented.

44
Discovery
  • The first service that is demanded by users is
    data discovery, in order to be able to find
    available data.
  • This service is driven by metadata.
  • In Canada we have the need for multilingual data
    discovery, which means we need linguistically
    adaptable metadata.
  • Cultural and Linguistic adaptability is required
    to support French, English and aboriginal
    languages.

45
Interconnectivity of Discovery Services
  • Metcalfe's law says that the "value" of a
    networked service increases by the square of the
    number of connections on a network and this is
    driven by the amount of information available on
    the network.
  • This means that discovery services will continue
    to grow and interconnect.
  • The higher the level of interconnectivity the
    more that common metadata standards are required.
  • This is a driving factor for NAP.

46
Access to data
  • There are a number of different web based
    services that provide access to data.
  • The simplest is web mapping.
  • All that is needed for web mapping is a
    transformation service so that images and SVG
    renderings of maps are co-located.
  • The user integrates multiple sources of data
    with their eyes.

47
Other Web Services
  • The OGC has and is developing a number of other
    more sophisticated web services.
  • These are feature based.
  • The more sophisticated the service the greater
    the need for compatible data at both the format
    level and semantic level.

48
Portrayal
  • Common portrayal of data is one of the most
    complex services.
  • The ISO standard for portrayal is Feature
    Centred and Rule Based
  • Features are portrayed from a symbol set based on
    a set of portrayal rules driven by the feature's
    attributes.
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