Published 2017
| Version v1
Publication
A continuous scale-space method for the automated placement of spot heights on maps
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Description
Spot heights and soundings explicitly indicate terrain elevation on cartographic maps. Cartographers have
developed design principles for the manual selection, placement, labeling, and generalization of spot height locations,
but these processes are work-intensive and expensive. Finding an algorithmic criterion that matches the
cartographers' judgment in ranking the significance of features on a terrain is a difficult endeavor. This article
proposes a method for the automated selection of spot heights locations representing natural features such as
peaks, saddles and depressions. A lifespan of critical points in a continuous scale-space model is employed as the
main measure of the importance of features, and an algorithm and a data structure for its computation are
described. We also introduce a method for the comparison of algorithmically computed spot height locations with
manually produced reference compilations. The new method is compared with two known techniques from the
literature. Results show spot height locations that are closer to reference spot heights produced manually by
swisstopo cartographers, compared to previous techniques. The introduced method can be applied to elevation
models for the creation of topographic and bathymetric maps. It also ranks the importance of extracted spot
height locations, which allows for a variation in the size of symbols and labels according to the significance of
represented features. The importance ranking could also be useful for adjusting spot height density of zoomable
maps in real time.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/875890
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/875890
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE