An Ontology-Based Information Extraction System for Residential Land Use Suitability Analysis
This work addresses the problem of automating land use planning for urban developers and planners, but it is incremental as it applies existing ontology-based methods to a specific domain.
The authors tackled automating land use suitability analysis by developing an ontology-based information extraction system to extract criteria from bylaw documents, and applied it to produce a suitability map for residential development in Regina, Saskatchewan, demonstrating effectiveness in generating the final map.
We propose an Ontology-Based Information Extraction (OBIE) system to automate the extraction of the criteria and values applied in Land Use Suitability Analysis (LUSA) from bylaw and regulation documents related to the geographic area of interest. The results obtained by our proposed LUSA OBIE system (land use suitability criteria and their values) are presented as an ontology populated with instances of the extracted criteria and property values. This latter output ontology is incorporated into a Multi-Criteria Decision Making (MCDM) model applied for constructing suitability maps for different kinds of land uses. The resulting maps may be the final desired product or can be incorporated into the cellular automata urban modeling and simulation for predicting future urban growth. A case study has been conducted where the output from LUSA OBIE is applied to help produce a suitability map for the City of Regina, Saskatchewan, to assist in the identification of suitable areas for residential development. A set of Saskatchewan bylaw and regulation documents were downloaded and input to the LUSA OBIE system. We accessed the extracted information using both the populated LUSA ontology and the set of annotated documents. In this regard, the LUSA OBIE system was effective in producing a final suitability map.