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03 December 2008
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Personalised maps to help tourists find their way more easily
20 Aug 2008, 1508 Hrs

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London, August 20 (ANI): A scientist has built a software that generates personalised maps showing only relevant information, and carefully chosen views of selected landmarks, which could help tourists find their way more easily.

According to a report in New Scientist, Floraine Grabler at the University of California in Berkeley has built software to let people generate maps for places they're going that display just the essential information - projections of landmark buildings, along with clear views of the major roads.

Grabler's team at Berkeley, working with researchers at ETH Zurich, used a perceptual study of San Francisco from the 1960s to help identify which landmark buildings to include on a map of the city.

They found that landmark buildings came in three varieties.

"Landmarks can be semantic - for instance, a theatre is a cultural landmark," said Grabler. "There are also visual landmarks, with a colour and shape that makes them distinctive, and structural landmarks with a strategic position: on the edge of a square or at an intersection," she added.

These categories were used to give each building in San Francisco a rating on the basis of its score in each of the three categories.

Only those that scored above a threshold value were then displayed on the final map.

When generating a map, the user can choose to display those landmarks in one of two ways. They can be displayed as straightforward three-dimensional depictions, but that masks the buildings' facades.

To provide the user with more information, Grabler's team added an oblique projection option, which shows all visible sides of the building.

Although the buildings look distorted compared with a regular three-dimensional depiction, it is possible to see all the facades a building presents to the street, including both facades for a building on a corner.

But buildings depicted this way can hide some streets.

This is avoided by widening the map's roads, and shrinking the height of the buildings so that roads remain visible behind even tall buildings.

The user's final decision is to choose the purpose of their map.

On a shopping map, all the major shops become semantically important and are included on the map. A food map, by contrast, will show fewer shops but more of the city's restaurants.

Grabler's team has yet to test their maps on San Franciscan tourists, but she told New Scientist that Microsoft has expressed an interest in incorporating her ideas into Microsoft Live maps. (ANI)




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