Characteristics of Heavily Edited Objects in OpenStreetMap
abernard102@gmail.com 2012-08-20
Summary:
Use the link above to access a pdf of the article published with the Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI), a platform for peer-reviewed, scientific open access journals, in the journal ‘future internet.’ The abstract for the current article reads as follows: “This paper describes the results of an analysis of the OpenStreetMap (OSM) database for the United Kingdom (UK) and Ireland (correct to April 2011). 15; 640 OSM ways (polygons and polylines), resulting in 316; 949 unique versions of these objects, were extracted and analysed from the OSM database for the UK and Ireland. In our analysis we only considered ‘heavily edited’ objects in OSM: objects which have been edited 15 or more times. Our results show that there is no strong relationship between increasing numbers of contributors to a given object and the number of tags (metadata) assigned to it. 87% of contributions/edits to these objects are performed by 11% of the total 4128 contributors. In 79% of edits additional spatial data (nodes) are added to objects. The results in this paper do not attempt to evaluate the OSM data as good/poor quality but rather informs potential consumers of OSM data that the data itself is changing over time. In developing a better understanding of the characteristics of ‘heavily edited’ objects there may be opportunities to use historical analysis in working towards quality indicators for OSM in the future.”