Information or Misinformation?
It happens all the time in action movies: the police have planted a
homing device on the culprit they are pursuing. Having determined the
exact whereabouts of this nefarious individual, they rush over to his
lair and break down the door ... only to find that the lair is empty,
and
the criminal is nowhere to be found. Only a blinking red homing device
remains behind, mocking them. The police's information has misled them.
Any industry that utilizes location-based services (LBS) has
experienced this type of misinformation to some extent. Take, for
example, the plumbing service that wants to locate its field workers
while they're out on service runs. Often the precise street address
displayed for a worker is actually that of the center of a large region
of location uncertainty or that of the nearest cell phone tower, not
for the worker. The variance between the two locations could be more
than a mile.
This misinformation can be traced to the traditional reverse geocoding
technology that has historically underpinned LBS. Traditional reverse
geocoding works by analyzing a street network model database and
associating a latitude and longitude coordinate with the nearest street
network link. The location is then returned in the form of
human-recognizable addresses.
So far, so good. But these traditional methods become rudimentary and
increasingly imperfect when we apply them to coordinate locations that
have varying levels of uncertainty associated with their accuracy.
Uncertainties can be caused by a variety of factors, from the quality
of the GPS chip being used, to interferences like tree cover, to
whether someone is indoors rather than outdoors.
Regardless of the cause, the end result is always the same: misleading
information can result from the use of traditional reverse geocoding to
return addresses for locations that have relatively significant
inaccuracies associated with them. This becomes a real problem when
that misleading information is then used by the system for further
processing, or by the end user. For example, our plumbing service might
dispatch a worker to a customer site, thinking he is much closer to the
destination than is actually the case. Potential delays - and unhappy
customers - await him, due to the faulty information.
Enter Autodesk's Intelligent Reverse Geocoding (IRG). Coupling
intelligent heuristics with traditional geocoding, IRG returns address
results that better reflect the various inaccuracies associated with
locations.
IRG is the brainchild of Autodesk's location-based services division. A
spin-off of Autodesk's geospatial software division, the LBS group saw
an opportunity to apply its knowledge and experience toward addressing
some of the challenges the industry faced when communicating location
information. The following example illustrates the difference between
traditional reverse geocoding and IRG. Let's say that you'd like to
know if your child is on her way back home from a movie or is still in
the theater.
Traditional reverse geocoding returns her location as:
- "111 Las Gallinas Ave. San Rafael CA"
IRG, on the other hand, returns her location as:
- "Within 2 miles of Northgate Mall�
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Under the Hood
A closer look "under the hood� demonstrates how IRG arrives at this type of meaningful result. For starters, it introduces a set of defined rules that are used to determine how the geocoder should behave, based on the characteristics of the source coordinate information. Characteristics include (but may not be limited to) location uncertainty information and proximity to the nearest street network link or point of interest. Coordinate information converted by the intelligent reverse geocoder into a human-recognizable format can take the form of anything from a street address with civic number detail to a city name or a nearby point of interest. The format returned to the application is that which best considers the unique and dynamic characteristics of the source location.
The result of all this sophisticated technology is that users and applications alike are returned valuable information that more accurately reflects the integrity of the original source location information. And the more meaningful the information, the more actionable and usable it is to the user.
News You Can Use
It is this very quality of providing "news you can use� that makes IRG so valuable. Far from being technology-for-the-sake-of-technology, IRG has a direct impact on improving the communication of location information - and making misleading location-based information a thing of the past.
The availability of more accurate information, in turn, leads to better usability, wider acceptance and increased adoption of location-based services. This is good news for the wireless network operators who are looking to offer the next generation of these services - but it's even better news for consumers who have been looking for a compelling reason to use them.



