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With the continued proliferation of location-based services, a growing number of web-accessible data objects are geotagged and have text descriptions. An important query over such web objects is the direction-aware spatial keyword query that aims to retrieve the top-k objects that best match query parameters in terms
Many applications require finding objects closest to a specified location that contains a set of keywords. For example, online yellow pages allow users to specify an address and a set of keywords. In return, the user obtains a list of businesses whose description contains these keywords, ordered by their distance from
Spatial-Keyword (SK) queries, which are queries on spatial objects associated with textual attributes, have received significant attention in geographic information system (GIS) recently. Many hybrid index structures have been proposed to answer SK queries. To the best of our knowledge, however, few of them are
Numerous geographic information system applications need to retrieve spatial objects which bear user specified keywords close to a given location. In this research, we present efficient approaches to answer spatial keyword queries on spatial networks. In particular, we formally introduce definitions of Spatial Keyword
In this paper, we focus on the issue of the m-closest keywords (mCK) query over spatial data in the Web. The mCK query is a problem to find the optimal set of records in the sense that they are the spatially-closest records that satisfy m user-given keywords. The mCK query was proposed by Zhang et al[1]. They assumed
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