Is there an ontology of geographical entities to visit?

Is there an ontology of geographical entities to visit? - Man in White Crew Neck T-shirt Sitting Beside Woman in Gray Sweater

I am a traveler of the kind that likes to log. I have this "ridiculous" race with a friend to visit as many country as possible, but we start running into issues about what is called a country. The basic idea is the more the merrier. So obviously, only logging existing countries is not enough. So we are considering to extend to territories (e.g. the Azores, French Guyana, Gibraltar, etc), or extend in the other directions where group of countries have a single name (e.g. Scandinavia, Maghreb, Indochina, Hispaniola, etc.).

What we need is an ontology of conglomerate of countries, countries, regions, and territories. The list doesn't necessarily need to be political correct. If in one language a name exists for two or more countries, even if the inhabitants themselves consider that an insult, it is fine for us.

Does such an ontology exist?



Best Answer

There are tons, and they're all different, because any list of countries beyond "full members of the United Nations" is open to interpretation. Here are a few of the better known ones, in order of increasing size:

  • The ISO 3166-1 standard defines 249 countries and territories. Getting on the list requires a fair bit of political recognition, so lots of interesting places are missing, although it's less restrictive than the UN list.
  • Travellers' Century Club, 324 countries and territories. This is the best known by a long shot, but not without its warts: lots of obscure islands, but larger countries get short shrift (Brazil and China are one place each, mainland Russia is only "Russia" and "Siberia").
  • Most Travelled People, 850 places, many of them states of countries etc. Annoyingly enough, the site is heavily paywalled.
  • ISO 3166-1's obscure cousin ISO 3166-2, which covers countries and all their top-level subdivisions (states, provinces, departments, unitary authorities, governorates, parishes etc), and thus lists over 4,000 places.
  • UN/LOCODE, which assigns codes for both places and transport facilities (airports, ports etc), and has over 82,000 listings!



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What role does ontology play in geographical research?

The constructed ontological system makes the components as well as the hierarchical structure of geographic scenario explicit, which can be used to store relevant data into each class to demonstrate the utility of our proposed framework.

What is ontology of the geographic domain?

Ontologies are regarded as a promising way to solve semantic problems by providing a formalized representation of geographic entities and relationships between them in a manner understandable to machines. Thus, many efforts have been made to explore ontology-based geospatial data integration and sharing.

What is geospatial ontology?

A geospatial ontology represents geospatial concepts and properties for use over the Web and is key for successful implementation of the Geospatial Semantic Web.

Do geospatial ontologies perpetuate indigenous assimilation?

Research on geospatial ontologies focuses on achieving interoperability by creating universal standards applied to data. We argue that universality through ontologies can potentially perpetuate homogenization of concepts, thus contributing to assimilation of Indigenous peoples.



Taxonomies, Ontologies, Knowledge Graphs, Oh My!




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Answer 2

Depends. What's a country? Very hard to define, it turns out. The CIA World Factbook has a list, and some people go by the UN list of member states. I believe that's the list Chris Guillibeau goes by (he's visited all of them).

If you're competing, and want to record it, Most Travelled People and Traveller's Century Club are the two main ones that I found when I got a bit competitive at one stage - I wanted to reach 50 countries by age 30, and ran into the same difficulties.

However, you start realising that everyone has a different view on what makes a country. Is Kosovo a country? I'd say so, people who live there say so, but the UN doesn't (last time I checked). Is Scotland? Some say yes, some say no. What about Sealand? Micronations that exist only one day a year, like Uzipis? It gets very tricky.

And if you're 'competing', the problem with MTP and others is that 1) you have to register, and 2) you have to pay. I'm not paying to be on an arbitrary brag list. Some do, clearly, and indeed, a friend is on MTP and claims to be the x most travelled NZer, even when he joined I'd been to more countries (he's since passed me, but that's besides the point).

In the end, it's best to make your own definition. My friend has as well, he counts what he calls Tier 1, 2 and 3 countries (depending on their independent status and so forth).

Don't forget, and this is what got to me - if you 'visit' a country, have you actually seen anything? I went to Paris for a few hours once, but I decided not to count it as I only saw the airport and a hotel. I've since been back. It's more important to experience the people, the food, the culture, the sights, sounds and memories than a number. However, I get it, I'm also driven by numbers, and I list them in my profile.

So what you're going to have to do is either get your friend to agree with you on one of those 'definitive' lists, and then use that as your reference. Let us know what you choose, and good luck! :)

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