GIR involves extracting and resolving the meaning of locations in unstructured text. This is known as geoparsing.[5] After identifying mentions of places and locations in text, a GIR system indexes this information for search and retrieval. GIR systems can commonly be broken down into the following stages: geoparsing, text and geographic indexing, data storage, geographic relevance ranking with respect to a geographic query and browsing results commonly with a map interface.
Some GIR systems separate text indexing from geographic indexing, which enables the use of generic database joins,[8] or multi-stage filtering,[9] and others combine them for efficiency.[10]
The study of GIR systems has a rich history dating back to the 1970s and possibly earlier. See Ray Larson’s book Geographic information retrieval and spatial browsing[20] for references to much of the pre-Web literature on GIR.
In 2005 the Cross-Language Evaluation Forum added a geographic track, GeoCLEF. GeoCLEF was the first TREC-style evaluation forum for GIR systems and provided participants a chance to compare systems.[21]
^Bordognaa, Gloria; Ghisalbertib, Giorgio; Psailac, Giuseppe (2012-06-01). "Geographic information retrieval: Modeling uncertainty of user's context". Fuzzy Sets and Systems. 196: 105–124. doi:10.1016/j.fss.2011.04.005. Geographic information retrieval (GIR) is nowadays a hot research issue that involves the management of uncertainty and imprecision and the modeling of user preferences and context. Indexing the geographic content of documents implies dealing with the ambiguity, synonymy and homonymy of geographic names in texts. On the other side, the evaluation of queries specifying both content based conditions and spatial conditions on documents' contents requires representing the vagueness and context dependency of spatial conditions and the personal user's preferences.
^Amitay, Einat; Har'El, Nadav; Sivan, Ron; Soffer, Aya (July 2004). Web-a-where: geotagging web content. SIGIR '04: Proceedings of the 27th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval. pp. 273–280. doi:10.1145/1008992.1009040. We describe Web-a-Where, a system for associating geography with Web pages. Web-a-Where locates mentions of places and determines the place each name refers to. In addition, it assigns to each page a geographic focus --- a locality that the page discusses as a whole.
^Himmelstein, Marty (2005). "Local Search: The Internet Is the Yellow Pages". Computer. 38 (2). Published by the IEEE Computer Society: 26–34. doi:10.1109/MC.2005.65. Every day, millions of people use their local newspapers, classified ad circulars, Yellow Pages directories, regional magazines, and the Internet to find information pertaining to the activities of daily life…