1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a computerized graphical user interface, and in particular to a graphical user interface for temporal manipulation of spatial operations and information.
2. Background
Agriculture, like most fields, has been technologically transformed in recent years. The field of precision agriculture is one such area of technological innovation that has produced far-reaching consequences and affects for modern agriculture. Advances in crop management, and in particular, the management of within-field variation creates enormous benefits and challenges for site-specific farming and crop management.
Presently, crop management decisions are typically made on a within-field basis. Entire fields are no longer treated as if they were one homogeneous unit. It has been understood for a long time that soil characteristics (pH, texture, organic matter) and other factors such as moisture conditions or weed problems may vary considerably within a given field. In the past it was not technologically feasible to account for such localized variations. This is no longer the case. Instead of managing an entire farm or field based upon some hypothetical average condition, which may not exist anywhere, a precision farming approach recognizes site-specific differences within fields and adjusts management actions accordingly. For example, based on extensive soil testing, different locations within a field may receive different amounts of fertilizer.
Technological advancements make precision farming not only possible, but make it easier. Smaller, faster, less expensive computers are of critical importance in gathering, analyzing, and acting upon information about soils and growing conditions in a timely manner. Soil sensors, variable rate applicators, on-the-go yield monitors, and global positioning systems (GPS) that use satellite technology to identify specific locations within fields are the high-tech tools of the precision farmer.
Harnessing this wealth of technology requires sophisticated data collection and analysis tools, of a type not considered practical or possible a few years ago. Accordingly, prior art methods of collection and analysis of crop management information are antiquated when it comes to meeting the demands of precision farming. Much improvement is required when it comes to managing the wealth of data available in modern farming in order to realize the true potential of precision agriculture.
In particular, data or events that are spatially orientated, for example related to a farm or field location, are collected or created for a wide variety of agricultural operations, and require a method for organization, viewing, and editing that conveys information efficiently and productively, and that are user friendly. Prior art systems for the conveying of such data or events utilize a system of data selection and interface based on the method upon which the data files were collected and stored—commonly called a file based approach. Some systems organize the data in a hierarchy that provides a management structure for information that can be selected for display, editing, and the like. The hierarchy can be organized according to some spatial hierarchy, for example by farm, fields within a farm, and so forth. Common GIS applications such as ESRI's ARCView software provide methods for selection of spatial information contained in a database and/or file system and layering this information together in a base hierarchy.
The problem with such prior art systems is that while they may provide a very linear, hierarchy driven approach to information selection and editing, this may not be the best way for the user to utilize or organize the information that they collect or create. Commonly, users activities or operations are very time sensitive and require planning and review that is temporally based, not hierarchy or file based.
Another problem is that many users currently manage and enter information of a spatial nature in static electronic or paper based forms, which provide no automated management, filtering, etc. of the information. Often users keep a printed-paper calendar and can add manual notes to track temporal events that occur spatially. These details are lost historically and spatially, and provide little to no interaction or usefulness for future planning activities or reviewing previous activities without extra effort and manual review of hand written information, which is not efficient or convenient.
Thus, a need exists for a novel approach to organizing and presenting spatial information to the user in a temporal manner that is productive, efficient, and user-friendly.
An object of the present invention is to provide new and novel means for managing, viewing, and editing spatial information via a temporal-based graphical user interface.
These and other objects of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon reference to the following specification, drawings, and claims.
The present invention intends to overcome the difficulties encountered heretofore. To that end, a computerized graphical user interface is provided for temporal manipulation of spatial operations and information. The interface comprising a general-purpose computer adapted for execution of instructions, wherein the instructions include a graphical user interface, and data for use by the general-purpose computer and adapted to be acted upon by the executable instructions, wherein the data comprises a representation of spatial operations and information. The interface displays with the graphical user interface a plurality of temporal cells, associates the spatial data with the temporal cells for display on the graphical user interface, and manipulates the spatial data through the temporal cells.
In the Figures, is shown a graphical user interface for the display of spatially orientated data in a temporal calendar based management system. The system comprises a computer executable software package for use on a general purpose computer utilizing any conventional operating system such as Windows, Linux, or Apple based computer systems with a display screen that shows information in various functional windows and dialogs, a keyboard of a fixed or virtual nature, and a method for graphical selection on a display such as a mouse, stylus, touch pad, etc. Also required, is a database or file system to store information that can be retrieved by the interface mechanism and viewed, edited, and manipulated on the display.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the data is agricultural data. However, the invention is not so limited. Those of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the invention is generally available for use with all types of organized collections of computer hardware and software that utilize geographic data for the efficient capture, storage, updating, manipulation, analysis, and display of forms of geographically referenced information, for example geographic information systems (GIS).
The system utilizes a graphical user interface (GUI) of the type shown in
In more detail,
Furthermore, multiple calendar events can be selected, and the corresponding information displayed on the map and summary windows, including events that are on the same or different days. This, event-grouping option, can be accomplished by holding down the control key on the keyboard while making a selection. This preserves the prior selection and adds the current selection thereto.
As mentioned previously, the system allows for the addition of associated data.
The day view display for the calendar can also include a daily stats/info event that appears on the calendar as a temporal event, and displays summary information specifically for the current day only in the summary window when the calendar event is selected (see
The system provides additional features and options as well, including:
Month/Week/Day View Type Selection—allows the selection of the view type for the calendar, month views shows 35 days at a time, week view shows 7 days at a time, and day view which shows events for a day from 12 am to 12 pm.
Date Selection—allows the selection of a date to display events for, before, or after.
Calendar Menu—accessible by clicking the right mouse button on the calendar, includes:
As described hereinabove the calendar includes several options and features. General user instructions for these options are as follows:
1. The calendar is viewed by selecting the calendar view tab in the main window.
2. The area above the calendar displays the available tools for working with the calendar. The current date should be displayed in a selection in the upper right corner of the window.
3. The user can adjust the date to a time of a logged event, such as the month and year of harvest with a yield monitor and GPS receiver. The date can be changed by selecting the date with the mouse and either typing in a number or using the arrow keys on the keyboard to increment the values. Additionally, the user can select the down arrow beside the date values and a small calendar will appear that the user can use to select a new date.
4. Once the user selects a date range with spatial data in it, they will see a gray bar(s) with a year/product/operation based name. These bars are called calendar events and are based on a grouping filter that can be set to group data into events of the user's choosing as disclosed above.
5. Left clicking on one of the gray boxes, selects the event and it turns to a dark color to indicate it is selected. The Summary Window will update with a summary of the selected calendar event. This summary view is different than other summaries in that it lists different management items together and provides a total of the relevant entries at the bottom. The summary can also be printed.
6. In addition to the Summary, displaying the spatial map will display all the data for the selected calendar event, which can be mapped. For example, the map can show spatially all soybean or corn harvest data for the selected event or events, with one button press.
7. The user can change the resolution of the calendar between a month, week, and day views for better resolution of the calendar view. In the day view, a daily stats/info is also available that summarizes the data that was collected on that day, but no map will be displayed.
8. Two filter and grouping buttons are available above the calendar view:
9. A print button is also provided in the Calendar View that will print the current calendar that is displayed, and in the format that it is displayed.
10. Notes can also be added to a date on the calendar by selecting a day in the calendar, which should then highlight at the top in blue, click the right mouse button, and select the add event function. This will allow the user to add text notes that will only be available in the calendar, but provides yet another way for you to document your operational activities.
11. Lastly, the user can select to view more detailed information on a calendar event by double-clicking with the left mouse button on a calendar event bar or by clicking your right mouse button with a bar selected and selecting view/edit event from the menu that appears. This will bring up the view event dialog, which will display a tree of all the management items and datasets that make up the selected event. Most management items can even be edited from this view, except for Farm and Field.
The system uses the following protocol to generate calendar events. In the preferred embodiment the code is written in C++, other suitable or similar programming languages can be used. All the calendar events contain a start date, an end date, and an event type. The current list of event types has the following definition:
enum EventTypes
MultiDay event is built dynamically from multiple selected dates in the calendar and is a merging of all DatasetDayEvents for each of the selected day events.
The DatasetEvent and DatasetDayEvent are generated automatically from the timestamp attribute (provided it is available) whenever a dataset is saved (whether it be through the spp, import, or whatever else). The difference between the two is that the start and end dates for the DatasetEvent are the earliest and latest sample timestamp from a “load”, but there may be multiple DatasetDayEvents for a load, if the data was collected over multiple days in this case the start and end dates will be the earliest and latest sample timestamp within each day for the “load”. Note also that there is special “accumulating” of the spatial summary to include totals/averages for each day for a load (when the timestamp attribute is available) in addition to the normal spatial summary for the entire load, which are used specifically for the purpose of the calendar.
The FileInfo event is also generated when reading files from the preprocessor, and it is just the event of when a file was read, and is linked to the info in the file history table. UserAssocDataEvent is linked to “associated data” that you manually add such as notes/reminders. These events all have corresponding records in the “calendar event table” in the database.
The ALD_CalendarManager generates the other event types dynamically when data is requested for the calendar window.
FileGroup—is made up by combining all the file information for events that occur on the same day.
Datasets Block—is made from combining dataset events from datasets that are of similar content (defined by grouping criteria) (i.e. all soybean harvest datasets from a farm may be grouped together).
LogDatasetsDayEvent—is made from combining dataset day events from the same day.
JobsEvent—is made from the data in the job table.
A further embodiment of the invention comprises the ability to created jobs and tasks. The organization of the system allows for forward-looking operational planning through the use of two types of user-initiated activities—jobs and tasks. A job is defined as a grouping of one or more tasks that user plans to perform during a certain time span. A task is defined as one or more operations that are planned to occur in a specific spatial location, and will be associated with actual/logged data upon the occurrence of the operation or event spatially.
The purpose of jobs and tasks is to provide planning and tracking of operations that will occur during the crop production cycle. An example would be planning of spring planting for an entire farm(s). The user would first write all the planting prescriptions for all the fields that will be planted, then create a job called “Spring 2006 Planting” and then add tasks for each field the user created a prescription for. The tasks are all associated with the Job—Spring 2006 Planting.
The user now has a record of the plan for Spring 2006 planting, and if the user logs as-applied data with a monitor system and reads the data into the system, the actual data will link up with the planned data and can be viewed in a summary so that user can compare planned versus actual results. Using jobs, the user can also export all the assigned tasks at one time to the field device. Thus, if the user assigned 50 tasks (fields) to a job all the prescriptions, boundaries, and setup information is transferred all in one simple process.
Jobs and tasks are also shown in the calendar view. The planned time span of the job will be displayed and when the job event is selected in the calendar, a summary is displayed that list all the tasks that are assigned to the job and various properties of those tasks. The actual data that is logged and related to the job and task will also be displayed in the calendar as its own event, based on the grouping and filtering that was selected for the calendar view. This allows for viewing what was planned for the job versus the actual results of the operations represented by the job.
Based on the foregoing, the present invention substantially eliminates the problems associated with the prior art, and presents a number of advantages and advancements thereof.
The calendar display can be filtered to show only specific information from the database or file system for a selected event. It can also be setup to group selected information from two categories of information—management items or properties. Organized in this manner, the system displays the GUI in many different ways.
Selection of events in the calendar-based GUI can load the spatial data from the attached database or file system for visualization of the information, selection, or the data can be directly mapped to a mapping window for display and editing of spatial information. Selected events in the calendar can also display a tabular summary of information defined by the event, such as averages, minimums/maximums, and totals for an event.
Metadata contained in an event in the calendar can also be edited as appropriate for the type of spatial information it contains. Manually entered notes can also be added to the calendar and defined with event spans for display on the calendar and storage in the database or file system.
The calendar-based GUI can also be used as a planning tool. Planning can occur in several forms:
Appointments for spatial operations that are booked in advance. An example would be to plan to apply a certain chemical to a customer's field or to repair a gas line at a specific spatial location.
Preplan work to occur in a spatial area. For example, generate a prescription for a certain application rate in a spatial area and then define a time span, thus event, for when this application should occur.
Events can automatically be generated based on criteria linked to the occurrence of a spatial operation. For example if you scouted a crop for pests then an event to re-scout that crop 3 weeks from the last event occurrence would be added to the system and displayed on the calendar interface as a reminder that a spatial activity needed to occur on a certain date or with a certain time span.
The planning examples listed above could then also take the form of providing a warning/reminder to the user in various forms, such as popping up a message on the users screen to announce a planned event that needs to be executed that is approaching, time and date wise. Such a warning could also be broadcast via the internet to Microsoft SPOT enabled devices, through cellular networks, or other wired or wireless transmission methods to an electronic device that can display the reminder of an impending spatial operation that has been planned.
Additional information and editing could occur via the calendar-based GUI other than just the editing of metadata discussed in examples of this embodiment. Examples of additional editing could include setting resource tracking information, entering expense/income values that correspond to events, etc.
Spatial data management and integration is another key aspect of what is claimed in this embodiment, specifically in how data is managed and updated. When information is created or processed into the system, DatasetEvents and DatasetDayEvents are generated based on the temporal data contained in information being processed or that is manually defined by a user when inputting data into the database or file system that does not contain temporal data. Similar events are created for notes that are added. Any information being processed into the system gets a calendar event created for it that tracks the temporal aspects and relationships of information read into the database or file system. Event tracking for input and output files can also be created and managed or displayed. Events are also created for jobs/tasks items, based on the defined operating span of each and displayed in the calendar GUI to indicate what jobs/tasks are planned for a spatial region(s) for a temporal span.
Another part of the management aspect of the calendar interface is that as new information is processed over time that relates to a temporal event in the calendar, the system will verify links to related data via metadata information and temporal spans to add new information automatically to an event to provide an updated map or summary display that includes the new information for the event, automatically without user intervention.
The foregoing description and drawings comprise illustrative embodiments of the present inventions. The foregoing embodiments and the methods described herein may vary based on the ability, experience, and preference of those skilled in the art. Merely listing the steps of the method in a certain order does not constitute any limitation on the order of the steps of the method. The foregoing description and drawings merely explain and illustrate the invention, and the invention is not limited thereto, except insofar as the claims are so limited. Those skilled in the art that have the disclosure before them will be able to make modifications and variations therein without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, the temporal and spatial data, information, and events utilized by the graphical user interface can be exported or imported to and from multiple computing devices, such as mobile devices or handheld computing devices. The system provides for export and import operations to synchronize multiple computing devices.
Priority is hereby claimed to U.S. Provisional Patent No. 60/591,706 filed on Jul. 28, 2004, and is incorporated herein by reference hereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60591706 | Jul 2004 | US |