He established a theory based course in Geographic Information Science in 1982 at the University of Maine at Orono and was the lead for the Maine participation in the winning proposal for the National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis where he served from 1988 onwards as Associate Director and lead the operations at University of Maine.[1] In 1992 he was appointed to the chair in Geoinformation at Vienna University of Technology. In 2016 he became emeritus professor at the same institution.[2]
Data storage and query languages for Geographic Data
The results of Frank's Ph.D. thesis[3] were published in 1981 as "Application of DBMS to land information systems"[4] in the Very Large Database Conference and in the following year as "MAPQUERY: Data Base Query Language for Retrieval of Geometric Data and their Graphical Representation".[5] From this line of research resulted eventually "Towards a Spatial Query Language: User Interface Considerations"[6] (with Max J. Egenhofer) published 1988 again in VLDB and the DE-9IM standard.
He published two articles "Qualitative spatial reasoning about distances and directions in geographic space"[8] and "Qualitative spatial reasoning: Cardinal directions as an example".[9]
Ontology for GIS
Together with Sabine Timpf he published "Multiple representations for cartographic objects in a multi-scale tree—An intelligent graphical zoom"[10] and refined the ideas to "Tiers of ontology and consistency constraints in geographical information systems".[11] With Peter A. Burrough he edited a book collecting contributions on "Geographic Objects with Indeterminate Boundaries".[12]
Land Tenure
Andrew Frank was involved in a number of international cadastral projects, most importantly a project funded by the U.S. AID to introduce a cadastre in Ecuador.
Advisees
Andrew Frank "has supervised nearly 40 PhD students, many of whom are now leaders in GIScience",[13] among others:
Yvan Bédard (Professor emeritus, Laval University; first advisor Earl F. Epstein)
In 1992 he organized the Conference on Spatial Information Theory in Pisa, known as COSIT 0 [18] and then the first COSIT in 1993 on the Island of Elba. This conference has been continued as a biannual meeting with proceedings published by Springer in LNCS.[19]
At the Vienna University of Technology he served as head of the institute for Geoinformation till it merged into the new department of Geodesy and Geoinformation. He was deputy to the chair of the senate of the Vienna University of Technology from 2013 till 2016.[20]
He served on the editorial board of several Journals in his field:
IJGIS International Journal of Geographical Information Science [21]
^Andrew U. Frank (1981), "Application of DBMS to land information systems", Very Large Database Conference (VLDB)
^Andrew U. Frank (1982), "MAPQUERY: Data Base Query Language for Retrieval of Geometric Data and their Graphical Representation", Journal of Computer Graphics, 16 (3): 199–207, doi:10.1145/965145.801281, S2CID251672166
^Max J. Egenhofer; Andrew U. Frank (1988), "Towards a Spatial Query Language: User Interface Considerations", Journal of Computer Graphics, 88: 124–133
^Martin Raubal; David M. Mark; Andrew U. Frank (eds.), Cognitive and Linguistic Aspects of Geographic Space, Kluver
^Andrew U. Frank (1992), "Qualitative spatial reasoning about distances and directions in geographic space", Journal of Visual Languages & Computing, 3 (4): 343–371, doi:10.1016/1045-926X(92)90007-9
^Andrew U. Frank (1996), "Qualitative spatial reasoning: Cardinal directions as an example", International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 10 (3): 269–290, doi:10.1080/02693799608902079, S2CID16646139
^Andrew U. Frank; Sabine Timpf (1994), "Multiple representations for cartographic objects in a multi-scale tree—An intelligent graphical zoom", Computers & Graphics, 18 (6): 823–829, doi:10.1016/0097-8493(94)90008-6
^Gerhard Navratil, ed. (2009), Research Trends in Geographic Information Science, Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography, Springer, ISBN978-3-540-88243-5