Data processing: vehicles – navigation – and relative location – Navigation – Employing position determining equipment
Reexamination Certificate
2002-10-11
2004-03-23
Jeanglaude, Gertrude A. (Department: 3661)
Data processing: vehicles, navigation, and relative location
Navigation
Employing position determining equipment
C701S209000, C707S793000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06711497
ABSTRACT:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a method for operating a navigational system having a digital map base which is a reproduction of real geographical regions including data on geographical elements and to a device which retrieves and processes the data, such as an operating unit having a display device. The present invention also relates to a navigational system for a means of transportation, particularly a motor vehicle, having a device making-available the data of a digital map base and a device, connected to it, which retrieves and processes data.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
In means of transportation, such as motor vehicles, airplanes or ships, permanently installed navigational systems guide an operator of the means of transportation rapidly, simply and safely to a desired destination, without his having to plan a route previously and with much effort, or having to acquire appropriate map material and/or having to study it. For this, appropriate navigational data, based, for example, on maps of various kinds or road maps, are stored in the navigational system as a digital map base, for instance on CD-ROM. The navigational device uses, for example, GPS (Global Positioning System) to determine an instantaneous location and to calculate appropriate navigational directions leading to a predetermined destination. In this connection, the navigational data may include, for example, data on roads and ways for motor vehicles as well as more detailed geographical data such as hills, lakes, woods, land development and other topographical elements. More detailed data, such as restaurants, hotels, points of interest, may also be included in the navigational data.
The digital map base thus includes a reproduction of the real road network as well as the corresponding geographical surroundings. This data from the digital map base is displayed on an operating unit for the information of the driver via a display. The degree of detail, or rather the number of illustrated geographical features for maintaining clarity of representation in different situations may be selected differently. Thus, for example, on a general map, only express highways are shown, whereas an inner city map should show details up to residential development. This choice of details represented on the map substantially influences the clarity and readability of the maps produced on digital map bases, which is particularly important for illustrations in motor vehicles, since a driver should be able to grasp all the necessary data for route guidance at one glance if possible. In this situation, the map illustrations may not sensibly be produced according to generally fixed rules, but rather a relative weighting of the elements of the representation is necessary. For example, a general map of the Ruhr region would appropriately not be expected to include all express highways. By comparison, a map of Arizona, on the same scale, could sensibly include some very minor roads.
In the case of navigational systems for motor vehicles, it makes sense to separate the navigation module, which makes available the digital map base, from the devices making the display and also to develop them separately. For this, then, a predefined interface for access to the digital map base of the navigation module is necessary. This interface must make it possible to produce digital maps having good clarity to different scales in the displaying device.
Such interfaces are known, for example, coming from the firms NAVTECH (http://www.navtech.com) or Etak, Inc. (http://www.etak.com). These interfaces make possible access to the physical storage format of the digital map base. It is true, though, that different map bases are used in different vehicles. Additionally, access to the navigation module, such as for internal route computation, and for generating an illustration of a section of the digital map base on the display device, may present conflicts of access because of competitive access of different programs to a sequentially readable data storage (CD-ROM, DVD-ROM). Furthermore, the elements contained in the digital map bases are described “directly”, i.e. that an express highway is a road of the classification “motorway” along with a number. It has become apparent that standardization and unification via classification of map elements is possible on only a very unsatisfactory level that is not suitable for generating an illustration.
Making data available for display on the display device on the operating unit of a navigational system is frequently done in the form of geographically defined page frames. In this context, a page frame network is composed of individual page frames of a digital map. The page frame network is formed by subdividing the earth's surface into a network of page frames of the same geographical extent for the map, comparable to the grid squares of a map printed as usual. To make possible differently detailed effects, several page frames are usually stored on one digital map. A coarse map illustration in a general network is produced using few page frames that are each greatly extended geographically. These, then, contain meaningful geographical data only for rough orientation. By contrast, a detail network includes many spatially small page frames, and is superposed on the general network. In the page frames of the detail network, for example, residential streets and other geographical data only of interest in the near region are included. Therefore, page frames of different extent and different content may be present in the digital map base at one geographical position. These mutually overlapping networks of page frames are also denoted as different page frame levels. In order to obtain certain data, the user or the operating device must request a page frame of the degree of detail desired from the digital map.
The operating device retrieves a page frame and shows this on the display device. Furthermore, the data contained in the page frame are used for route computation. On the one hand, this has the advantage that a simple determination of the data to be requisitioned from the digital map base is implemented by simply calling up one page frame and transmitting all the data on geographical elements contained in this page frame. Furthermore, decoupling of the video screen section and data administration is achieved. On the other hand, however, a considerable disadvantage of the page frames is that possibly interesting data or information outside each page frame, or at the edge of the page frame, are not available, since these are cut of with the aid of so-called “clipping”, and are not transmitted. Also, data at the edges of page frames possibly have to be computed for route computation. Beyond that, the operating unit has no information of any kind concerning what is stored in which page frame, and thus cannot retrieve digital data from the map base in a targeted manner.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is the object of the present invention to make available an improved method which will remove the disadvantages mentioned above and will make available a more targeted access to data of a digital map base.
To achieve this for the method of the kind mentioned above, the present invention provides that a data directory of the data present in the digital map base is transmitted to the device retrieving and processing the data, and that the device retrieving and processing the data selects the data to be requested from the digital map base with the aid of this data directory.
This has the advantage that the application in the device retrieving and processing the data is decoupled from the physical data storage. Furthermore, the device retrieving and processing the data may retrieve data from the digital map base in a targeted way, without being limited to block-wise or page frame-like summaries of the data in the digital map base.
For instance, data in the digital map base are summarized in the form of geographically defined page frames and a data directory with respect to contents of individual page frame level
Binnewies Olaf
Fabian Thomas
Hessing Bernd
Jung Thomas
Nordsiek Walter
Jeanglaude Gertrude A.
Kenyon & Kenyon
Robert & Bosch GmbH
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