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Geoinformatic surveillance for spatial and temporal hotspot detection and prioritization is a critical need for the 21st century Digital Government. A hotspot can mean an unusual phenomenon, anomaly, aberration, outbreak, elevated cluster, or critical area.

The declared need may be for monitoring, etiology, management, or early warning. The responsible factors may be natural, accidental or intentional, with relevance to both infrastructure and homeland security. This involves critical societal issues, such as carbon budgets, water resources, ecosystem health, public health, drinking water distribution system, persistent poverty, environmental justice, crop pathogens, invasive species, biosecurity, biosurveillance, remote sensor networks, early warning and homeland security.

The geosurveillance provides an excellent opportunity, challenge, and vehicle for synergistic collaboration of computational, technical, and social scientists.