A Survey on Spatio-Temporal Knowledge Graph Models
By: Philipp Plamper, Hanna Köpcke, Anika Groß
Many complex real-world systems exhibit inherently intertwined temporal and spatial characteristics. Spatio-temporal knowledge graphs (STKGs) have therefore emerged as a powerful representation paradigm, as they integrate entities, relationships, time and space within a unified graph structure. They are increasingly applied across diverse domains, including environmental systems and urban, transportation, social and human mobility networks. However, modeling STKGs remains challenging: their foundations span classical graph theory as well as temporal and spatial graph models, which have evolved independently across different research communities and follow heterogeneous modeling assumptions and terminologies. As a result, existing approaches often lack conceptual alignment, generalizability and reusability. This survey provides a systematic review of spatio-temporal knowledge graph models, tracing their origins in static, temporal and spatial graph modeling. We analyze existing approaches along key modeling dimensions, including edge semantics, temporal and spatial annotation strategies, temporal and spatial semantics and relate these choices to their respective application domains. Our analysis reveals that unified modeling frameworks are largely absent and that most current models are tailored to specific use cases rather than designed for reuse or long-term knowledge preservation. Based on these findings, we derive modeling guidelines and identify open challenges to guide future research.
Similar Papers
Unsupervised Multimodal Graph-based Model for Geo-social Analysis
Social and Information Networks
Finds important news in social media posts.
Geospatial Question Answering on Historical Maps Using Spatio-Temporal Knowledge Graphs and Large Language Models
Information Retrieval
Answers questions about old maps using AI.
Research Knowledge Graphs: the Shifting Paradigm of Scholarly Information Representation
Information Retrieval
Organizes science knowledge for easier finding.