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Venue: Room B clear filter
Monday, June 15
 

1:00pm EDT

From Prompts to Protocols: Governing Agentic AI for Reliable Geospatial Programming
Monday June 15, 2026 1:00pm - 4:30pm EDT
This workshop introduces AgentLoom, a dual-helix governance framework for reliable agentic AI in geospatial programming. Participants will leverage Persistent Knowledge and Enforceable Behavioral Constraints to stabilize LLM outputs, ensuring scientifically rigorous and reproducible software development across complex geospatial workflows.

Prerequisite Knowledge & Materials:
● Intermediate understanding of programming
● Laptop with a modern web browser
● Ideally access to an LLM API key (details to obtain these will be provided) We will also provide a free-tier option

This workshop requires registration - click here to register

Abstract
The transition from passive, chat-based interfaces to autonomous Agentic AI has revealed a critical reliability gap in scientific software production (e.g. application development or programming-based data analysis). While Large Language Models (LLMs) demonstrate remarkable proficiency in generating localized code snippets, they consistently struggle with the structural requirements of software development. These models frequently fail to maintain architectural coherence across long-context development cycles, lack the "memory" to preserve scientific constraints across multiple sessions, and exhibit stochastic variability that undermines the reproducibility of complex geospatial code.

This workshop introduces a dual-helix governance framework designed to move beyond "prompt engineering" toward executable protocols for reliable agentic AI in geospatial contexts. The framework stabilizes agentic execution by decoupling the LLM’s reasoning capabilities from its volatile internal state through two orthogonal axes: Persistent Knowledge Externalization (auditable domain-specific memory) and Enforceable Behavioral Constraints (machine-executable protocols rather than suggestive instructions). The framework is implemented as an open-source software AgentLoom1 that implements a 3-track architecture (Knowledge, Behavior, and Skills). This serves as the structural foundation for building a project-specific Knowledge Graph that functions as a persistent, version-controlled and auditable repository of domain facts, architectural protocols, and validated workflows, ensuring that the agent’s reasoning remains grounded and scientifically rigorous across extended development and interaction cycles.

Participants will explore this framework and its open-source implementation that addresses five fundamental LLM limitations:
1. Long-context Fragmentation: Managing codebases that exceed the effective attention window of modern transformers.
2. Cross-session Forgetting: Maintaining knowledge over multi-day development cycles.
3. Output Stochasticity: Standardizing architectural patterns to ensure predictable, reproducible outputs.
4. Instruction Following Failure: Enforcing strict protocols (e.g., geospatial standards, or accessibility features).
5. Adaptation Rigidity: Facilitating the transparent evolution of a domain knowledge graph without the need for expensive model fine-tuning.

Learning Outcomes:
● Set up AgentLoom’s Knowledge/Behavior/Skills tracks for a geospatial project.
● Identify common reliability failures in LLM-assisted geospatial coding
● Externalize key domain knowledge and project rules into auditable, version-controlled artifacts
● Apply enforceable protocols (checks/tests/constraints) to make agentic outputs more consistent and scientifically valid
Speakers
DB

Dr. Boyuan Guan

Lead Developer, Florida International University
avatar for Dr. Levente Juhász

Dr. Levente Juhász

Assistant Professor of Geospatial Analytics, University of Florida
Levente Juhász is an Assistant Professor of Geospatial Analytics at the University of Florida. His research specializes in geospatial analytics, spatial data science, and OpenStreetMap, and GeoAI, focusing on geographic data quality and other pressing issues.
DW

Dr. Wencong Cui

Florida International University
Monday June 15, 2026 1:00pm - 4:30pm EDT
Room B
 
Tuesday, June 16
 

1:30pm EDT

Student papers B: Environmental & Hazard Applications
Tuesday June 16, 2026 1:30pm - 3:00pm EDT
Omada Friday Ojonugwa, Beihang Univ.: Multi-Sensor Fusion for Soil Moisture Estimation in West Africa using Ensemble Learning
Paul C. Dunn, Oregon State Univ.: Retrieval-Augmented 4D Visualization for a Digital Twin of the Ocean: Improving Multiscale Pattern–Process Analysis with Generative AI, Reinforcement Learning, and Heterogeneous I/O
Youshuang Hu, Univ. of Connecticut: GISc for Social Equity: Unpacking the Black Box of Multidimensional Impact of Structural Racism and Discrimination
Tuesday June 16, 2026 1:30pm - 3:00pm EDT
Room B

3:30pm EDT

Student papers D: Spatial Analysis and Emerging Applications in GIScience
Tuesday June 16, 2026 3:30pm - 5:00pm EDT
Hailey Richardson, Univ. of Alabama: Understanding the Impact of Spatial Relationship Definitions on Crime Clustering Analysis: Implications for Urban Crime Patterns and Policing Strategies
Youshuang Hu, Univ. of Connecticut: GIScience for Social Equity: Unpacking the Black Box of Spatial Inequality
Yuán Niú, Texas A&M Univ.: A Spatial Decision-Support Tool to Enhance Participatory Planning for Urban Heat Resilience
Madhukar Kuchavaram, Univ. of Florida: Spatiotemporal Forecasting for Proactive Vector Control
Tuesday June 16, 2026 3:30pm - 5:00pm EDT
Room B
 
Wednesday, June 17
 

10:30am EDT

Developing Your GIS Professional Ecosystem: Associations, Networks, and Career Pathways
Wednesday June 17, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
Join us for a session on growing your network and career!

Esri: Michelle Kinzer
GPN: Sid Pandey
ASPRS: Karen Schuckman
WiGIS: Eva Reid
GISCI: Jochen Albrecht
Wednesday June 17, 2026 10:30am - 12:00pm EDT
Room B

1:30pm EDT

Humans in GeoAI
Wednesday June 17, 2026 1:30pm - 3:00pm EDT
This panel session aims to engage both panelists and the audience in a critical dialogue about the challenges, opportunities, and paths forward regarding the relationship between humans and GIS/GeoAI. We seek to explore how to develop a human-centered vision of GIScience and GeoAI that is both socially responsible and cognitively informed.
Moderators
avatar for Shih-Lung Shaw

Shih-Lung Shaw

Professor, University of Tennessee-Knoxville
Dr. Shih-Lung Shaw is Chancellor’s Professor and Alvin and Sally Beaman Professor in the Department of Geography and Sustainability at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. His research interests cover GIS for transportation, space-time GIS, time geography, transportation geography... Read More →
Wednesday June 17, 2026 1:30pm - 3:00pm EDT
Room B
 
Thursday, June 18
 

1:30pm EDT

Education Session
Thursday June 18, 2026 1:30pm - 3:00pm EDT
Thursday June 18, 2026 1:30pm - 3:00pm EDT
Room B
 
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