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E-raamat: Research Agenda for Spatial Analysis

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Elgar Research Agendas
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-May-2024
  • Kirjastus: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781802203233
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Elgar Research Agendas
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-May-2024
  • Kirjastus: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781802203233

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This Research Agenda explores the future of spatial analysis, and how the field informs and challenges the policy landscape. A wide range of contributors from different intellectual communities address the problem of causality in geographic analysis, arguing that diversity is crucial for the future success of the discipline.

Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary.



This Research Agenda explores the future of spatial analysis, and how the field informs and challenges the policy landscape. A wide range of contributors from different intellectual communities address the problem of causality in geographic analysis, arguing that diversity is crucial for the future success of the discipline.



Chapters define and explore specific concepts and practices within the field, for instance data science and geosimulation, providing perspectives on the current state of the art of these areas within geography, and how they will shift in the future. In the first section, contributors cover the fundamentals of the topic, as well as various ways to handle the ‘spatial variable’, including the concept of space, the scale of spatial patterns and what those patterns reveal. The book then analyses schools of practice, including geographical data science, causality, generative modelling and machine learning.



A Research Agenda for Spatial Analysis will prove an invaluable resource for spatial analysts and geographic information scientists interested in learning about the direction of future developments in the field. Additionally, scholars and students of human and urban geography and geographic research methods will benefit from this crucial overview of the topic.

Arvustused

A thought-provoking volume, condensing pressing and interesting issues in contemporary spatial analysis into one compact package, and, indeed, offering so much more than agenda setting: a birds eye perspective on key challenges in spatial analysis, a conversation starter, and a manifesto that will appeal to students, researchers, and practitioners, alike. -- Rachel Franklin, Newcastle University, UK This series of thought-provoking chapters offers a fresh perspective on core concepts and application areas in the evolving interdisciplinary field of spatial data science, situated in the context of the new era of big data and machine learning. An invaluable source of inspiration for anyone embarking on new research projects. -- Luc Anselin, University of Chicago, US The editors have done a magnificent job of assembling insightful essays that present key themes in spatial analysis, such as scale, pattern, process and interaction, in ways that can be used to define many different geographies whilst enabling a synthesis of geospatial ideas to be established. This is important reading for everyone who has a concern for the application of geographical science to the grand challenges that manifest themselves spatially. -- Michael Batty, CASA, University College London, UK

Contents:

Introduction to A Research Agenda for Spatial Analysis 1
Richard Harris, Alison Heppenstall and Levi John Wolf

PART I CONCEPTS IN SPATIAL ANALYSIS
1 Linking spatial pattern to process: an old
challenge with new barriers 13
Trisalyn A. Nelson
2 Reconstructing the map 27
James Cheshire
3 Space: towards a global sense of place 39
Luke Bergmann and David OSullivan
4 How to solve the scale problem in spatial analytics 55
A. Stewart Fotheringham
5 Reproducible research, and research into
reproducibility: review and prospects 67
Chris Brunsdon

PART II COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE IN SPATIAL ANALYSIS
6 Geographic data science: a manifesto 85
Daniel Arribas-Bel and Anita Graser
7 Causal, not casual, spatial data science 97
Gareth Griffith, Gwilym Owen and Meng Le Zhang
8 Generative modelling and geosimulation 113
Clémentine Cottineau
9 Progress on machine learning applications in geography 127
Stephen Law, Yao Shen and Chen Zhong
10 Earth observation 147
Michelle Stuhlmacher
11 Integrated science of movement: crossing the
boundary between human mobility and animal
movement research 159
Urka Demar
12 Spatial interaction modelling: a manifesto 177
Francisco Rowe, Robin Lovelace and Adam Dennett
13 The neighbourhood: where Wilson, Schelling and
Hägerstrand meet 197
Ana Petrovi, Maarten van Ham and David Manley
Conclusion: spatial analysis the geographers art? 209
Richard Harris, Alison Heppenstall and Levi John
Wolf
Edited by Levi John Wolf, Associate Professor of Spatial Analysis, Richard Harris, Professor of Quantitative Social Geography, School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol and Alison Heppenstall, Professor of Geocomputation, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow, UK