67,689 research outputs found
Does land use and landscape contribute to self-harm? A sustainability cities framework
Self-harm has become one of the leading causes of mortality in developed countries.
The overall rate for suicide in Canada is 11.3 per 100,000 according to Statistics Canada in 2015.
Between 2000 and 2007 the lowest rates of suicide in Canada were in Ontario, one of the most
urbanized regions in Canada. However, the interaction between land use, landscape and self-harm
has not been significantly studied for urban cores. It is thus of relevance to understand the impacts of
land-use and landscape on suicidal behavior. This paper takes a spatial analytical approach to assess
the occurrence of self-harm along one of the densest urban cores in the country: Toronto. Individual
self-harm data was gathered by the National Ambulatory Care System (NACRS) and geocoded into
census tract divisions. Toronto’s urban landscape is quantified at spatial level through the calculation
of its land use at di erent levels: (i) land use type, (ii) sprawl metrics relating to (a) dispersion and
(b) sprawl/mix incidence; (iii) fragmentation metrics of (a) urban fragmentation and (b) density and
(iv) demographics of (a) income and (b) age. A stepwise regression is built to understand the most
influential factors leading to self-harm from this selection generating an explanatory model.This research was supported by the Canadian Institutes of
Health Research Strategic Team Grant in Applied Injury Research # TIR-103946 and the Ontario Neurotrauma
Foundation grantinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Towards a Scalable Dynamic Spatial Database System
With the rise of GPS-enabled smartphones and other similar mobile devices,
massive amounts of location data are available. However, no scalable solutions
for soft real-time spatial queries on large sets of moving objects have yet
emerged. In this paper we explore and measure the limits of actual algorithms
and implementations regarding different application scenarios. And finally we
propose a novel distributed architecture to solve the scalability issues.Comment: (2012
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Supporting Story Synthesis: Bridging the Gap between Visual Analytics and Storytelling
Visual analytics usually deals with complex data and uses sophisticated algorithmic, visual, and interactive techniques. Findings of the analysis often need to be communicated to an audience that lacks visual analytics expertise. This requires analysis outcomes to be presented in simpler ways than that are typically used in visual analytics systems. However, not only analytical visualizations may be too complex for target audience but also the information that needs to be presented. Hence, there exists a gap on the path from obtaining analysis findings to communicating them, which involves two aspects: information and display complexity. We propose a general framework where data analysis and result presentation are linked by story synthesis, in which the analyst creates and organizes story contents. Differently, from the previous research, where analytic findings are represented by stored display states, we treat findings as data constructs. In story synthesis, findings are selected, assembled, and arranged in views using meaningful layouts that take into account the structure of information and inherent properties of its components. We propose a workflow for applying the proposed framework in designing visual analytics systems and demonstrate the generality of the approach by applying it to two domains, social media, and movement analysis
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