951 research outputs found

    Evaluating the efficiency of typographic design : gender and expertise variation

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    Although the efficiency of label placement algorithms has been studied extensively, few studies considered the influence of the label designs on the efficiency of map readers. Labels are one of the most important elements on the map as they can provide more information than other symbols can. The design of the labels does have to stress the theme, shape and functionality of the associated objects, which results in a more efficient interpretation of the map content by the user. How the label designs can enhance the map readers' efficiency (and thus the quality of the maps themselves) is the main objective of this study. A user study was conducted in which the participants were asked to locate a target label on a map. Different label designs were implemented across the trials. The participants' reactions times were registered to measure their efficiency and statistically analysed using a one-way ANOVA. Two different users' characteristics were considered: gender and expertise. Related to the size, shape, orientation and texture of the labels, a number of significant differences (P<0.05) and trends were located. Differences in efficiency between males and females, on the one hand, and between novices and experts, on the other hand, were also described statistically. Consequently, recommendations can be formulated regarding the design of labels in order to obtain more efficient maps, keeping in mind the map users' characteristics

    Polyvocal Portolans: Nautical Charts and Hybrid Maritime Cultures In Early Modern East Asia

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    Argues for the development of a late sixteenth and early seventeenth century Japanese cartographic practice that reflected a combination of traditions that were commonly practiced by seafarers traversing East Asian waters.Early Modern Japan Networ

    Assessing visual variables of cartographic text design

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    This dissertation presents a series of usability studies, which examines the usability of the application of visual variables on cartographic text. Labels’ size, shape, orientation, texture, and colour were tested. The study also examines different lettering systems and their impact on cartographic text design. The obtained users’ preference, time measurement, questionnaires and eye tracking data were analysed both qualitatively and quantitatively. Insights are acquired to improve the quality of map through Improving cartographic text design

    Investigating a Cartographic Niche: Drawing Maps for Historians

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    Drawing maps for historians involves a number of distinct challenges. The historical cartographer must grapple not only with geological changes over time, but geographical ones, from human-cultural to physical, and from political to spatial. Original manuscripts must be read with close attention toward extracting geographical data, map sources must be vetted, and design challenges must be resolved. Furthermore, many of the antiquarian sources that are used to create current-day maps of historical times have unique scales, projections, and senses of place—all of which present complications that need to be overcome when creating historically based maps for publication. This thesis describes some of the quagmires that the historical cartographer encounters on a regular basis, and details methods for avoiding them. Using maps drawn by the author as source materials, techniques for creating historically cognizant, technically accurate, and elegant maps are examined and described as parts of the process of illustrating historians’ manuscripts. Ultimately, the goal of the historical cartographer is to create maps that provide readers with an easily graspable graphic methodology for understanding the arguments presented in the text. When this is done well, the maps support the legitimacy of the historian’s research and offer a clarity of vision that might otherwise be difficult with words alone

    Conflating point of interest (POI) data: A systematic review of matching methods

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    Point of interest (POI) data provide digital representations of places in the real world, and have been increasingly used to understand human-place interactions, support urban management, and build smart cities. Many POI datasets have been developed, which often have different geographic coverages, attribute focuses, and data quality. From time to time, researchers may need to conflate two or more POI datasets in order to build a better representation of the places in the study areas. While various POI conflation methods have been developed, there lacks a systematic review, and consequently, it is difficult for researchers new to POI conflation to quickly grasp and use these existing methods. This paper fills such a gap. Following the protocol of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA), we conduct a systematic review by searching through three bibliographic databases using reproducible syntax to identify related studies. We then focus on a main step of POI conflation, i.e., POI matching, and systematically summarize and categorize the identified methods. Current limitations and future opportunities are discussed afterwards. We hope that this review can provide some guidance for researchers interested in conflating POI datasets for their research

    전근대 토지대장과 지적도의 대화형 분석을 위한 시각화 설계

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    학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 전기·컴퓨터공학부, 2016. 2. 서진욱.We propose an interactive visualization design tool, called JigsawMap, for analyzing and mapping historical textual cadasters. A cadaster is an official register that records land properties (e.g., location, ownership, value and size) for land valuation and taxation. Such mapping of old and new cadasters can help historians understand the social and economic background of changes in land uses or ownership. JigsawMap can effectively connect the past land survey results to modern cadastral maps. In order to accomplish the connection process, three steps are performed: (1) segmentation of cadastral map, (2) visualization of textual cadastre, (3) and mapping interaction. We conducted usability studies and long term case studies to evaluate JigsawMap, and received positive responses. We summarize the evaluation results and present design guidelines for participatory design projects with historians. Followed by our study on JigsawMap, we further investigated on each components of our tool for more scalable map connection. First, we designed a hybrid algorithm to semi-automatically segment land pieces on cadastral map. The original JigsawMap provides interface for user to segment land pieces and the experiment result shows that segmentation algorithm accurately extracts the regions. Next, we reconsidered the visual encoding and simplified it to make textual cadastre more scalable. Since the former visual encoding relies on traditional map legend, the visual encoding can be selected based on user expert level. Finally, we redesigned layout algorithm to generate a better initial layout. We used evolution algorithm to articulate ambiguity problem of textual cadastre and the result less suffered from overlapping problem. Overall, our visualization design tool will provide an accurate segmentation result, give the user an option to select visual encoding that suits on their expert level, and generate more readable initial layout which gives an overview of cadastre layout.Chapter 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Background & Motivation 1 1.2 Main Contribution 7 1.3 Organization of the Dissertation 8 Chapter 2 Related Work 11 2.1 Map Data Visualization 11 2.2 Graph Layout Algorithms 13 2.3 Collaborative Map Editing Service 14 2.4 Map Image Segmentation 15 2.5 Premodern Cadastral Maps 17 2.6 Assessing Measures for Cartogram 18 Chapter 3 Visualizing and Mapping Premodern Textual Cadasters to Cadastral Maps 20 3.1 Textual Cadastre 21 3.2 Cadastral Maps 24 3.3 Paper-based Mapping Process and Obstacles 24 3.4 Task Flow in JigsawMap 26 3.5 Design Rationale 32 3.6 Evaluation 34 3.7 Discussion 40 3.8 Design Guidelines When Working with Historians 42 Chapter 4 Accurate Segmentation of Land Regions in Historical Cadastral Maps 44 4.1 Segmentation Pipeline 45 4.2 Preprocessing 46 4.3 Removal of Grid Line 48 4.4 Removal of Characters 52 4.5 Reconstruction of Land Boundaries 53 4.6 Generation of Polygons 55 4.7 Experimental Result 56 4.8 Discussion 59 Chapter 5 Approximating Rectangular Cartogram from Premodern Textual Cadastre 62 5.1 Challenges of the Textual Cadastre Layout 62 5.2 Quality Measures for Assessing Rectangular Cartogram 64 5.3 Quality Measures for Assessing Textual Cadastre 65 5.4 Graph Layout Algorithm 66 5.5 Results 72 5.6 Discussion 73 Chapter 6 Design of Scalable Node Representation for a Large Textual Cadastre 78 6.1 Motivation 78 6.2 Visual Encoding in JigsawMa 80 6.3 Challenges of Current Visual Encoding 81 6.4 Compact Visual Encoding 83 6.5 Results 84 6.6 Discussion 86 Chapter 7 Conclusion 88 Bibliography 90 Abstract in Korean 101Docto

    A Method for Place Name Display Considering User Locating Habits in Map Sites

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    An Evolutionary Approach to Adaptive Image Analysis for Retrieving and Long-term Monitoring Historical Land Use from Spatiotemporally Heterogeneous Map Sources

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    Land use changes have become a major contributor to the anthropogenic global change. The ongoing dispersion and concentration of the human species, being at their orders unprecedented, have indisputably altered Earth’s surface and atmosphere. The effects are so salient and irreversible that a new geological epoch, following the interglacial Holocene, has been announced: the Anthropocene. While its onset is by some scholars dated back to the Neolithic revolution, it is commonly referred to the late 18th century. The rapid development since the industrial revolution and its implications gave rise to an increasing awareness of the extensive anthropogenic land change and led to an urgent need for sustainable strategies for land use and land management. By preserving of landscape and settlement patterns at discrete points in time, archival geospatial data sources such as remote sensing imagery and historical geotopographic maps, in particular, could give evidence of the dynamic land use change during this crucial period. In this context, this thesis set out to explore the potentials of retrospective geoinformation for monitoring, communicating, modeling and eventually understanding the complex and gradually evolving processes of land cover and land use change. Currently, large amounts of geospatial data sources such as archival maps are being worldwide made online accessible by libraries and national mapping agencies. Despite their abundance and relevance, the usage of historical land use and land cover information in research is still often hindered by the laborious visual interpretation, limiting the temporal and spatial coverage of studies. Thus, the core of the thesis is dedicated to the computational acquisition of geoinformation from archival map sources by means of digital image analysis. Based on a comprehensive review of literature as well as the data and proposed algorithms, two major challenges for long-term retrospective information acquisition and change detection were identified: first, the diversity of geographical entity representations over space and time, and second, the uncertainty inherent to both the data source itself and its utilization for land change detection. To address the former challenge, image segmentation is considered a global non-linear optimization problem. The segmentation methods and parameters are adjusted using a metaheuristic, evolutionary approach. For preserving adaptability in high level image analysis, a hybrid model- and data-driven strategy, combining a knowledge-based and a neural net classifier, is recommended. To address the second challenge, a probabilistic object- and field-based change detection approach for modeling the positional, thematic, and temporal uncertainty adherent to both data and processing, is developed. Experimental results indicate the suitability of the methodology in support of land change monitoring. In conclusion, potentials of application and directions for further research are given

    When Worlds Collide--Art, Cartography, and Japanese Nanban World Map Screens

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    A number of Momoyama (1573-1615) and Edo (1615-1868) period folding screens feature Western maps of the world as their subject. These map screens are among the earliest examples of Japanese visual culture to feature pictorial imagery shaped by European cartographic science, geographic knowledge, and overseas trade and exploration. In these works, anonymous Japanese artists adapted Western European maps and book illustrations, often making substantial changes of form and content. This dissertation confronts many current assumptions concerning the nature of the map screens. The study argues that Japanese artists who produced the screens grappled with a complex tension between European pictorial cartographic representations of a newly introduced world and the world views that prevailed in Japan. It proposes that European map imagery and pictorial forms, through the process of reinvention for the Japanese format of the folding screen and for Japanese tastes and sensibilities, became vulnerable to alternative, and often unintended, interpretations by the Japanese political and social elite. The present study considers various dimensions of the world map screens: the manner of their production; their meaning in relation to maps of Japan and other subjects; their implications in regard to an established world view and cosmological order; their circulation in a changing political and cultural sphere; and their position within the modern history of Japanese maps and art

    On the Formal Flexibility of Syntactic Categories

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    This dissertation explores the formal flexibility of syntactic categories. The main proposal is that Universal Grammar (UG) only provides templatic guidance for syntactic category formation and organization but leaves many other issues open, including issues internal to a single category and issues at the intercategorial, system level: these points that UG "does not care about" turn out to enrich the categorial ontology of human language in important ways. The dissertation consists of seven chapters. After a general introduction in Chapter 1, I lay out some foundational issues regarding features and categories in Chapter 2 and delineate a featural metalanguage comprising four components: specification, valuation, typing, and granularity. Based on that I put forward a templatic definition for syntactic categories, which unifies the combinatorial and taxonomic perspectives under the notion mergeme. Then, a detailed overview of the "categorial universe" I work with is presented, which shows that the syntactic category system (SCS) is an intricate web structured by five layers of abstraction divided into three broad levels of concern: the individual level (layers 1–2), the global level (layers 3–4), and the supraglobal level (layer 5). In the subsequent chapters I explore the template-flexibility pairs at each abstraction layer, with Chapters 3–4 focusing on the first layer, Chapter 5 on the second layer, and Chapter 6 on the third and fourth layers; the fifth layer is not in the scope of this dissertation. Chapter 3 examines a special type of category defined by an underspecified mergeme, the defective category, which behaves like a "chameleon" in that it gets assimilated into whatever nondefective category it merges with. This characteristic makes it potentially useful in analyzing certain adjunction structures, and I explore this potential by two case studies, one focusing on modifier-head compounds and the other on sentence-final particles. Chapter 4 examines another special type of category defined by the absence of a mergeme, the Root category. Deductive reasoning leads me to propose a generalized root syntax, according to which roots are not confined to lexical categorial environments but may legally merge with and hence "support" any non-Root category. I demonstrate the empirical consequences of this theory by a comprehensive study of the half-lexical–half-functional vocabulary items in Chinese. Chapter 5 ascends to the second abstraction layer and raises the question of whether the categorial sequences (or projection hierarchies) in human language are necessarily totally ordered, as certain analytical devices (e.g., "flavored" categories) can only be theoretically maintained if we also allow categorial sequences to be partially ordered. After a diachronic study of the flavored verbalizer vBEv_{BE} (stative) in Chinese resultative compounds, I conclude that while "flavoring" is indeed a possible type of flexibility in the SCS, it is the deviation rather than the norm due to non-UG or "third" factors and hence should be cautiously used in syntactic analyses. Chapter 6 ascends even higher on the ladder of abstraction and examines the global interconnection in the SCS ontology with the aid of mathematical Category theory. I formalize the functional parallelism across major parts of speech and the inheritance-based relations across granularity levels as Category-theoretic structures, which reveal further and more abstract templates and flexibility types in the SCS. A crucial mathematical concept in the formalization is epi-Adjunction. Finally, in Chapter 7 I summarize the main results of this dissertation and briefly discuss some potential directions of future research.My PhD is funded by Cambridge Trust and China Scholarship Council. I have also received travel grants and financial aids from Gonville and Caius College and the Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages
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