526,919 research outputs found
Mechanistic and Correlative Models of Ecological Niches
The suite of factors that drives where and under what conditions a species occurs has become the focus of intense research interest. Three general categories of methods have emerged by which researchers address questions in this area: mechanistic models of species’ requirements in terms of environmental conditions that are based on first principles of biophysics and physiology, correlational models based on environmental associations derived from analyses of geographic occurrences of species, and process-based simulations that estimate occupied distributional areas and associated environments from assumptions about niche dimensions and dispersal abilities. We review strengths and weaknesses of these sets of approaches, and identify significant advantages and disadvantages of each. Rather than identifying one or the other as ‘better,’ we suggest that researchers take great care to use the method best-suited to each specific research question, and be conscious of the weaknesses of any method, such that inappropriate interpretations are avoided
UK open source crime data: accuracy and possibilities for research
In the United Kingdom, since 2011 data regarding individual police recorded crimes have been made openly available to the public via the police.uk website. To protect the location privacy of victims these data are obfuscated using geomasking techniques to reduce their spatial accuracy. This paper examines the spatial accuracy of the police.uk data to determine at what level(s) of spatial resolution – if any – it is suitable for analysis in the context of theory testing and falsification, evaluation research, or crime analysis. Police.uk data are compared to police recorded data for one large metropolitan Police Force and spatial accuracy is quantified for four different levels of geography across five crime types. Hypotheses regarding systematic errors are tested using appropriate statistical approaches, including methods of maximum likelihood. Finally, a “best-fit” statistical model is presented to explain the error as well as to develop a model that can correct it. The implications of the findings for researchers using the police.uk data for spatial analysis are discussed
FixMyStreet Brussels: Socio-Demographic Inequality in Crowdsourced Civic Participation
FixMyStreet (FMS) is a web-based civic participation platform that allows
inhabitants to report environmental defects like potholes and damaged pavements
to the government. In this paper, we examine the use of FMS in Brussels, the
capital city of Belgium. Analyzing a total of 30,041 reports since its
inception in 2013, we demonstrate how civic participation on FMS varies between
the ethnically diverse districts in Brussels. We compare FMS use to a range of
sociodemographic indicators derived from official city statistics as well as
geotagged social media data from Twitter. Our statistical analysis revealed
several significant differences between the districts that suggested that
crowdsourced civic participation platforms tend to marginalize low-income and
ethnically diverse communities. In this respect, our findings provide timely
evidence to inform the design of more inclusive crowdsourced, civic
participation platforms in the future
Geospatial information infrastructures
Manual of Digital Earth / Editors: Huadong Guo, Michael F. Goodchild, Alessandro Annoni .- Springer, 2020 .- ISBN: 978-981-32-9915-3Geospatial information infrastructures (GIIs) provide the technological, semantic,organizationalandlegalstructurethatallowforthediscovery,sharing,and use of geospatial information (GI). In this chapter, we introduce the overall concept and surrounding notions such as geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial datainfrastructures(SDI).WeoutlinethehistoryofGIIsintermsoftheorganizational andtechnologicaldevelopmentsaswellasthecurrentstate-of-art,andreflectonsome of the central challenges and possible future trajectories. We focus on the tension betweenincreasedneedsforstandardizationandtheever-acceleratingtechnological changes. We conclude that GIIs evolved as a strong underpinning contribution to implementation of the Digital Earth vision. In the future, these infrastructures are challengedtobecomeflexibleandrobustenoughtoabsorbandembracetechnological transformationsandtheaccompanyingsocietalandorganizationalimplications.With this contribution, we present the reader a comprehensive overview of the field and a solid basis for reflections about future developments
Node similarity as a basic principle behind connectivity in complex networks
How are people linked in a highly connected society? Since in many networks a
power-law (scale-free) node-degree distribution can be observed, power-law
might be seen as a universal characteristics of networks. But this study of
communication in the Flickr social online network reveals that power-law
node-degree distributions are restricted to only sparsely connected networks.
More densely connected networks, by contrast, show an increasing divergence
from power-law. This work shows that this observation is consistent with the
classic idea from social sciences that similarity is the driving factor behind
communication in social networks. The strong relation between communication
strength and node similarity could be confirmed by analyzing the Flickr
network. It also is shown that node similarity as a network formation model can
reproduce the characteristics of different network densities and hence can be
used as a model for describing the topological transition from weakly to
strongly connected societies.Comment: 6 pages in Journal of Data Mining & Digital Humanities (2015)
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Contemporary American cartographic research: a review and prospective
A Survey of e-Biodiversity: Concepts, Practices, and Challenges
The unprecedented size of the human population, along with its associated
economic activities, have an ever increasing impact on global environments.
Across the world, countries are concerned about the growing resource
consumption and the capacity of ecosystems to provide them. To effectively
conserve biodiversity, it is essential to make indicators and knowledge openly
available to decision-makers in ways that they can effectively use them. The
development and deployment of mechanisms to produce these indicators depend on
having access to trustworthy data from field surveys and automated sensors,
biological collections, molecular data, and historic academic literature. The
transformation of this raw data into synthesized information that is fit for
use requires going through many refinement steps. The methodologies and
techniques used to manage and analyze this data comprise an area often called
biodiversity informatics (or e-Biodiversity). Biodiversity data follows a life
cycle consisting of planning, collection, certification, description,
preservation, discovery, integration, and analysis. Researchers, whether
producers or consumers of biodiversity data, will likely perform activities
related to at least one of these steps. This article explores each stage of the
life cycle of biodiversity data, discussing its methodologies, tools, and
challenges
Willingness to participate in a randomized trial comparing catheters to fistulas for vascular access in incident hemodialysis patients: an international survey of nephrologists
BACKGROUND: Current guidelines favor fistulas over catheters as vascular access. Yet, the observational literature comparing fistulas to catheters has important limitations and biases that may be difficult to overcome in the absence of randomization. However, it is not clear if physicians would be willing to participate in a clinical trial comparing fistulas to catheters.
OBJECTIVES: We also sought to elicit participants' opinions on willingness to participate in a future trial regarding catheters and fistulas.
DESIGN: We created a three-part survey consisting of 19 questions. We collected demographic information, respondents' knowledge of the vascular access literature, appropriateness of current guideline recommendations, and their willingness to participate in a future trial.
SETTING: Participants were recruited from Canada, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand.
PARTICIPANTS: Participants include physicians and trainees who are involved in the care of end-stage renal disease patients requiring vascular access.
MEASUREMENTS: Descriptive statistics were used to describe baseline characteristics of respondents according to geographic location. We used logistic regression to model willingness to participate in a future trial.
METHODS: We surveyed nephrologists from Canada, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand to assess their willingness to participate in a randomized trial comparing fistulas to catheters in incident hemodialysis patients.
RESULTS: Our results show that in Canada, 86 % of respondents were willing to participate in a trial (32 % in all patients; 54 % only in patients at high risk of primary failure). In Europe and Australia/New Zealand, the willingness to participate in a trial that included all patients was lower (28 % in Europe; 25 % in Australia/New Zealand), as was a trial that included patients at high risk of primary failure (38 % in Europe; 39 % in Australia/New Zealand). Nephrologists who have been in practice for a few years, saw a larger volume of patients, or self-identified as experts in vascular access literature were more likely to participate in a trial.
LIMITATIONS: Survey distribution was limited to vascular access experts in participating European countries and ultimately led to a discrepancy in numbers of European to non-European respondents overall. Canadian views are likely over-represented in the overall outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: Our survey results suggest that nephrologists believe there is equipoise surrounding the optimal vascular access strategy and that a randomized controlled study should be undertaken, but restricted to those individuals with a high risk of primary fistula failure
Do differences in the administrative structure of populations confound comparisons of geographic health inequalities?
<p>Background: Geographical health inequalities are naturally described by the variation in health outcomes between areas (e.g. mortality rates). However, comparisons made between countries are hampered by our lack of understanding of the effect of the size of administrative units, and in particular the modifiable areal unit problem. Our objective was to assess how differences in geographic and administrative units used for disseminating data affect the description of health inequalities.</p>
<p>Methods: Retrospective study of standard populations and deaths aggregated by administrative regions within 20 European countries, 1990-1991. Estimated populations and deaths in males aged 0-64 were in 5 year age bands. Poisson multilevel modelling was conducted of deaths as standardised mortality ratios. The variation between regions within countries was tested for relationships with the mean region population size and the unequal distribution of populations within each country measured using Gini coefficients.</p>
<p>Results: There is evidence that countries whose regions vary more in population size show greater variation and hence greater apparent inequalities in mortality counts. The Gini coefficient, measuring inequalities in population size, ranged from 0.1 to 0.5 between countries; an increase of 0.1 was accompanied by a 12-14% increase in the standard deviation of the mortality rates between regions within a country.</p>
<p>Conclusions: Apparently differing health inequalities between two countries may be due to differences in geographical structure per se, rather than having any underlying epidemiological cause. Inequalities may be inherently greater in countries whose regions are more unequally populated.</p>
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