70 research outputs found

    A Geographer Looks at Spatial Information Theory

    Full text link
    Abstract. Geographic information is defined as a subset of spatial information, specific to the spatiotemporal frame of the Earth’s surface. Thus geographic information theory inherits the results of spatial information theory, but adds results that reflect the specific properties of geographic information. I describe six general properties of geographic information, and show that in some cases specialization has assumed other properties that are less generally observed. A recognition of the distinction between geographic and spatial would allow geographic information theory to achieve greater depth and utility.

    “Sphere to Tangential Plane”: Polar (Normal) Aspect

    No full text

    Geo-Opera: Workflow concepts for spatial processes

    No full text

    Terabytes of Tobler: Evaluating the First Law in a Massive, Domain-Neutral Representation of World Knowledge

    No full text
    Abstract. The First Law of Geography states, “everything is related to everything else, but near things are more related than distant things. ” Despite the fact that it is to a large degree what makes “spatial special, ” the law has never been empirically evaluated on a large, domain-neutral representation of world knowledge. We address the gap in the literature about this critical idea by statistically examining the multitude of entities and relations between entities present across 22 different language editions of Wikipedia. We find that, at least according to the myriad authors of Wikipedia, the First Law is true to an overwhelming extent regardless of language-defined cultural domain
    corecore