This Handbook is an essential reference and a guide to the rapidly expanding field of Geographic Information Science. * Designed for students and researchers who want an in-depth treatment of the subject, including background information * Comprises around 40 substantial essays, each written by a recognized expert in a particular area * Covers the full spectrum of research in GIS * Surveys the increasing number of applications of GIS * Predicts how GIS is likely to evolve in the near future
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This Handbook is an essential reference and a guide to the rapidly expanding field of Geographic Information Science.
List of Figures. List of Contributors. Preface. Geographic Information Science: An Introduction: A. Stewart Fotheringham (National University of Ireland) and John P. Wilson (University of Southern California). Part I: Data Issues:. 1. The Availability of Geographic Data: The Current Technical and Institutional Environment: David J. Cowen (University of South Carolina). 2. Social Data: David J. Martin (University of Southampton). 3. Remote Sensing: Brian G. Lees (University of New South Wales). 4. Spatialization: Andre Skupin (San Diego State University) and Sara I. Fabrikant (University of Zurich). 5. Uncertainty in Spatial Databases: Ashley Morris (DePaul University). 6. On the Identification of Uncertainties in Spatial Data and Their Quantification with Probability Distribution Functions: James D. Brown (Universiteit van Amsterdam) and Gerald B. M. Heuvelink (Wageningen University and Research Centre). Part II: Database Trends and Challenges:. 7. Object-Oriented Database Management Systems: Shashi Shekhar and Ranga Raju Vatsavai (University of Minnesota). 8. Adding the Z Dimension: Michael F. Hutchinson (Australian National University). 9. Adding Time into Geographic Information Science Databases: May Yuan (University of Oklahoma). 10. Geospatial Data Integration: Craig A. Knoblock and Cyrus Shahabi (University of Southern California). Part III: Visualization:. 11. Mapping in a Digital Age: William E. Cartwright (RHIT University). 12. Generalization of Spatial Databases: William A. Mackaness (University of Edinburgh). 13. Geographic Information Science and Surfaces: Nicholas J. Tate (University of Leicester), Peter F. Fisher (City University), and David J. Martin (University of Southampton). 14. Fuzzy Classification and Mapping: Vincent B. Robinson (University of Toronto). 15. Rule-Based Mapping: A-Xing Zhu (University of Wisconsin). 16. Multivariate Geovisualization: Mark Gahegan (Pennsylvania State University). 17. Virtual Reality in Geographic Information Science: Michael Batty (University College London). Part IV: Knowledge Elicitation:. 18. Inference and Spatial Data: Chris Brunsdon (University of Leicester). 19. Geographic Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery: Harvey J. Miller (University of Utah). 20. The Geospatial Semantic Web: Frederico Fonseca (Pennsylvania State University). Part V: Spatial Analysis:. 21. Quantitative Methods and Geographic Information Systems: Martin Charlton (National University of Ireland). 22. Spatial Cluster Analysis: Geoffrey M. Jacquez (BioMedware, Inc., Ann Arbor). 23. Terrain Analysis: Yongxin Deng (Western Illinois University), John P. Wilson (University of Southern California), and John C. Gallant (CSIRO Land and Water, Canberra). 24. Dynamic Modeling: Jochen Albrecht (City University of New York). Part VI GIS and Society:. 25. Institutional Geographic Information Science and GI Partnering: David Tulloch (State University of New Jersey). 26. Participatory Geographic Information Science: Daniel Weiner and Trevor M. Harris (West Virginia University). 27. Geographic Information Science and Participatory Decision Making: Piotr Jankowski (San Diego State University) and Timothy L. Nyerges (University of Washington). 28. Surveys of People and Place: Peter H. Dana (Georgetown). 29. Geographic Information, Personal Privacy, and the Law: George C. H. Cho (University of Canberra). 30. Geographic Information in Education: Joseph J. Kerski (Denver Federal Center). Part VII: Future Trends and Challenges:. 31. Web-based Geographic Information Science: Christopher B. Jones (Cardiff University) and Ross S. Purves (University of Zurich). 32. Location-based Services and Geographic Information Science: Allan J. Brimicombe (University of East London). 33. Geographic Information Science: The Grand Challenges: Michael F. Goodchild (University of California). 34. Geographic Information Science: Where Next?: Andreas Reuter (European Media Laboratory, Heidelberg) and Alexander Zipf (University of Applied Sciences FH Mainz). Index
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“Each chapter contains a valuable list of literature, and the book ends with an exten­sive, 15-page index. This makes this textbook a valuable and useful companion for students of geoinformation, geoinformatics, geocompu­tation, and geoprocessing (GIScience), as well as for experienced scientists and professionals applying GIS."(Geologos, 2010) “This book is quite extraordinary value providing a timely and extensive review of much of the discipline. Serious researchers and students alike should see it as an essential addition to their GIScience library." (Journal of Regional Science, May 2009) "The topics covered are wide ranging, covering many aspects of GI science … .A good spread of authors from Europe, North America and Australia." (Reference Reviews, Issue 6 2008)
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780470690819
Publisert
2008-02-25
Utgiver
Vendor
Wiley-Blackwell
Vekt
1326 gr
Høyde
262 mm
Bredde
187 mm
Dybde
43 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Annet format
Antall sider
656

Biographical note

John P. Wilson is Professor of Geography and Director of the GIS Research Laboratory at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. A. Stewart Fotheringham is Director of the National Centre for Geocomputation at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth. They are both editors of the journal Transactions in GIS, also published by Blackwell.