Qualitative Spatial ChangeOxford University Press, 2000 - 409 Seiten This book is a contribution to the emerging discipline of Qualitative Spatial Information Theory. The discipline has arisen from a realization that traditional quantitative techniques for the analysis of spatial phenomena must be supplemented by a wide range of qualitative methods if we are to use information technology effectively to further our capacity for handling spatio-temporal information. Such qualitative methods must be supported by a body of theory concerning the nature and organization of our spatio-temporal concepts. This theory will cover time, space, objects in space, their spatial attributes, changes in those attributes, and the temporal structure of those changes. In this book each topic is given a chapter to itself, and theory of qualitative spaces as partitions of quantitative spaces is developed in detail, and applied to numerous particular cases. The theory thus provides a uniform basis for the further development of formal and computational theories of spatial change. |
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Seite 125
... reason for this lie in our language , our culture , our cognition , or in the nature of things themselves ? This is quite a different case from a pair of shoes , which also has a disconnected bona fide boundary . Shoes come in pairs ...
... reason for this lie in our language , our culture , our cognition , or in the nature of things themselves ? This is quite a different case from a pair of shoes , which also has a disconnected bona fide boundary . Shoes come in pairs ...
Seite 126
... reasons , for example ( a ) because that is what it was made for , or ( b ) because that is how it is , in fact , being used , or ( c ) because it is more effective when used in that way than in any other way ( though it is hard to see ...
... reasons , for example ( a ) because that is what it was made for , or ( b ) because that is how it is , in fact , being used , or ( c ) because it is more effective when used in that way than in any other way ( though it is hard to see ...
Seite 378
... reason , these less dominant modes are less interesting , because they lack the salience that makes landmarks of the other modes and gives us a reason to pick them out . The motivation for the term ' dominance ' is as follows . Suppose ...
... reason , these less dominant modes are less interesting , because they lack the salience that makes landmarks of the other modes and gives us a reason to pick them out . The motivation for the term ' dominance ' is as follows . Suppose ...
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Verweise auf dieses Buch
Event-Oriented Approaches in Geographic Information Science: A Special Issue ... Kathleen Hornsby,Michael Worboys Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2004 |
Classics from IJGIS: Twenty years of the International Journal of ... Peter Fisher Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2006 |