Spatial analysis

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Spatial analysis started in the beginning of the 1950. Geographers were convinced that geography was a science like other sciences and therefore scientific laws could also be applied to geography and researchers should be looking for law like relationships in geography.

The application of quantitative methods in locational analysis within human geography and sometimes used as a synonym for that portion of the discipline that concentrates on the geometry of the landscape spatial science. O’Sullivan and Unwin (2002) present spatial analysis as the study of the arrangements of points, lines, areas and surfaces on a map, and of their interrelationships. Analyses of those separate components have deployed procedures adapted from other sciences – nearest-neighbour analysis and quadrat analysis, for point pattern analysis; graph theory for lines; and trend surface analysis for surfaces, for example. Whereas many geographers have undertaken analyses of the interrelationships using techniques from within the general linear model, others have argued that spatial analysis poses particular statistical problems because of the nature of spatial data spatial autocorrelation, thus requiring special techniques.

Behavioral geography critiqued spatial analysis and formed a bridge from the peopleless landscapes of spatial science to the peopled landscapes of Humanistic geography.

References

  • Cloke, P., Philo, Ch. & Sadler, D. (1991) Approaching Human Geography. Chapman, London.
  • Johnston, R., Gregory, D. Pratt, G. & Watts, M. (2000) The Dictionary of Human Geography, 4th edition. Cambridge: Blackwell Publishing;
  • O'Sullivan, D. and D. J. Unwin (2002). Geographic Information Analysis. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley


Contributors

Published by Mike van der Linden and Paul Cuijpers

Links added and enhanced by --SusanVerbeij 11:32, 19 October 2011 (CEST)

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