Geographical modeling : cities and territories /

The modeling of cities and territories has progressed greatly in the last 20 years. This is firstly due to geographic information systems, followed by the availability of large amounts of georeferenced data - both on the Internet and through the use of connected objects. In addition, the rise in per...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Pumain, Denise (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: London : Hoboken, NJ : ISTE Ltd ; John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2019.
Series:Science, society and new technologies series.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to the full text of this electronic book
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction ix; Denise PUMAIN Chapter 1. Complexity in Geography 1; Denise PUMAIN 1.1. A first bifurcation in the epistemology of geographic modeling 3 1.1.1. Vertical explanations for the science of places, not people 4 1.1.2. Horizontal explanations for the science of the spatiality of societies 5 1.1.3. The discussed status of modeling 7 1.2. Modeled regularities 10 1.2.1. Proximity and distances 11 1.2.2. The scale 15 1.2.3. Concentration and accumulation: geographical inequalities and scaling laws 19 1.2.4. Spatial change and trajectory dependence 21 1.2.5. Territorial drifts, space-time compression, and globalization 25 1.3. Conclusion 29 Chapter 2. Choosing Models to Explain the Dynamics of Cities and Territories 31; Lena SANDERS 2.1. Introduction 31 2.2.
  • Explaining by reasons or laws: choosing an epistemological framework 32 2.3. The modeling approach: diversity of models 36 2.4. Explaining through statistical relationships or mechanisms 38 2.5. Choosing the level of abstraction for the phenomenon to be explained: general versus particular 41 2.6. Choosing the level of abstraction for the model: stylized or realistic, KISS or KIDS 44 2.6.1. Modes of representation of space: from a stylized space to a realistic space 45 2.6.2. Formalizing spatial mechanisms: from stylized to realistic 48 2.7. Conclusion 50 Chapter 3. Effects of Distance and Scale Dependence in Geographical Models of Cities and Territories 53; Cécile TANNIER 3.1. Three fundamental principles for modeling cities and territories 55 3.1.1. Effects of distance 57 3.1.2. Effects of scale dependence 58 3.2.
  • Role of distance in spatial simulation models 61 3.3. Modeling scale dependence 76 3.3.1. Scale dependence as a result of processes acting at different scales 77 3.3.2. Scale invariance for the description of geographical phenomena 83 3.3.3. Scale dependence as a generative mechanism for simulated spatial configurations 88 3.4. Conclusion 93 Chapter 4. Incremental Territorial Modeling 95; Clémentine COTTINEAU, Paul CHAPRON, Marion LE TEXIER and Sébastien REY-COYREHOURCQ 4.1. The map and the territory 96 4.1.1. Modeling as one map: selection and schematization 96 4.1.2. The representation of territory as an input of the model 100 4.1.3. The representation of territory as an output of the model 102 4.2. Generality and specificity: explaining by ways of geographical models 106 4.2.1. Historical contingency and non-ergodicity 106 4.2.2.
  • Methods for Exploring Simulation Models 125; Juste RAIMBAULT and Denise PUMAIN 5.1. Social sciences and experimentation 126 5.2. Geographical data and computer skills 127 5.3. New generation simulations 130 5.3.1. A virtual laboratory: the OpenMOLE platform 131 5.3.2. The SimpopLocal experiment: simulation of an emergence in geography 134 5.3.3. Implementation of SimpopLocal, from NetLogo to OpenMOLE 137 5.3.4. Calibration and validation 139 5.4. Other examples of OpenMOLE applications: network-territory interaction models 143 5.5. Perspectives 147 5.5.1. Methods 147 5.5.2. Tools 148 5.6. Conclusion 149 Chapter 6. Model Visualization 151; Robin CURA 6.1. Introduction 151 6.2. Visualization as modeling 153 6.2.1. Visualization as a tool for interdisciplinarity 155 6.2.2.