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Conceptualizing Space and Time: A Classification of Geographic Movement1

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Metrically (ruler), temporally (I.e. 'drive time') or by adapting a system (I.e lat/long) ... Time in the study of social change. As causal link between elements ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conceptualizing Space and Time: A Classification of Geographic Movement1


1
Conceptualizing Space and Time A Classification
of Geographic Movement1
  • Movement and Geography
  • Classification and Science in Geography
  • Geographic Movement
  • Space
  • Time
  • Scale
  • Classification of Geographic Movement
  • Continuous movement
  • Cyclical movement
  • Intermittent movement
  • Conclusion

1 Yattaw, N. J., in Cartography and Geographic
Information Systems. Vol 26, No 2, 1999. Pp.
85-98 outline of article extensive
paraphrasing and quotations
2
Movement and Geography
  • Space is naturally linked with time and recently
    geographers have begun to include time as an
    integral part of their domain of inquiry
  • Key element in research how to store historical
    and anticipated geographic data effectively so
    that one can do temporal modeling and simulation
    of geographic processes.
  • Visualization tool help geographers better
    understand dynamic phenomena by visualizing
    space through time
  • Including the understanding of these phenomena
    over a range of scales
  • Classification of spatio-temporal properties by
    abstracting movement with respect to events,
    occurrence and processes.

3
Classification and Science in Geography
  • Classification is a part of the scientific
    process. It enables generalizations and leads to
    a conceptual framework (or follows from) about
    reality.
  • Classification helps us understand the phenomena
    under study.
  • Identify fundamental principles and
    characteristics inherent in objects
  • Identify similarities and differences
  • Generic concepts divided into classes based on a
    set of criteria
  • Simple is or isnt something
  • Complex A formal scheme for grouping of a
    definite set of objects into hierarch of
    classes
  • Kinds of classification
  • From above logical subdivisions using some set
    of criteria
  • From below agglomeration using discriminate
    analysis or some clustering procedure

4
Geographic Movement
  • Geographic phenomena and change
  • Phenomenal may change aspacially (e.g. rezoning).
  • Spatially (e.g. land parcel merger)
  • Both (e.g. ag to residential, one lot to many)
  • Change location movement has occurred
  • Movement often explained in terms of spatial
    interaction
  • Movement of people, goods, information, and ideas
    discussed in terms of migration, trade and
    transportation, communications and diffusion,
    respectively.

5
Geographic Movement cont.
  • Space basic organizing concept of the geographer
  • Spatial data
  • Each element or entity has associated location in
    n dimensional space
  • Space can be measured
  • Metrically (ruler), temporally (I.e. drive
    time) or by adapting a system (I.e lat/long)
  • Movement comes from understanding the spatial
    form or pattern that a phenomenon takes as it
    evolves and changes with time
  • Structure and process different
  • Process discovered from spatial form that is
    arrangement of points lines, areas or volumes

6
Geographic Movement cont.
  • Time a prerequisite for geographic change
  • Way of dealing with Present
  • Describing the direction and frequency of change
  • Provide historical context in explaining the
    existence and cause of features on the landscape
  • Types of temporal
  • Constant (long term)
  • Trends (long term)
  • Cycles
  • Shifts
  • Time in the study of social change
  • As causal link between elements
  • Quantitative measure of their interplay

7
Geographic Movement cont.
  • Time
  • What happened, why it happened, why it happened
    at that time and why something else did not
    happen?
  • Temporal and spatial can be viewed as similar and
    inseparable but measurements can not!
  • Spatial measures changed in state between two
    entities over space at a single time (e.g. forest
    then ag)
  • Temporal measures changes in state (over time)
    for a single entity (e.g. forest to ag)
  • All time measurements involve movements in space
  • Time as
  • continuum (earth revolving around sun)
  • discrete or body time ( related to human
    activity social time)

8
Geographic Movement cont.
  • Time
  • Characteristics of time
  • Direction flowing water
  • Duration how long continuance in space with
    some assoicated change
  • Frequency how often
  • Time intervals are useful in epidemiology where
    epidemics occur periodically
  • Patterns
  • Homogeneous processes (e.g. continuous)
  • Majoritative, and occasional patterns are
    non-cyclical. System is coontinuously being
    carried into states that are different from all
    previous states of the system (e.g. landslides)
  • Wholistic process interval is singular and
    treated as whole (e.g. flying from LA to NYC).

9
Geographic Movement cont.
  • Scale
  • Detection of event changes are functionally
    dependent on the scale at which events are
    analyzed.
  • Determining which temporal and spatial scales to
    use in examination of geographic phenomenon is
    imperative and will affect focus, methodology and
    results of analysis.
  • Choice of scale dependent on questions to ask
  • Research design will first defines the scale at
    which the phenomenon o finterest can be observed
    and then select methods of analysis appropriate
    for resolving patterns and process at that
    spatial-temporal scale.

10
Classification of Geographic Movement
  • Organizes geographic phenomena by how they move
    through space and time
  • Categorized based on spatial and temporal
    patterns or forms they exhibit as they move
  • Classification based on spatio-temporal form of
    the geographic phenomena (e.g. residential
    migration, urban sprawl, diffusion) not the
    objects themselves (I.e. people, cities and
    disease)
  • Premise any spatially dynamic geographic
    phenomenon can be conceptualized by its patterns
    and processes of movement through space and time
    and will fit in one of 12 classes defined by a 4
    X 3 matrix of
  • Space (Points, lines, areas and volumes) by Time
    (continuous, cyclical and intermittent) at
    differing scales (micro, meso, macro, and mega)

11
Classification of Geographic Movement
  • Point to point
  • Only concerned with beginning and ending
  • Animal tracking
  • sample of points ? spatial extent and behavior of
    animals movement pattern
  • Linear, areal or volumetric occur over continuous
    space
  • Entire movement from beginning to end important
  • Linear- along a network
  • Areal- over a surface
  • Volume- volume changes
  • Concerned with pattern of change
  • Duration of event
  • Interval between events

12
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