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GIS I First Principles.

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Presentation on theme: "GIS I First Principles."— Presentation transcript:

1 GIS I First Principles

2 Why GIS Matters 2 Big Questions Pattern and Process
Knowing where some things happen is critically important Crime/ Poverty Health Care Access Food/ Water Location and Access Natural resource distribution and character Technological/ Environmental hazards

3 Aerial Image WTC site

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7 How we see the world… How it looks – Form/Pattern
How it works – Process Knowledge about process different from form/pattern, because it might be used to predict GIS combine General scientific knowledge (procedures) Specific information (data) Data Models (raster or vector)

8 Raster Townville (like a photo) Town River Latitude (y) Town Lake
Longitude (x)

9 Vector Townville (x,y) (like a map) Town River Latitude (y) Town Lake
Longitude (x)

10 Some important spatial concepts
Geographic – Earth’s surface and near-surface Spatial – any space (including geographic) e.g. medical imaging Geospatial – synonymous with geographic Location – an attribute of all things in space Distance – many types, e.g. absolute, relative, social, cost, etc.

11 GI is unique Multidimensional Voluminous
Requires projection to flat surface Unique analysis methods Analyses require data integration Requires Georeferencing Map displays require fast data retrieval

12 Types of Problem Solving in GIS
Objective or goal - often maximize or minimize (cost, distance) Tangible (well defined scale) vs intangible - e.g. quality of life, environmental impact Multiple objectives - e.g. cost and environmental impact Multi-criteria decision-making techniques

13 Geographic Information Systems
Software product Data sets / databases Community of people working with geographic information and tools Activity of advanced science and problem solving

14 Geographic Information System
Container of maps Computerized tools for solving geographic problems Spatial decision support system Mechanized inventory of geographically distributed features and facilities Method for revealing patterns and processes in geographic information Tool to automate time-consuming tasks

15 Geographic Information System
Organized collection of Hardware Software Network Data People Procedures

16 Social Implications of GIS
Favors generalization, possibly at expense of minorities and individuals Use is not always neutral and can be applied to state, military, and industrial surveillance Tendency to be technological rather than human need focused Maintains and extends the status quo of societal power structures Community GIS and PPGIS


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