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1: | Untitled The Spatial and Temporal Diffusion of Democracy, 1815-1995 Sponsored by the National Science Foundation Institute of Behavioral Science Program on Political and Economic Change University of Colorado Boulder, CO 80309-0487 Phone: (303) 492 6404 Facsimile: (303) 492 3609 email: mdw@u.washington.edu The Spatial and Temporal Diffusion of Democracy is an NSF-Sponsored program using leading-edge techniques to uncover the relationships between democracy and conflict. In order to understand the techniques used in this research, one must be familiar with the different data sources we have used. These data fall roughly into two categories: descriptive and events. The former are the typical cross-sectional data that are familiar to many-objective measures such as macroeconomic figures and trade flows, and subjective data such as level of democracy or autocracy. In addition, we use several well-known events data series, including those on conflict and cooperation and military interventions. ... http://www.colorado.edu/IBS/GAD/spacetime.html |
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2: | Spatial and Temporal Diffusion of Democracy ... http://www.colorado.edu/IBS/GAD/diffppt |
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3: | Meir, A Meir, A. (1979). A disparity-based diffusion model. The Professional Geographer, 31(4), 382-387. Meir, A. (1979). A dynamic spatial diffusion model: An application to the kibbutz industry in Israel. GeoJournal, 3(1), 81-87. Meir, A. (1979). The nature and mutual complementarity of humanism and positivism in human geography. Geography Research Forum, 1, 21-36. Meir, A. (1979). Humanism and positivism in contemporary human geography. Horizons in Geography, 4, 65-67. (Hebrew) Meir, A. (1980). The diffusion of industry adoption by kibbutz rural settlements in Israel. The Journal of Developing Areas, 4, 539-551. (Hebrew) Meir, A. (1981). Innovation diffusion and regional economic development: The spatial diffusion of automobiles in Ohio. Regional Studies, 15, 111-122. Meir, A. (1981). The temporal stability of spatial diffusion channels. GeoJournal, 5(3), 277-284. Meir, A. (1981). Humanistic geography and education for human and environmental values. Geography Research Forum, ... http://www.bgu.ac.il/NCRD/bib2/Meir.htm |
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4: | CCTP: Geography for GIS Geography for GIS Written by Robert Slobodian, Malaspina University-College CONCEPT NAME Spatial Diffusion DEFINITION AND EXAMPLES changing time AND changing places transfer or movement of things, ideas, people from place to place a main mechanism in the process of cultural change. Technology, for example, is produced through innovation(internal) and spread through diffusion(external) processes of diffusion : - the origin in time and place of the feature the routes, chronology, and manner of the spread any "regionalization" of features resultant geographies globalization is essentially a process of diffusion, note the labels in your household: Korea - computer Japan - stereo Germany - car Brazil - shoes India - shirts and blouses Expansion Diffusion Contagious does not necessarily have a not a specific pre-existing structure for transmission disease contagion is a prime example the spread of products from a forest fire(particles/gases/heat) dissipate from the source(the ... http://www.ncgia.ucsb.edu/... units/geog_for_GIS/GC_50_1.html |
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5: | Just Another Medical Geography Page of Medicine, Epidemiology, Public Health, and Medical Geography there is a long tradition of examining the distribution of disease and death at various geographic scales, in an attempt to determine if the presence or absence of particular illness is associated with some factor(s) in the social or physical environment. In the case of infectious diseases such as measles , influenza or AIDS , this frequently involves examining the diffusion of a disease through space over a given period of time. Although the mapping of disease data can be relatively straightforward, interpreting spatially referenced disease data can sometimes be challenging - particularly for noninfectious and chronic diseases. A researcher maps the distribution of people with schitzophrenia in urban areas, for example, and she notices that they tend to reside in low-income inner-city areas. The researcher understands how the data are distributed, but explaining why requires further research. Does the stress ... http://www.geocities.com/... lats/7335/medical_geography.html |
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6: | ESF GISDATA SPECIALIST MEETINGS Specialist Meetings The following meetings were organised by the GISDATA programme: Diffusion Generalisation Spatial Analysis Concepts and Paradigms Strategic Data Review Multimedia Remote Sensing and Urban Analysis Data Quality Spatial Models and GIS Geographic Information: the European Dimension Spatial Socio - Economic Units GIS and Health Back to Home Page ... http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/academic/D-H/gis/specmeet.html |
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7: | Population Index - Volume 60 - Number 1 that are concerned primarily with the movement of population are classified under H. Migration . Studies concerned with the definition of urban or rural areas and with boundary changes are classified here or in O.1. Population Statistics, General Aspects . 60:10058 Al-Sa'adi, Abbas F. Spatial diffusion of the population of Al-Jazirah region in Iraq. Population Bulletin of ESCWA, No. 35-37, 1989-1990. 99-127 pp. Amman, Jordan. In Eng. "The aim of this study is to illustrate the picture of the spatial diffusion of the population in Al-Jazirah in the north-west of Iraq.The region was studied in the light of the 1977 census and compared with the data of the 1987 census to determine the extent of change in population diffusion during the period between the two censuses." Correspondence: A. F. Al-Sa'adi, University of Baghdad, Faculty of Arts, Geography Department, P.O. Box 12, Jadiriya, Baghdad, Iraq. Location: Princeton University Library (SPR). 60:10059 Bender, Rainer J. ... http://popindex.princeton.edu/browse/v60/n1/c.html |
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8: | CCTP: Geography for GIS Geography for GIS Written by Robert Slobodian, Malaspina University-College SPATIAL TRANSITION (Time and Space) Spatial phenomena change from place to place and places change in character over time SPATIAL TRANSITION (Time and Space) Spatial Diffusion Sequent Occupance GO TO : Geography Concepts Table of Contents Page GO TO : Previous Concept Page GO TO : Next Concept Page GO TO : Bob Slobodian's Homepage ... http://www.ncgia.ucsb.edu/... units/geog_for_GIS/GC_50_0.html |
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9: | NCGIA GIS Core Curriculum for Technical Programs geographic questions 1.2. Spatial description 1.2.1. location 1.2.2. distance 1.2.3. direction 1.2.4. scale and geographic detail 1.2.5. physical space 1.2.6. psychological space 1.3. Spatial distribution 1.3.1. pattern 1.3.2. density 1.3.3. concentration(dispersion) 1.4. Spatial interaction 1.4.1. connectivity 1.4.2. spatial hierarchies 1.5. Space and time 1.5.1. flow and diffusion 1.6. Spatial systems 1.6.1. classification(boundaries) 1.6.2. regions 1.6.3. systems 1.7. Landscapes 1.7.1. natural(physical) 1.7.2. cultural 1.8. What is GIS? 1.9. What does GIS do? 2. MAPPING THE EARTH 2.1. Representing the earth 2.1.1. map types 2.1.2. map accuracy and resolution 2.1.3. map projections 2.1.4. coordinate systems 2.2. Describing the earth 2.2.1. measurement 2.2.2. position on the earth 2.2.2.1. the shape of the earth 2.2.2.2. georeferencing (ie postal codes) 2.2.2.3. latitude/longitude/time 2.3. Cartographic representation 2.3.1. symbols 2.3.2. images 2.3.3. variables (choropleth) ... http://www.ncgia.ucsb.edu/... cctp/participants/wg/tasks.html |
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10: | Content, NCGIA Core Curriculum in GIScience 1.3.2. Latitude and Longitude (014), Anthony Kirvan 1.3.3. The Shape of the Earth (015), Peter Dana 1.3.4. Discrete Georeferencing (016), David Cowen 1.3.5. Global Positioning Systems Overview (017), Peter Dana 1.4. Mapping the earth (018) 1.4.1. Projections and transformations (019), *from the old CC, see also GC notes 1.4.2. Maps as Representations of the World (020), Judy Olson 1.5. Spatial relationships (021) connections and topology; networks; distance and direction; flow and diffusion; spatial hierarchies; boundaries; spatial patterns; attributes of relationships 1.6. Abstraction and incompleteness (030) 1.6.1. Sampling the World (031), *from the old CC 1.6.2. Line Generalization (034), *from the old CC scale and geographic detail; uncertainty; generalization 2. Implementing Geographic Concepts in GISystems (035) 2.1. Defining characteristics of computing technology (036) 2.1.1. Fundamentals of Data Storage - Carol Jacobson (037) 2.1.2. Algorithms (040) 2.1.2.1. ... http://www.csiss.org/... ources/content/giscc/giscc_contents.html |
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