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Presents contributions from leading academics in the fields of spatial sciences, environmental studies, geography, cartography, GIS, urban planning, architecture, with a focus in investigations of settlements and infrastructure
Multidisciplinary approach to studying recent developments in spatial analysis and modelling which contributes to a better understanding of built-up areas, sustainable resource management, planning and regional development, and spatial information knowledge
Cooperation between the disciplines spatial planning, geography and computer science is useful for the complementary linkage of data and methods in the context of supporting spatial planning relevant impulses
Auteur
Martin Behnisch received his diploma and doctoral degrees at the Department of Architecture, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. He also received a degree in Wood Processing Technologies (University of Cooperative Education, Dresden, Germany) and a master's degree in Geographical Information Science (University of Salzburg, Austria) with distinction. He worked in Switzerland as a post-doctoral researcher (2007-2011) at the Institute of Historic Building Research (ETH Zurich). He is currently a senior scientist at the Leibniz Institute of Ecological Urban and Regional Development. His research interests are in spatial analysis and modeling, urban data mining, spatial monitoring, land use science as well as building stock research. He has published numerous refereed articles in international journals, scientific books and conference proceedings in his discipline.
Dr. Gotthard Meinel is specialist in the field of monitoring of land use development. His research interests are indicator development, automated spatial analysis of large datasets and visualization technologies. Since 1992 he has been acting as a project leader in the field of informatics, GIS and remote sensing at Leibniz Institute of Ecological Urban and Regional Development (IOER). Since 2009 he has been head of the research area Monitoring of settlement and open space development at IOER in Dresden. He received an M.S. in Information Technology in 1981 and a Ph.D. degree in Image Processing at Dresden University of Technology in 1987. Later he was a postdoctoral researcher in biomathematics and technical mathematics. He has published more than 100 research articles in international journals and refereed conference proceedings.
Contenu
Part 1: Towards a better understanding of settlements and infrastructure.- Chapter 1. Reverse engineering of land cover data: Machine learning for data replication in the spatial and temporal domains (Maclaurin).- Chapter 2. Spatial analysis requires a different way of thinking: the problem of spatial heterogeneity (Jiang).- Part 2: Geographic data mining.- Chapter 3: Survey on spatiotemporal and semantic data mining (Yuan).- Chapter 4. Spatial clustering with SOM and GeoSOM (Bação).- Chapter 5. Spatial analysis with self-organizing neural networks: SPAWNN Toolkit (Hagenauer).- Part 3: Spatial modelling, system dynamics and geosimulation.- Chapter 6. The evolution of the land development industry. An agent-based simulation model? (Modified re-print) (Almagor).- Chapter 7. Dynamic relationships between human decision making and socio-natural systems (Koch).- Chapter 8. Lessons and challenges in land change modelling derived from synthesis of cross-case comparisons (Gilmore Pontius Jr.).- Part 4: Multi-scale representation and analysis.- Chapter 9. Applications of 3D city models for a better understanding of the built environment (Willenborg).- Chapter 10. An automatic approach for generalization of land-cover data from topographic data (Thiemann).- Chapter 11. Epilogue (Pumain).
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