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WEEK THREE. Map of the Day. Data: Terrorist Plots AND Drone Strike Locations in Yemen Goal: 1 map that shows both 2000-2012 What does your map look like?. Principles of Symbolization. EMR 21 September 19, 2012 Chapter 5 / Slocum Text. What’s the point?.
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Map of the Day • Data: Terrorist Plots AND Drone Strike Locations in Yemen • Goal: 1 map that shows both • 2000-2012 • What does your map look like?
Principles of Symbolization • EMR 21 • September 19, 2012 • Chapter 5 / Slocum Text
What’s the point? • The Basic Principles of Symbolizing Phenomena • The Congruence Principle • Lots of ways to think about and differentiate geographic phenomena • Different kinds of phenomena need different kinds of maps
Diagnose your data • Different data require different visual treatments
Diagnose your data • Different data require different visual treatments • Build a visual structure that mimics the nature of your data’s structure • Qualitative vs. Quantitative / Discrete vs. Continuous / Abrupt vs. Smooth • Points, Lines, Polygons, Volumes • Levels of Measurement • Visual Variables
The thematic map • Also called the “statistical map,”“single-topic map,” or the “special-purpose” map • Less literal than a general-reference map • Two groups of thematic maps: qualitative and quantitative
The 2 kinds of thematic maps • Qualitative thematic maps • Show the spatial distribution or location of kind • Land use • Soil types • Languages • Restaurants • These maps are concerned with kinds, names, types (nominal data)
The 2 kinds of thematic maps • Quantitative thematic maps • Spatial aspects of numerical data • Corn yield • Per Capita Income • Number of Tornadoes • Population Density • These maps are concerned with amounts, or quantities • Can you tell the difference? • Is the attribute a quantity or a quality?
This here is a Thematic map: Lung cancer in white males, by BrewerQualitative or Quantitative?
Geographic Phenomena • The things we want to map • 5 geometric models of geographic phenomena • Differentiated by spatial dimensions
Spatial Arrangement of Data • 5 types of geographic phenomena • differentiated by spatial dimensions • Zero-dimensional – ? • One-dimensional - ? • Two-dimensional - ?
Spatial Arrangement of Data • 5 types of geographic phenomena • Separated by spatial dimensions • Zero-dimensional – points • One-dimensional - lines • Two-dimensional – areas • 2.5-dimensional - ? • Three-dimensional - ?
Point Phenomena • Points have no spatial-extent: zero-dimensional
Point Phenomena • Points have no spatial-extent: zero-dimensional • Examples of geographic point data?
Point Phenomena • Points have no spatial-extent: zero-dimensional • Examples of geographic point data? • Weather stations, oil wells, eagle nesting sites • Location described by coordinates • (X,Y) • (X,Y,Z)
Linear Phenomena • Lines have 1 dimension: length, but no width • Examples of geographic lines?
Linear Phenomena • Lines have 1 dimension: length, but no width • Examples of geographic lines? • Borders between countries • Flight lines
Linear Phenomena • Lines have 1 dimension: length, but no width • Examples of geographic lines? • Borders between countries • Flight lines • Described by a series of coordinate locations
Areal Data • 2-dimensional in spatial extent: length and width • Examples of geographic areas?
Areal Data • 2-dimensional in spatial extent: length and width • Examples of geographic areas? • Lakes, political areas… • Described using a series of coordinates that close a region
Volumetric Phenomena • 2.5-Dimensional Phenomena • 3-Dimensional Phenomena
Volumetric Phenomena • 2.5-Dimensional Phenomena • 1 x value, 1 y value, 1 z value • Every x,y pair has a single value associated with it • “A surface” – example: elevation • 3-Dimensional Phenomena
Volumetric Phenomena • 2.5-Dimensional Phenomena • 1 x value, 1 y value, 1 z value • Every x,y pair has a single value associated with it • “A surface” – example: elevation • 3-Dimensional Phenomena • True 3-D data are multivalued • Each x,y pair can have many z values
True 3-D phenomena • 4 important values • X-value • Y-value • Z-value (height above or below)
True 3-D phenomena • 4 important values • X-value • Y-value • Z-value (height above or below) • Measured value of Phenomenon
True 3-D phenomena • 4 important values • X-value • Y-value • Z-value (height above or below) • Measured value of Phenomenon • The first 3 are locational coordinates, the last describes the attribute • EXAMPLES?
How does map scale influence spatial dimension? • Map Scale and cities? • Map Scale and rivers? • Models of geographic phenomena • Reducing geographic realities to geometric primitives
Other phenomenal characteristics • Discrete v. Continuous • Abrupt v. Smooth
Discrete Phenomena • Occur at distinct location • With space in between • Examples: people living in a city – as points, space between • Weather stations • Restaurants
Continuous Phenomena • Continuous phenomena are defined everywhere: • Examples: elevation, air pressure, temperature, land cover
How do they change? • Phenomenon can change two main ways over space… • Abruptly or Smoothly
What things change abruptly? • Tax rates • Spending on public school students • Number of postal employees • # of electoral votes
What things change smoothly? • Precipitation levels • Influenza cases • See figure 4.1 in your book.
Discrete/ContinuousAbrupt/Smooth • Who cares??
Ratio of Unmarried Men to Unmarried Women in US (Census) • Who cares??