Literature DB >> 24587490

Real-time Space-time Integration in GIScience and Geography.

Douglas B Richardson1.   

Abstract

Space-time integration has long been the topic of study and speculation in geography. However, in recent years an entirely new form of space-time integration has become possible in GIS and GIScience: real-time space-time integration and interaction. While real-time spatiotemporal data is now being generated almost ubiquitously, and its applications in research and commerce are widespread and rapidly accelerating, the ability to continuously create and interact with fused space-time data in geography and GIScience is a recent phenomenon, made possible by the invention and development of real-time interactive (RTI) GPS/GIS technology and functionality in the late 1980s and early 1990s. This innovation has since functioned as a core change agent in geography, cartography, GIScience and many related fields, profoundly realigning traditional relationships and structures, expanding research horizons, and transforming the ways geographic data is now collected, mapped, modeled, and used, both in geography and in science and society more broadly. Real-time space-time interactive functionality remains today the underlying process generating the current explosion of fused spatiotemporal data, new geographic research initiatives, and myriad geospatial applications in governments, businesses, and society. This essay addresses briefly the development of these real-time space-time functions and capabilities; their impact on geography, cartography, and GIScience; and some implications for how discovery and change can occur in geography and GIScience, and how we might foster continued innovation in these fields.

Entities:  

Keywords:  GIScience; GPS/GIS; Geographic Management Systems; Philosophy of Science; Real-time Space-time; Spatiotemporal

Year:  2013        PMID: 24587490      PMCID: PMC3935343          DOI: 10.1080/00045608.2013.792172

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Assoc Am Geogr        ISSN: 0004-5608


  2 in total

1.  From place-based to people-based exposure measures.

Authors:  Mei-Po Kwan
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2009-08-07       Impact factor: 4.634

2.  Medicine. Spatial turn in health research.

Authors:  Douglas B Richardson; Nora D Volkow; Mei-Po Kwan; Robert M Kaplan; Michael F Goodchild; Robert T Croyle
Journal:  Science       Date:  2013-03-22       Impact factor: 47.728

  2 in total
  1 in total

1.  Risk assessment for precise intervention of COVID-19 epidemic based on available big data and spatio-temporal simulation method: Empirical evidence from different public places in Guangzhou, China.

Authors:  Shuli Zhou; Suhong Zhou; Zhong Zheng; Junwen Lu; Tie Song
Journal:  Appl Geogr       Date:  2022-04-20
  1 in total

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