| Literature DB >> 35875724 |
Farrukh Chishtie1,2, Rizwan Bulbul3, Panka Babukova3, Johannes Scholz3.
Abstract
While platial representations are being developed for sedentary entities, a parallel and useful endeavor would be to consider time in so-called "platio-temporal" representations that would also expand notions of mobility in GIScience, that are solely dependent on Euclidean space and time. Besides enhancing such aspects of place and mobility via spatio-temporal, we also include human aspects of these representations via considerations of the sociological notions of mobility via the mobilities paradigm that can systematically introduce representation of both platial information along with mobilities associated with 'moving places.' We condense these aspects into 'platial mobility,' a novel conceptual framework, as an integration in GIScience and the mobilities paradigm in sociology, that denotes movement of places in our platio-temporal and sociology-based representations. As illustrative cases for further study using platial mobility as a framework, we explore its benefits and methodological aspects toward developing better understanding for disaster management, disaster risk reduction and pandemics. We then discuss some of the illustrative use cases to clarify the concept of platial mobility and its application prospects in the areas of disaster management, disaster risk reduction and pandemics. These use cases, which include flood events and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, have led to displaced and restricted communities having to change practices and places, which would be particularly amenable to the conceptual framework developed in our work.Entities:
Keywords: Place in GIScience; Platial displacements; Platial mobility; Platial mobility for disaster management; Platial modeling; Platio-temporal’ mobilities
Year: 2022 PMID: 35875724 PMCID: PMC9287132 DOI: 10.1007/s10109-022-00389-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Geogr Syst ISSN: 1435-5930
Platial classification
| Type and characteristics | Description |
|---|---|
| Dynamic vs Static | Places can be dynamic or static based on their extents or boundaries. Dynamic places possess flexible boundaries that may change over a time interval, while static places have fixed boundaries that may not change over time. For example, the place of a demonstration may be important for law enforcing agencies for crowd management. However, the extent of the place of demonstration may change continuously over time based on the number of participants and crowd movement dynamics. Static places, on the other hand, have static boundaries that remain invariant over a time interval. For example, the place of a city festival happening in a city hall has static boundaries that will not change substantially over the course of the event |
| Temporary vs Permanent | Temporary places have predefined life spans and disappear over time. Permanent places have no predefined lifespans and exist until natural or active human interventions that make these disappear over time. An example of a temporary place is a police check post along a highway that is established for random snap checking. Statue of liberty in USA and Eiffel tower in France are permanent places as these will exist until natural or human interventions are made. The world trade center in USA was a permanent place but (negative) interventions made the place to disappear |
| Movable vs Immovable | Movable places are places that may displace or change location over time without losing their essence. These location-based displacements may cause change in other properties as well and can be human induced or natural. For example, a shop or business moved from one place to another. This could be due to human intervention to relocate business to maximize profit or reduce costs, or because of some natural calamity that damaged the place where the business was located and thus making it inevitable to migrate the business to a new place. Immovable places may lose essence (and sense of place) if displaced and are thus immovable. For example, some sacred religious places make sense only being there such as the sacred place of “Kaaba” in the city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia and another such example is the holy “Wailing Wall” in the city of Jerusalem |
| Instantaneous vs Planned | Unplanned or instantaneous places come into existence without being planned through the instantaneous occurrence of any event. For example, the place of an accident instantaneously comes into being when a sudden event (the accident) occurs. On the other hand the planned events can create planned places. For example, the planned meeting place, the planned place for constructing a home, etc |
Fig. 1Places and scale. Places may have different meanings at different levels based on individual or group experiences
Difference between spatial and platial models
| Dimension | Spatial model | Platial model |
|---|---|---|
| Level of detail | Most of the existing spatial data models support level of detail through representation of spatial data at multiple levels (Frank and Timpf | In case of platial models, the hierarchical representation of platial information would be the useful option to capture the inherent hierarchical cognitive sense of place. However, it is not necessary that the platial hierarchies match the spatial hierarchies |
| Time | Time is a key dimension for spatio-temporal analysis and can be modeled either as an attribute of n-dimensional geometries (resulting in n.5 D models) or integrated as an additional dimension of the n-dimensional geometries (resulting in n+1 D models) | Time could be a time stamp or interval and is an integral component or dimension of platial definition. Places make sense only in temporal dimension and that also enables platial representation models to support platio-temporal analysis. Time in platial models, for a specific level of detail, is associated with spatial and meaning dimensions |
| Geometry | Many geometric representation data models exist that can handle multidimensional geometries. Most of these models can also handle level of detail and support robust geometric and topological operations. A subset of models also support fuzzy and imprecise boundaries | The platial geometries are defined by the space dimension of the place and spatial modeling techniques are sufficient to handle the requirements of platial geometric representations. Platial analysis along spatial dimension utilizes existing spatial analysis techniques |
| Meaning | Semantic enrichment of spatial models is possible using various approaches, e.g., linked data (Kuhn et al. | Meaning is the most important and distinguishing dimension of platial model and has the capability to capture cognitive sense of place at various levels of detail. Meaning then makes it possible to perform platial analysis using both geometric and semantic measurements. Like spatial models, semantic enrichment of platial models is also possible. However, this is only viable if the platial dimensions are fixed, well-known and well-controlled (Seamon and Sowers |
Fig. 2Variability of places is a function of space and time dimensions. Two places (X and Y) may share same space (S’) at a given time(T’)
Space time combinations for platial constructions
| Time | Space | Place ( | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Place is driven by meaning only (“1-D”) | At a specific time or fixed time interval for which only place is variable. Examples: A historical place, monument, shop, etc., which can have multiple meanings or interpretations | ||
| Driven by meaning, and changing spaces (“2-D”) | On a specific time or fixed time interval, the multiple spaces defining the place. Examples: a shop extended its boundary by including neighboring empty shop with various meanings of this place | ||
| Driven by changing time and meaning (“2-D”) | Space defining place is not changing over time. These are the permanent places as discussed in Table | ||
| Driven by change in meaning, time and space(“3-D”) | Space defining the place is changing over time. The change could be change in spatial extent or displacement or both. The spatial displacements would make the case for generalized “platial mobility,” while changes in spatial boundaries would lead to “dynamic places” as discussed in Table |
FT, time or its interval as fixed or constant; CT, time or its interval as changing or variable; FS, fixed or constant space; CS, changing or variable space
Fig. 3A view of Lake Attabad, courtesy of Google Maps
Fig. 4Flooded village in Eferding Basin 2013. Image source: police records
Fig. 5The Johns Hopkins COVID-19 Web-based data Dashboard