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by David O’Sullivan
by David O’Sullivan Geographic information science (GISc) and systems (GIS) have grown rapidly in recent decades, increasingly on a separate track from geographic thought. As geography’s “big ideas”–such as space, place, boundaries, scale, process, and relationality–have evolved, what does this mean for their computational representation? This book considers how key concepts have developed in geography and are represented (or not) in GISc, with a view to bridging gaps between the two. David O’Sullivan shows how revisiting the theoretical underpinnings of geography offers insights on enduring GIS challenges–including map projections, the modifiable areal unit problem, scale and map generalization, and the…
by David O’Sullivan
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