This year marks the 21st anniversary of the International GeoComputation Conference Series. To celebrate the occasion, Environment and Planning B invited some members of the geocomputational community to reflect on its achievements, some of the unrealised potential, and to identify some of the on-going challenges
It is 20 years since the term “geographic information science” was suggested to encompass the set of...
The experience developed by Ian McHarg represents the first attempt to base environmental planning o...
The world is a big place. At any given instant something is happening somewhere, but even when nothi...
This year marks the 21st anniversary of the International GeoComputation Conference Series. To celeb...
When the first GeoComputaion (GC) conference took place in 1996, the computational environment was m...
Sixteen years ago, Franklin estimated that about 80% of data contain geo-referenced information. To ...
In a desire to create a space of dialogue for scholars working at the interface of Geography and Sci...
I am introducing in this paper some remarks on a research work for my thesis on the subject of GIS, ...
Geocomputation is the use of software and computing power to solve complex spatial problems. It is g...
Globalisation has not led to the ‘death of geography’. Intensified relations between communities in ...
The author offers a critical appreciation of the strengths and weaknesses of quantitative geography,...
This book encompasses all that is new in geocomputation. It is also a primer - that is, a book which...
When looking at an average world map, the amount of detailed information required to create each squ...
The term GIS had existed in the literature for over 10 years by the mid-1970s and textbooks studied ...
The potential of big data fused with the vision of a digital Earth offers powerful opportunities to ...
It is 20 years since the term “geographic information science” was suggested to encompass the set of...
The experience developed by Ian McHarg represents the first attempt to base environmental planning o...
The world is a big place. At any given instant something is happening somewhere, but even when nothi...
This year marks the 21st anniversary of the International GeoComputation Conference Series. To celeb...
When the first GeoComputaion (GC) conference took place in 1996, the computational environment was m...
Sixteen years ago, Franklin estimated that about 80% of data contain geo-referenced information. To ...
In a desire to create a space of dialogue for scholars working at the interface of Geography and Sci...
I am introducing in this paper some remarks on a research work for my thesis on the subject of GIS, ...
Geocomputation is the use of software and computing power to solve complex spatial problems. It is g...
Globalisation has not led to the ‘death of geography’. Intensified relations between communities in ...
The author offers a critical appreciation of the strengths and weaknesses of quantitative geography,...
This book encompasses all that is new in geocomputation. It is also a primer - that is, a book which...
When looking at an average world map, the amount of detailed information required to create each squ...
The term GIS had existed in the literature for over 10 years by the mid-1970s and textbooks studied ...
The potential of big data fused with the vision of a digital Earth offers powerful opportunities to ...
It is 20 years since the term “geographic information science” was suggested to encompass the set of...
The experience developed by Ian McHarg represents the first attempt to base environmental planning o...
The world is a big place. At any given instant something is happening somewhere, but even when nothi...