People often communicate with reference to informally agreed places, such as “the city centre”. However, views of the spatial extent of such areas may vary, resulting in imprecise regions. We compare perceptions of Sheffield’s City Centre from a street survey to extents derived from various web-based sources. Such automated approaches have advantages of speed, cost and repeatability. We show that footprints from web sources are often in concordance with models derived from more labour-intensive methods. Notable exceptions however were found with sources advertising or selling residential property. Agreement between sources was measured by aggregating them to identify locations of consensus.</p
Online search behaviour has become increasingly utilised in the study of housing markets. Currently...
The Defining Town Centre Statistics Project was aimed at defining town centre boundaries for all tow...
This paper describes several steps in the derivation of boundaries of imprecise regions using the We...
People often communicate with reference to informally agreedplaces, such as “the city centre”. Howev...
Place names are commonly communicated terms between individuals used to informally agree on a locati...
Many attempts to embed the concept of ‘place ’ into current location-based technologies and spatial ...
Crowdsourced knowledge websites such as Wikipedia and OpenStreetMap are increasingly attracting a cr...
Crowdsourcing is one mechanism for undertaking e-participation. This chapter considers the broader ...
Neighbourhoods are important in our everyday lives, but physical definitions of neighbourhoods are of...
Social software completely revolutionizes the way of information sharing by allowing every individua...
It is often the case that locality boundaries are not sharply delineated in our mental maps. This pa...
Internet users may be asked to manually provide their contact details including city or full postal ...
Social interaction is typically studied from the context of physical movement, where geographic dist...
The informal and unofficial nature of how citizens discuss and conceive geographical entities such a...
Vagueness is an inherent property of geographic data. This thesis develops a geocomputational method...
Online search behaviour has become increasingly utilised in the study of housing markets. Currently...
The Defining Town Centre Statistics Project was aimed at defining town centre boundaries for all tow...
This paper describes several steps in the derivation of boundaries of imprecise regions using the We...
People often communicate with reference to informally agreedplaces, such as “the city centre”. Howev...
Place names are commonly communicated terms between individuals used to informally agree on a locati...
Many attempts to embed the concept of ‘place ’ into current location-based technologies and spatial ...
Crowdsourced knowledge websites such as Wikipedia and OpenStreetMap are increasingly attracting a cr...
Crowdsourcing is one mechanism for undertaking e-participation. This chapter considers the broader ...
Neighbourhoods are important in our everyday lives, but physical definitions of neighbourhoods are of...
Social software completely revolutionizes the way of information sharing by allowing every individua...
It is often the case that locality boundaries are not sharply delineated in our mental maps. This pa...
Internet users may be asked to manually provide their contact details including city or full postal ...
Social interaction is typically studied from the context of physical movement, where geographic dist...
The informal and unofficial nature of how citizens discuss and conceive geographical entities such a...
Vagueness is an inherent property of geographic data. This thesis develops a geocomputational method...
Online search behaviour has become increasingly utilised in the study of housing markets. Currently...
The Defining Town Centre Statistics Project was aimed at defining town centre boundaries for all tow...
This paper describes several steps in the derivation of boundaries of imprecise regions using the We...