1. Impact of travel time uncertainties on modeling of spatial accessibility: a comparison of street data sources p. 471-490 2. Point, polygon, or marker? In search of the best geographic entity for mapping cultural ecosystem services using the online public participation geographic information systems tool, “My Green Place” p. 491-511 3. Semantic conflation in GIScience: a systematic revi…
1. A learning-based approach to automatically evaluate the quality of sequential color schemes for maps p. 377-392 2. Developing reliably distinguishable color schemes for legends of natural resource taxonomy-based maps p. 393-418 3. Embodied gesture interaction for immersive maps p. 417-431 4. The role of user context in the design of mobile map applications p. 432-448 5. Evaluating schema…
1. How do people perceive the disclosure risk of maps? Examining the perceived disclosure risk of maps and its implications for geoprivacy protection 2 - 20 2. Aerial perspective for shaded relief P. 21 - 28 3. Modeling the risk of robbery in the city of Tshwane, South Africa p. 29 - 43 4. Toward green cartography & visualization: a semantically-enriched method of generating energy-aware col…
1. A personalized activity-based spatiotemporal risk mapping approach to the COVID-19 pandemic p. 275-291 2. An area preserving method for improved categorical raster resampling p. 292-304 3. Spatial knowledge acquisition with virtual semantic landmarks in mixed reality-based indoor navigation p. 305-319 4. Taking speed seriously: motion, simultaneity, and context in map-making for historic…
The book starts with an introduction by the editors, providing an overview of tradional and energing geospatial technologies and how they each can significantly contribute to urban health studies. Section 1 covers urban health risk and disease, and analyses the spatial and temporal patterns of selected urban issues. Section 2 addresses urban health service accese, and demonstrate how tradition…