04718nam 2200709Ia 450 991014127200332120230801223310.01-118-35399-41-280-77570-X97866136860911-118-35398-61-118-35392-71-118-35400-1(CKB)2670000000206483(EBL)945112(OCoLC)796383238(SSID)ssj0000679522(PQKBManifestationID)11365655(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000679522(PQKBWorkID)10610028(PQKB)10818526(MiAaPQ)EBC4034515(MiAaPQ)EBC945112(Au-PeEL)EBL945112(CaPaEBR)ebr10570733(EXLCZ)99267000000020648320120309d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe visualization of spatial social structure[electronic resource] /Daniel Dorling2nd ed.Chichester [UK] Wiley20121 online resource (385 p.)Wiley series in computational and quantitative social scienceDescription based upon print version of record.1-119-96293-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.The Visualization of Spatial Social Structure; Contents; List of figures; List of text boxes; Preface; Introduction: Human cartography; Chapter 1 Envisioning information; 1.1 Visual thinking; 1.2 Pictures over time; 1.3 Beyond illustration; 1.4 Texture and colour; 1.5 Perspective and detail; 1.6 Pattern and illusion; 1.7 From mind to mind; Chapter 2 People, spaces and places; 2.1 Which people?; 2.2 Why study places?; 2.3 What are spaces?; 2.4 Drawing lines; 2.5 Picturing points; 2.6 Population space; 2.7 Adding time; Chapter 3 Artificial reality; 3.1 Imagining reality; 3.2 Abstract spaces3.3 Area cartograms3.4 The nature of space; 3.5 Producing illusions; 3.6 Population space; 3.7 Stretching spacetime; Chapter 4 Honeycomb structure; 4.1 Viewing society; 4.2 Who the people are; 4.3 Disparate origins; 4.4 Lost opportunities; 4.5 Work, industry and home; 4.6 How people vote; 4.7 The social landscape; Chapter 5 Transforming the mosaic; 5.1 Still images of change; 5.2 Forming the structure; 5.3 Structure transformed; 5.4 Variable employment; 5.5 House price inflation; 5.6 Reshaping votes; 5.7 Erosion and deposition; Chapter 6 Cobweb of flows; 6.1 What flow is6.2 What flows there are6.3 Unravelling the tangles; 6.4 Drawing the vortices; 6.5 Commuting chaos; 6.6 Migration networks; 6.7 A space of flows; Chapter 7 On the surface; 7.1 2D vision, 3D world; 7.2 Surface definition; 7.3 Depth cues; 7.4 Landscape painting; 7.5 Surface geometry; 7.6 Travel time surface; 7.7 Surface value; Chapter 8 The wood and the trees; 8.1 Sculptured characters; 8.2 Circles, pies and rings; 8.3 Bars and pyramids; 8.4 Flocks of arrows; 8.5 Trees and castles; 8.6 Crowds of faces; 8.7 Information overload; Chapter 9 Volume visualization; 9.1 The third dimension9.2 Spaces, times and places9.3 Spacetime continuum; 9.4 Three-dimensional graphs; 9.5 Flows through time; 9.6 Volume rendering; 9.7 Interactive visualization; Chapter 10 Conclusion: Another geography; Endnote; Acknowledgements; Appendix: Drawing faces; References; Author Index; Subject Index; Color PlatesHow do you draw a map of 100,000 places, of more than a million flows of people, of changes over time and space, of different kinds of spaces, surfaces and volumes, from human travel time to landscapes of hopes, fears, migration, manufacturing and mortality? How do you turn the millions of numbers concerning some of the most important moments of our lives into images that allow us to appreciate the aggregate while still remembering the detail? The visualization of spatial social structure means, literally, making visible the geographical patterns to the way our lives have come to be sWiley series in computational and quantitative social science.Human geographyGreat BritainCartographyMethodologyCartographyPhilosophyHuman geographyCartographyMethodology.CartographyPhilosophy.304.2910.285Dorling Daniel254256MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910141272003321The visualization of spatial social structure2196477UNINA