You are currently viewing an archived version of Topic Proximity and Distance Decay.
If updates or revisions have been published you can find them at Proximity and Distance Decay.
Author and Citation Info:
DiBiase, D., DeMers, M., Johnson, A., Kemp, K., Luck, A. T., Plewe, B., and Wentz, E. (2006). Proximity and distance decay. The Geographic Information Science & Technology Body of Knowledge. Washington, DC: Association of American Geographers. (2nd Quarter 2016, first digital).
Learning Objectives:
Describe real world applications where distance decay is an appropriate representation of the strength of spatial relationships (e.g., shopping behavior, property values)
Explain the rationale for using different forms of distance decay functions
Explain how a semi-variogram describes the distance decay in dependence between data values
Outline the geometry implicit in classical “gravity” models of distance decay
Plot typical forms for distance decay functions
Write typical forms for distance decay functions
Write a program to create a matrix of pair-wise distances among a set of points
Describe real world applications where distance decay would not be an appropriate representation of the strength of spatial relationships (e.g., distance education, commuting, telecommunications)
You are currently viewing an archived version of Topic Proximity and Distance Decay. If updates or revisions have been published you can find them at Proximity and Distance Decay.
DiBiase, D., DeMers, M., Johnson, A., Kemp, K., Luck, A. T., Plewe, B., and Wentz, E. (2006). Proximity and distance decay. The Geographic Information Science & Technology Body of Knowledge. Washington, DC: Association of American Geographers. (2nd Quarter 2016, first digital).
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