1 / 16

Spatial and Geospatial Thinking in System Design

Spatial and Geospatial Thinking in System Design. What’s this all about?.

brenna
Download Presentation

Spatial and Geospatial Thinking in System Design

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Spatial and Geospatial Thinking in System Design

  2. What’s this all about? • Methods used for the development of non-spatial systems are often insufficient for designing spatial (and geospatial) systems because “normal” software development methods fail in the treatment space in the design process. • But, what the heck is space?

  3. Spatial Thinking • The spatial context is critical because it ultimately determines a user’s perspective and need. • It’s never simple; there are actually three spaces contexts: • Physical space • Life space • Intellectual space

  4. Spatial Thinking (Cont) • Physical space is also built on the four-dimensional world of space-time, but focuses on a scientific understanding of the nature, structure and function of phenomena. • This is cognition about space and involves thinking about the ways in which the "world" works. • An example might be how an earthquake creates a tsunami. • Lots of GISs work in this space.

  5. Spatial Thinking (Cont) • Life space is the four-dimensional space-time where spatial thinking is a means of coming to grips with the spatial relations between self and objects in the physical environment. • This is cognition in space and involves thinking about the world in which we live. • It is exemplified by navigation and the actions that we perform in space. • A number of GISs work in this space.

  6. Spatial Thinking (Cont) • Intellectual space is in relationship to concepts and objects that are not in and of themselves necessarily spatial, but the nature of the space is defined by the particular problem. • This is cognition with space and involves thinking with or through the medium of space in the abstract. • An example might be the territorial dispute between two ethnic groups. • Few GISs work in this space.

  7. Geospatial thinking • Geospatial thinking is simply spatial thinking related to the earth.

  8. What information gets stored? • Attributes - A property inherent in an entity. • e.g., John runs a 6 minute mile. • Activities - A unit of work performed by an actor. • e.g., John runs between Old Main and Beaver Stadium.

  9. Easy! So, what’s the problem?

  10. What did you see in the figure? D

  11. Are the drawings all of men? D

  12. Old woman or a young woman? D

  13. What do you see?

  14. Why? • People perceive what they expect to perceive • New information is assimilated into existing mental models • Conflicting information is often dismissed or ignored

  15. The bottom-line • Since all people observe the same information with inherent and different biases • We need a safeguard – a design method that: • State assumptions • Show chains of inferences • Consider alternative points of view • Documents D

More Related