Books on the topic 'Internet cartography'

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1

Zentai, László, and Jesús Reyes Nunez. Maps for the future: Children, education and internet. Berlin: Springer, 2012.

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2

Uga, Katsuya, and Masao Horibe. Chiri kūkan jōhō no katsuyō to puraibashī hogo: Sutorīto byū sābisu teikyō to Sōmushō Kenkyūkai tō no kentō o fumaete : intānetto chizu jōhō sābisu tō no hōsei to kadai taiōsaku. [Tokyo]: Chiiki Kagaku Kenkyūkai, 2009.

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3

Murayama, Yūji. Progress in Geospatial Analysis. Tokyo: Springer Japan, 2012.

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4

Mei-po, Kwan, Goodchild Michael F, Shekhar Shashi, and SpringerLink (Online service), eds. Geographic Information Science: 7th International Conference, GIScience 2012, Columbus, OH, USA, September 18-21, 2012. Proceedings. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012.

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5

Hodge, David C., and Donald G. Janelle. Information, place, and cyberspace: Issues in accessibility. Berlin: Springer, 2000.

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6

Strohmaier, Alena, and Angela Krewani, eds. Media and Mapping Practices in the Middle East and North Africa. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462989092.

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A few months into the popular uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region in 2009/10, the promises of social media, including its ability to influence a participatory governance model, grassroots civic engagement, new social dynamics, inclusive societies and new opportunities for businesses and entrepreneurs, became more evident than ever. Simultaneously, cartography received new considerable interest as it merged with social media platforms. In an attempt to rearticulate the relationship between media and mapping practices, whilst also addressing new and social media, this interdisciplinary book abides by one relatively clear point: space is a media product. The overall focus of this book is accordingly not so much on the role of new technologies and social networks as it is on how media and mapping practices expand the very notion of cultural engagement, political activism, popular protest and social participation.
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7

1939-, Read Andrew P., ed. Molecular basis of inherited disease. 2nd ed. Oxford: IRL Press at Oxford University Press, 1992.

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8

Davies, K. E. Molecular basis of inherited disease. Oxford: IRL Press, 1988.

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9

Cammack, Rex. Trends and Technologies for Maps and the Internet. Springer, 2020.

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10

Brown, Allan, and Jan-Menno Kraak. Web Cartography. CRC, 2000.

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11

P, Peterson Michael, and International Cartographic Association, eds. Maps and the internet. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2003.

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12

Alexandra, Budke, Kanwischer Detlef, and Pott Andreas, eds. Internetgeographien: Beobachtungen zum Verhältnis von Internet, Raum und Gesellschaft. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 2004.

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13

P, Peterson Michael, ed. International perspectives on maps and the internet. Berlin: Springer, 2008.

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14

Peterson, Michael P. International Perspectives on Maps and the Internet. Springer, 2008.

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15

P, Peterson Michael, and International Cartographic Association, eds. Maps and the Internet. Amsterdam: published on behalf of the International Cartographic Association by Elsevier, 2005.

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16

Zentai, László, and Jesús Reyes Nunez. Maps for the Future: Children, Education and Internet. Springer, 2012.

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17

Peterson, Michael P. International Perspectives on Maps and the Internet (Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography). Springer, 2007.

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18

J, Kraak M., and Brown Allan, eds. Web cartography: Developments and prospects. London: Taylor & Francis, 2001.

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19

Crampton, Jeremy W. The Political Mapping of Cyberspace. University Of Chicago Press, 2004.

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20

Crampton, Jeremy W. The Political Mapping of Cyberspace. University Of Chicago Press, 2004.

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21

Crampton, Jeremy W. The Political Mapping of Cyberspace. Edinburgh University Press, 2003.

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22

Never lost again: The Google mapping revolution that sparked new industries and augmented our reality. 2018.

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23

Baunaz, Lena, Liliane Haegeman, Karen De Clercq, and Eric Lander, eds. Exploring Nanosyntax. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190876746.001.0001.

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By offering the first in-depth introduction to the framework of nanosyntax, Exploring Nanosyntax fills a major gap in the current theoretical literature. Originating within the generative Principles and Parameters tradition in the study of language, nanosyntax was developed starting in the early 2000s by Michal Starke. Deploying a radical implementation of the cartographic “one feature–one head” maxim, the framework aims at a fine-grained decomposition of morphosyntactic structure, thus laying bare the building blocks of the universal functional sequence. This volume aims at making three contributions. First, it presents the framework’s constitutive tools and principles and explains how nanosyntax relates to cartography and to Distributed Morphology. Second, the volume illustrates how nanosyntactic tools and principles can be applied within a range of empirical domains of natural language. In doing so, the volume provides a range of detailed and crosslinguistic investigations that uncover novel empirical data and that contribute to a better understanding of the functional sequence. Finally, new theoretical strands internal to the nanosyntactic framework are explored, with specific problems raised and discussed. The volume contains original contributions by senior and junior researchers in the field and constitutes an ideal handbook for advanced students and researchers in linguistics. Above all, Exploring Nanosyntax offers the first encompassing view of this promising framework, making its methodology and exciting results accessible to a wide audience.
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24

Bajpai, Anandita. Cordial Cold War:Cultural Actors in India and the German Democratic Republic. SAGE Publications, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9789354790232.

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Cordial Cold War examines cultural entanglements, in various forms, between two distant yet interconnected sites of the Cold War—India and the German Democratic Republic (GDR). Focusing on theatre performances, film festivals, newsreels, travel literature, radio broadcasting, cartography and art as sites of engagement, the chapters spotlight actual spaces of interaction that emerged in spite of, and within, the ambits of Cold War constraints. The inter-disciplinary collection of contributions sheds light on the variegated nature of translocal cultural entanglements. By foregrounding the role of actors, their practices and the sites of their entanglement, the book exposes how creative energies were mobilized to forge zones of friendship, mutual interest and envisioned solidarities.
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25

Arregui, Ana, María Luisa Rivero, and Andrés Salanova, eds. Modality Across Syntactic Categories. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198718208.001.0001.

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This volume explores the extremely rich diversity found under the “modal umbrella” in natural language. Offering a cross-linguistic perspective on the encoding of modal meanings that draws on novel data from an extensive set of languages, the book supports a view according to which modality infuses a much more extensive number of syntactic categories and levels of syntactic structure than has traditionally been thought. The volume distinguishes between “low modality,” which concerns modal interpretations that associate with the verbal and nominal cartographies in syntax, “middle modality” or modal interpretation associated to the syntactic cartography internal to the clause, and “high modality” that relates to the cartography known as the left periphery. By offering enticing combinations of cross-linguistic discussions of the more studied sources of modality together with novel or unexpected sources of modality, the volume presents specific case studies that show how meanings associated with low, middle, and high modality crystallize across a large variety of languages. The chapters on low modality explore modal meanings in structures that lack the complexity of full clauses, including conditional readings in noun phrases and modal features in lexical verbs. The chapters on middle modality examine the effects of tense and aspect on constructions with counterfactual readings, and on those that contain canonical modal verbs. The chapters on high modality are dedicated to constructions with imperative, evidential, and epistemic readings, examining, and at times challenging, traditional perspectives that syntactically associate these interpretations with the left periphery of the clause.
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26

Chatterjee, Shibashis. India's Spatial Imaginations of South Asia. Edited by Sumit Ganguly and E. Sridharan. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199489886.001.0001.

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Since India attained independence, its foreign policy discourse has imagined its South Asian neighbourhood through the politics of realism. This imagination explicates state interest in South Asia by establishing it as a space of sovereign territoriality. Even today, India’s foreign and security policies are primarily shaped by geopolitical centrism, and remain unaffected by economic prosperity and community concerns. As a part of the Oxford International Relations in South Asia series, this volume examines alternative conceptions of South Asian space in terms of geo-economics and community, and justifies why they have been unable to replace its dominant understanding, irrespective of the political regime. This volume probes reasons behind the relevance of differentiated cartography of territorial nationalism in our shared understanding of space, politics, society, and the community.
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27

Hoelscher, Steven D., David Woodward, Robert C. Ostergren, Onno Brouwer, and Joshua Hane. Cultural Map of Wisconsin: A Cartographic Portrait of the State. University of Wisconsin Press, 1996.

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28

Cultural map of Wisconsin: A cartographic portrait of the state. Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press, 1996.

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29

Camp, Elisabeth. Why Maps are Not Propositional. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198732570.003.0002.

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Many philosophers and logicians assume an exhaustive and exclusive dichotomy between “imagistic”, iconic, or pictorial representations and “discursive”, logical, or propositional ones. Maps seem to fall somewhere in between, with different theorists assimilating them to one or the other side of the divide. Given this assumption, philosophers and logicians interested in defending the logical tractability of maps have typically analyzed them as being predicative, where this is understood as a species of logical, propositional representation. This chapter argues that the best way to interpret the debate about propositionality is as concerning a representational system’s operative functional structure. Propositional structure is claimed to exhibit several distinctive properties: it is digital, asymmetrical, general, recursive, and hierarchical. However, there is little positive evidence that cartographic structure exhibits these features in the relevant sense.
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30

Barrett, Chris. The Dream of an Unmappable Nation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198816874.003.0002.

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The Faerie Queene frequently meditates on how representing space—imagistically or narratively—involves distortion. This chapter proposes that allegory as an expressive mode allows the poem to interrogate the workings of mapping and poetry in particular, and of representation more broadly. Noting that some of the poem’s most vexing encounters with allegory’s limits come at moments in which the representation of space is at stake, the chapter considers several moments in the poem (e.g. Book V’s Giant with the Scales) when cartographic anxiety reveals a tension between the map’s and poem’s literary and literal ambitions. If mapping depends on an enabling metaphoricity that conceals its artifice, then allegory, which trumpets its metaphoricity to problematize its artifice, emerges as the poetic mode best able to supply an alternative model for how the literal and the literary interact in the making of poetry.
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31

GaryJ, Robinson, and British Cartographic Society. Digital Cartography Special Interest Group., eds. Going digital: Pros and cons : edited transcripts of the BCS Digital Cartography Special Interest Group Workshop held at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth on 6th September 1985. Torrington, Devon: British Cartographic Society, 1987.

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32

Six-Hohenbalken, Maria, ed. Reisen zu den Quellen des Tigris ‒ Travels to the Tigris Springs. Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1553/978oeaw85796.

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In the second half of the 19th century, European interest in research in western Asia increasingly expanded to the areas inhabited by the Kurds. From the modern perspective, these studies contributed not only to the study of still little-known regions, but also to the introduction of Kurdish Studies. Initially the focus of the research was almost entirely dictated by British, Russian and French colonial interests, which have been subjected to a critical reappraisal over the last three decades in accordance with post-colonial approaches and their importance redefined. It is for precisely this reason that those study trips which did not have a colonial background or did not pursue economic or power-political interests are particularly valuable. And that is also why nowadays autonomous and independently organised research, like that undertaken by Josef Wünsch (1842–1907), who worked in Prague and Vienna, can be seen as pioneering. Wünsch pursued universal research interests and produced both ethnographic and cartographic documentation. He drew up detailed cartographic material for the “Kurdish regions” and created a museum collection of everyday items. The results of his research on Mesopotamia were published in journals in Vienna and Prague, but he never produced a complete overview of his two years of research. Nowadays Wünsch's legacy is divided between various Austrian and Czech institutions. By bringing together the various partial legacies, in this collective volume all published and unpublished results of Josef Wünsch’s research will be edited, reports in Czech incorporated through commentated translations and then a critical re-evaluation undertaken. All of this will be preceded by an introductory chapter on Austrian contributions to the development of Kurdish Studies from the late 19th century on.
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33

Owens, Thomas. Wordsworth, Coleridge, and 'the language of the heavens'. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198840862.001.0001.

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This book explores some of the exultant visions inspired by Wordsworth’s and Coleridge’s close scrutiny of the night sky, the natural world, and the domains of science. It examines a set of scientific patterns drawn from natural, geometric, celestial, and astronomical sources which Wordsworth and Coleridge used to express their ideas about poetry, religion, literary criticism, and philosophy. It establishes the central important of analogy in their creative thinking. Analogies prompted the poets’ imaginings in geometry and cartography, in nature (representations of the Moon) and natural history (studies of spider-webs, streams, and dew), in calculus and conical refraction, and in the discovery of infra-red and ultraviolet light. Although this is primarily a study of the patterns which inspired their writing, the findings overturn the prevalent critical consensus that Wordsworth and Coleridge did not have the access, interest, or capacity to understand the latest developments in nineteenth-century astronomy and mathematics, which they did in fact possess. This research reinstates many relationships which the poets had with scientists and their sources. Most significantly, the book illustrates that these sources are not simply another context or historical lens through which to engage with Wordsworth’s and Coleridge’s work but are instead a controlling device of the symbolic imagination. Exploring the structures behind Wordsworth’s and Coleridge’s poems and metaphysics stakes out a return to the evidence of the Romantic imagination, not for its own sake, but in order to reveal that their analogical configuration of the world provided them with a scaffold for thinking, an intellectual orrery which ordered artistic consciousness and which they never abandoned.
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34

Luc, Heres, ed. Time in GIS: Issues in spatio-temporal modelling. Nederlandse Commissie voor Geodesie, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.54419/v5m55p.

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Most Geographic Information Systems started as a substitute for loose paper maps. These paper maps did not have a built-in time dimension and could only represent history indirectly as a sequence of physically separate images. This was in fact imitated by these first generation systems. The time dimension could only be represented by means of separate files. A minority of Geographic Information Systems however, started their life as a substitute for ordered lists and tables with a link to paper maps. In these lists, the inclusion of a time com-ponent in the form of a data field was quite usual. This method too was copied by the systems that replaced these paper tables. The current trend in the development of Geographic Information Systems is towards the inte-gration of the classical map-oriented concepts with the table-oriented concepts. This often leads to the explicit embedding of the time component in the GIS environment. The Subcommission Geo-Information Models of the Netherlands Geodetic Commission has organized a workshop to discuss the theory and practice of time and history in GIS on 18 May 2000. This publication contains 6 articles prepared for the workshop. The first paper, written by Donna Peuquet, gives a bird’s-eye view of the current state of the art in spatio-temporal database technology and methodology. She is a well-known expert in the field of spatio-temporal information systems and the author of many articles in this field. The second article is written by Monica Wachowicz. She describes what you can do with a GIS once it contains a historical dimension and how you can detect changes in geographic phenomena. Furthermore, her article suggests how geographic visualisation and knowledge discovery techniques can be integrated in a spatio-temporal database. How to record the time dimension in a database is one thing, how to show this dimension to users is another one. In his contribution, Menno-Jan Kraak first tells about the techniques, which were used in the age of paper maps and the limitations these methods had. He goes on to explain what kind of cartographic techniques have been developed since the mass introduc-tion of the computer. Finally he describes the powerful animation methods which currently exist and can be used on CD-ROM and Internet applications. Peter van Oosterom describes how the time dimension is represented in the information sys-tems of the Cadastre and how this is used to publish updates. The Cadastre has a very long tradition in incorporating the time component, which has always been an inherent component of the cadastral registration. In former times this was translated in very precise procedures about how to update the paper maps and registers. Today it is translated in spatio-temporal database design. The article of Luc Heres tells about the time component in the National Road Database, origi-nally designed for traffic accident registration. This is one of the systems with ''table'' roots and with quite a long tradition in handling the time dimension. He elucidates first the core objects in the conceptual model and how time is added. Next, how this model is translated in a logical design and finally how this is technically implemented. Geologists and geophysicians also have a respectable tradition in handling the time dimension in the data they collect. This is illustrated in the last paper, which is written by Ipo Ritsema. He outlines how time is handled in geological and geophysical databases maintained by TNO. By means of some practical cases he illustrates which problems can be encountered and how these can be solved.
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35

Read, Andrew, and K. E. Davies. Molecular Basis of Inherited Disease: In Focus. Oxford University Press, USA, 1989.

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