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Spatial Situation Models

2005
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Spatial Panel Models

2013
This chapter provides a survey of the existing literature on spatial panel data models. Both static and dynamic models will be considered. The chapter also demonstrates that spatial econometric models that include lags of the dependent variable and of the independent variables in both space and time provide a useful tool to quantify the magnitude of ...
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Spatial Models

2013
In Chapter 7, annual counts were used to create rate models, and in Chapter 8, lifetime maximum winds were used to create intensity models. In this chapter, we show you how to use cyclone track data together with climate field data to create spatial models. Spatial models make use of location information in data.
James B. Elsner, Thomas H. Jagger
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Spatial modelling

1995
The Boolean random functions are used as a tool to model surface roughness of a soil. The model was introduced by considering the surface as an agglomerate of basic elements and by giving simple assumptions on these elements. The evolution of the model was done to answer some specific questions.
Michel, Goulard, Chadoeuf, Joel
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Estimating Spatial-Interaction Models

Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1978
The problems that arise when estimating the unknown parameters of models of spatial interaction are considered. Two models are analysed and the large-lattice theory outlined. The need for a small-lattice theory is discussed, and those aspects of the theory that distinguish it from the large-lattice theory are emphasized.
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Spatial models

2009
Abstract Spatial models—and geographic maps in particular—have always played a central role in the “person, place, and time” triad of descriptive epidemiology. Nowhere is this better illustrated than in the pioneering work of John Snow (1855) on cholera (Figure 9.1) that led to the identification of the Broad Street pump as the source of
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Spatial Modeling by Computer

1988
Computer-based spatial models, representing the past and present disposition and configuration of sets of rock bodies, are a potentially important segment of a geological knowledge base. A spatial model is an interpretation that should be consistent with available data and with expectations based on knowledge of the processes which formed and deformed ...
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Spatial Models

2011
Dominique Haughton, Jonathan Haughton
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