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The Navajo language (Dine bizaad) has a vocabulary of landscape
terms that allows speakers to communicate about their environment.
This book documents that vocabulary and provides photographic
illustration of many of the terms. The meanings of these terms
seldom match the English-language terms one-to-one. Terms include
explicit reference to earth materials such as water or rock/stone.
Rather than alphabetically, this book is organized by material and
form categories. This dictionary is a valuable resource for
language preservation in schools and elsewhere, and for linguists,
anthropologists, geographers, and earth scientists interested in
indigenous conceptualization of landscape and environment.
The Navajo language (Dine bizaad) has a vocabulary of landscape
terms that allows speakers to communicate about their environment.
This book documents that vocabulary and provides photographic
illustration of many of the terms. The meanings of these terms
seldom match the English-language terms one-to-one. Terms include
explicit reference to earth materials such as water or rock/stone.
Rather than alphabetically, this book is organized by material and
form categories. This dictionary is a valuable resource for
language preservation in schools and elsewhere, and for linguists,
anthropologists, geographers, and earth scientists interested in
indigenous conceptualization of landscape and environment.
20 years ago, from July 8 to 20, 1990, 60 researchers gathered for
two weeks at Castillo-Palacio Magalia in Las Navas del Marques
(Avila Province, Spain) to discuss cognitive and linguistic aspects
of geographic space. This meeting was the start of successful
research on cognitive issues in geographic information science,
produced an edited book (D. M. Mark and A. U. Frank, Eds., 1991,
Cognitive and Linguistic Aspects of Geographic Space. NATO ASI
Series D: Behavioural and Social Sciences 63. Kluwer,
Dordrecht/Boston/London), and led to a biannual conference (COSIT),
a refereed journal (Spatial Cognition and Computation), and a
substantial and still growing research community. It appeared
worthwhile to assess the achievements and to reconsider the
research challenges twenty years later. What has changed in the age
of computational ontologies and cyber-infrastructures? Consider
that 1990 the web was only about to emerge and the very first
laptops had just appeared! The 2010 meeting brought together many
of the original participants, but was also open to others, and
invited contributions from all who are researching these topics.
Early-career scientists, engineers, and humanists working at the
intersection of cognitive science and geographic information
science were invited to help with the re-assessment of research
needs and approaches. The meeting was very successful and compared
the research agenda laid out in the 1990 book with achievements
over the past twenty years and then turned to the future: What are
the challenges today? What are worthwhile goals for basic research?
What can be achieved in the next 20 years? What are the lessons
learned? This edited book will assess the current state of the
field through chapters by participants in the 1990 and 2010
meetings and will also document an interdisciplinary research
agenda for the future.
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Spatial Information Theory - International Conference, COSIT 2005, Ellicottville, NY, USA, September 14-18, 2005, Proceedings (Paperback, 2005 ed.)
Anthony G. Cohn, David M. Mark
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R1,765
Discovery Miles 17 650
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume contains the papers presented at the Conference on
Spatial Inf- mationTheory, heldinEllicottville, NewYorkinSeptember
2005.COSIT2005 was the 7th International Conference held under the
COSIT name. When -
drewFrankandhiscolleaguesorganizedthe?rstCOSITconferenceontheisland
of Elba, Italy, in 1993, it represented the maturing of an
international research community that had already met four or ?ve
times in the United States, Spain, and Italy. Of course, cognitive
and computational approaches to space and s- tial phenomena werenot
themselves new topics, but a contextof providingth- retical
underpinning for geographicinformation systems refocused some of
these researchers and brought them up against practical and
conceptual challenges. A second international symposium under the
COSIT name, held in Semmering, Austria in 1995, established COSIT
as a biennial conference series that cont- ued at Laurel Highlands,
Pennsylvania, USA (1997), Stade, Germany (1999), Morro Bay,
California, USA (2001) and Ittingen, Switzerland (2003). A prod-
tive partnership with Springer s Lecture Notes in Computer Science
has ensured that the papers from every COSIT meeting have been
widely disseminated, and the COSIT community has contributed
signi?cantly to the development of G- graphic Information Science,
Geoinformatics and Spatial Information Theory in general."
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Second International Conference on Geographic Information Science, GIScience 2002, held in Boulder, Colorado, USA in September 2002.The 24 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 64 paper submissions. Among the topics addressed are Voronoi diagram representation, geospacial database design, vector data transmission, geographic information retrieval, geo-ontologies, relative motion analysis, Web-based maps information retrieval, spatial pattern recognition, environmental decision support systems, multi-scale spatial databases, mobile journey planning, searching geographical data, indexing, terrain modeling, spatial allocation, distributed geographic internet information systems, and spatio-thematic information programming.
The Conference on Spatial Information Theory - COSIT - grew out of
a series of workshops / NATO Advanced Study Institutes / NSF
specialist meetings concerned with cognitive and applied aspects of
representing large-scale space, particularly geographic space. In
these meetings, the need for a well-founded theory of spatial
information processing was identified. The COSIT conference series
was established in 1993 as a biennial interdisciplinary European
conference on the representation and processing of information
about large-scale space, after a successful international
conference on the topic had been organized by Andrew Frank et al.
in Pisa, Italy, in 1992 (frequently referred to as 'COSIT zero').
After two successful European conferences with strong
North-American participation (COSIT '93, held on the Island of
Elba, Italy; COSIT '95, held in Semmering, Austria), the conference
became a truly international enterprise when COSIT '97 was held in
the Laurel Highlands, Pennsylvania, USA. COSIT '99 will take place
in Stade, Germany. All aspects of large-scale space, i. e. spaces
too large to be seen from a single vantage point, are addressed in
the COSIT conferences. These include spaces of geographic scale, as
well as smaller spaces in which humans, animals, or autonomous
robots have to find their way around. Spatial information theory
also deals with the description of objects, processes, or events in
spatial environments and it forms the foundation for the
construction of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and for
spatial information and communication system design in general.
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