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The thesis of this book is that there are one set of equations that
can define any trip between an origin and destination. The idea
originally came from work that I did when applying the hydrodynamic
analogy to study congested traffic flows in 1981. However, I was
disappointed to find out that much of the mathematical work had
already been done decades earlier. When I looked for a new
application, I realised that shopping centre demand could be like a
longitudinal wave, governed by centre opening and closing times.
Further, a solution to the differential equation was the gravity
model and this suggested that time was somehow part of distance
decay. This was published in 1985 and represented a different
approach to spatial interaction modelling. The next step was to
translate the abstract theory into something that could be tested
empirically. To this end, I am grateful to my Ph. D supervisor,
Professor Barry Garner who taught me that it is not sufficient just
to have a theoretical model. This book is an outcome of this
on-going quest to look at how the evolution of the model performs
against real world data. This is a far more difficult process than
numerical simulations, but the results have been more valuable to
policy formulation, and closer to what I think is spatial science.
The testing and application of the model required the compilation
of shopping centre surveys and an Internet data set.
The thesis of this book is that there are one set of equations that
can define any trip between an origin and destination. The idea
originally came from work that I did when applying the hydrodynamic
analogy to study congested traffic flows in 1981. However, I was
disappointed to find out that much of the mathematical work had
already been done decades earlier. When I looked for a new
application, I realised that shopping centre demand could be like a
longitudinal wave, governed by centre opening and closing times.
Further, a solution to the differential equation was the gravity
model and this suggested that time was somehow part of distance
decay. This was published in 1985 and represented a different
approach to spatial interaction modelling. The next step was to
translate the abstract theory into something that could be tested
empirically. To this end, I am grateful to my Ph. D supervisor,
Professor Barry Garner who taught me that it is not sufficient just
to have a theoretical model. This book is an outcome of this
on-going quest to look at how the evolution of the model performs
against real world data. This is a far more difficult process than
numerical simulations, but the results have been more valuable to
policy formulation, and closer to what I think is spatial science.
The testing and application of the model required the compilation
of shopping centre surveys and an Internet data set.
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