Geography 591: Introduction to Geographic Information Science
Email: dmark@geog.buffalo.edu
Note: This course does NOT include any software
training or laboratories, which are available in Geography 506 and other
courses.
Geography 591 presents a
survey of Geographic Information Science, the basic research field underpinning
geographic information systems (GIS). Geographic information science rests on
three basic areas: cognitive models of geographic concepts; computational and
implementations of geographic models; and interactions between GIS and society.
The course will provide overviews of these three research areas. The course
will review applications of GIS and sources of geographic data, and include
material on spatial data quality and spatial data standards. It also will
provide students with an awareness of the history of GIS, the current state of
the GIS industry, and trends and projections for the future. Ethical issues and
legal dimensions of geographic information will be presented, and current high
priority research areas within geographic information science also will be
reviewed. This course is required course in UB's IGERT (Integrated Graduate
Education and Research Training) multidisciplinary Ph.D. in Geographic
Information Science.
Facts About the Course
FALL 2003 INFORMATION: GEO
591
TIMETABLE: Geography 591
meets twice a week (Tu & Th), 12:30-1:50 pm.
CREDIT HOURS: Geography 591
is a 3-credit course.
GRADING: Two non-cumulative
short-essay tests will each be worth 35 % of the grade, and a term paper will
be worth 30 %.
Fall 2003 Course Outline
- Aug 26 (Tu) Course Introduction; Defining
Geographic Information Science
- Aug 28 (Th) Geographic Information Science and
GIS overview
- Sep 2 (Tu) Geographic Entities and Phenomena:
Ontology of the Geographic Domain
- Sep 4 (Th) Geographic Entities and Phenomena:
Formal Representation of Geographic Phenomena
- (includes Raster and Vector Data Models; qualitative
and quantitative computation)
- Sep 9 (Tu) SDTS, the U.S. Spatial Data Transfer
Standard
- Sep 11 (Th) Computational Geometry 1: Coordinate
Systems, Map Projections, Map Overlay
- Sep 16 (Tu) Computational Geometry 2: Voronoi
principles
- Sep 18 (Th) Map Overlay: The Core of GIS
- Sep 23 (Tu) Class cancelled (DMM Away for COSIT)
- Sep 25 (Th) Class cancelled (DMM Away for COSIT)
- Sep 30 (Tu) Efficient Indexing in Geographic
Databases
- Oct 2 (Th) Qualitative Spatial Reasoning:
Formalizing Spatial Relations
- Oct 7 (Tu) Acquisition and Quality of Geographic
Data
- Oct 9 (Th) Scale, Detail, and Generalization in
GIS input and Output
- Oct 14 (Tu) Data Acquisition
- Oct 16 (Th) Mid-term Test
- Oct 21 (Tu) Address Matching and Related Topics
- Oct 23 (Th) Distributed Databases and
Interoperability
- Oct 28 (Tu) Time in Geographic Space and in GIS
- Nov 4 (Tu) Cognitive Models of Geographic
Phenomena
o
UCGIS
White Paper on Cognition of Geographic Information (1998)
·
Nov 5
(Th) Human Interaction with GI and Technology
o
ESRI's
Usability
Engineering page
- Nov 11 (Tu) Visualization and Cartographic
Design
- Nov 13 (Th) Geographic Information and Society
- Nov 18 (Tu) Intellectual Property, Privacy, and
Ethics; Efficiency, Equity, Effectiveness
- Nov 20 (Th) Public Participation GIS; GIS and
Social Theory
- Nov 25 (Tu) History of GIS
- Nov 27 (Th) Fall Recess (Thanksgiving)
- Dec 2 (Tu) The GIS Industry: Current Status; GI
and US Federal Policy
- Dec 4 (Th) TEST #2 (non cumulative)
- Dec 8 ( M) (Last day of classes)
- Dec 11 (Th) Term Paper Due
Last updated on December 2 2003
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