Archive for the ‘Open Source Geography’ category

A Review of (potentially) Geographic Titles from the Journal of Rural Health

September 17th, 2009

In keeping with my interests to specialize in the geographical implications of health and access to care, I have decided to focus on the rural aspects of these issues. As such, the academic journal I have chosen to review is the Journal of Rural Health.  In the title of the journal introduces the concept of “rural”.  In Geography as a discipline, this is a subset of our fundamental notions of “place” or “region.”  Many articles are essays on the meaning of the “Rural” concept.  That medical and public health researchers write them does not discount that they are doing the work of a Geographer.

The journal is balanced in terms of commentary/qualitative and quantitative methodologies, including GIS technologies.  Most articles are about rural U.S. or Canadian health, but there are som international articles.  Diseases representative in this journal include HIV/AIDS, diabetes, substance abuse, obesity, cancer, dementia and many others.  Positive issues such as well-being or healthy pregnancy are a minority, but still represented.  In addition, specific populations are considered, including the elderly, children, both minority and majority populations, economically disadvantaged, physically and mentally impaired, migrant-workers and others.

The research frames specific diseases and/or population segments into any of the following broad themes found in this journal:

  • Patient Behavior
    • Insurance
    • Access to Healthcare
      • Geographic
      • Financial
  • Supply of Medical Facilities and Physicians
  • Rural and Urban Health Care Comparisons
  • Physician Behavior
    • Migration Patterns
    • Physician Training
    • Distribution
  • Policy Analysis
    • Legislation Proposals
    • Program management
    • Effectiveness
  • Status and Evolution of Rural Hospitals
  • Attitudes towards treatment or specific diseases
  • Data and Methods
  • Technology and Best Practices
  • Essays about the meaning of RURAL

NOTE:  For the review of this journal, I used the search terms “GIS”, “Spatial”, “Geography”, or “Geographic” to identify articles in this journal that have some identifiable geographic component.  However, even with these search terms, many of the articles were not inherently geographical.  I retained all articles that I found, and then reviewed the titles of 139 articles to detect the types of articles this journal tends to publish.  Based on titles alone, I identified 21 articles where researchers behaved as if they were Geographers in their research.  Many more have identifiable geographic components, but overall, Geographers have a role in this journal.

» Read more: A Review of (potentially) Geographic Titles from the Journal of Rural Health

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Obama Has A Crowd of Map-Makers

July 15th, 2008

I wondered when a major party presidential candidate would assemble a Geographic Information Sciences Team. It was confirmed when the Campaign put out a call for volunteers over at the GIS Jobs Clearinghouse. I signed up to help and heard the electrical thumps of the team getting slammed with volunteer cartographers and other GIS folk clamoring to help the put their candidate’s train in motion.

To the candidate, I would like to say that it is fantastic that the GIS Team you assembled are applying the technology in some very interesting ways. I wonder if the other campaigns are running their GIS teams as effectively. I offer the floor to the techno-critics over at the Low Tech Times for their position on the role of technology in presidential campaigns.

Give up? Barack Obama is taking a crowdsourced, collaborative approach to his GIS Operations. Will Obama be the first Open-Source President? As an academic advisor, I would suggest to any student working on the campaign to treat this like a laboratory of ideas worthy of doctoral dissertations. But remember, there will also be a lot of boring old production cartography. Either way, the Obama Campaign has embraced an important technology and an interesting method of crowdsourcing.

Also, the Low-Tech Times has asked that you not use the GIS as a  campaign SPAM-building effort.

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    Geography, I Welcome You Back to My Life!

    July 14th, 2008

    In preparation for the academic world, I have sought and found a new adjunct teaching position in Geography at Virginia International University. Deals aren’t done until contracts are signed, but I am confident I will be in the classroom this fall. I am still seeking used Geography Textbooks if anyone has any to share, Donate Used Geography Texts for Open-Source Geography Project

    Anyway, below are my notes from my sample lecture about Boundary-Making Processes in Washington DC, as well as a statement of my teaching philosophy.

    Teaching Philosophy

    • Conversational
    • I am No Smarter Than You, I have Only Read More about Geography
    • A Student’s Work Has Value Beyond The Classroom
    • The Student Should be able to teach a concept
    • Assignments should be Personally Relevant
    • Authentic Assessment Strategy
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    Open Source Geography: Keyword Collection Method

    July 8th, 2008


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    Critique of “Keyword: Evil – Google’s Addiction to Cheap Energy”

    July 7th, 2008

    Harper’s Bazaar’s publication of Ginger Strand’s, “Keyword: Evil – Google’s Addiction to Cheap Energy,” refers to the electricity-hungry Internet and uses Google’s new data center on the Dalles, OR as its primary example. With some variation in energy management practices, “addiction to cheap energy” would be an applicable term for any of the Industry Giants employing server farms.

    Critique #1: The thesis of her argument is that Google is evil for cutting energy costs and explains with a series of interesting statistics. Its a good read, you should check it out. I am going to bring it as required reading for my Geography class. I believe that renewable energy sources, as a mode of economic sustanence, should be exploited and harvested like our other dirtier energy sources. I see this story as indicative of Google as an energy leader. leading the way. What does that say about the American Energy System if if has actually become more cost-effective to heavily invest in an alternative energy infrastructure rather than rely on existing electrical grid indefinitely?

    Critique #2: There was a brief mention of how much energy was created, but a key piece seemed missing. That is, by unintended implication, it makes those of us who are loyal Google users, evil as well. Collectively, it is our clicks that generate the significant amount of energy usage. I see no evil in cutting your costs while demonstrating the economic feasibility of alternative energy sources.

    Critique #3: The Blueprints depicting Google’s Data Center…are the proof that the Web is no ethereal store of ideas.

    While I believe the Internet as a commerce of ideas is solid, it is still dependent on Energy as any other heavy Industry. Strand desccribes it as a “a new heavy industry, a glutton….” Consider for a moment, Treehugger’s story that the average avatar in Second Life uses as much energy as the average person in Brazil. Perhaps “gluttons” is apt, but there is little doubt that these Giants provide a service unique to human history. Having energy needs does not contradict the service they provide and believe that these companies form the current infrastructure of the Commerce of Ideas.

    Google is a propenent of renewable energy projects from a purely capitalist position, to cut future costs. If the economics of renewable energy works for them, why call them evil for participating in such a revolution?

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    Ideas for Internet Infrastructure Analysis for Economic Geographers and Industrial Location Specialists

    July 5th, 2008

    In Geography is Dead, Warwick E. Murray’s revisits the economic geography theory that Globalization is the end of Geography. Using Amazon as an example, he claimed brick-and-mortar book sales losses would collapse the bookstore industry. We know they adapted and survived and his thesis is deftly countered by Kevin Morgan’s “Exaggerated Death of Geography.”

    As a PhD applicant actively seeking Graduate Funding, any one of these topics is a viable PhD dissertation topic. There are observable geographic patterns of Internet Activity that can be measured and statistically modelled within commonly understood models of Industrial Location.

    • Mutually Beneficial Economic Development as Optimization Variable in Industrial Location: A Google, Government and Energy Management Case Study
    • Patterns of Starbuck Store Closure: A Correlation with the Commercial and Residential Development Market.
    • Geographic Patterns of Crowdsourced Loans: A Prosper.com Case Study (for Academic purposes, Prosper offers a download of its entire dataset).
    • The Economics the Pioneer Fringe: An Empirical Revisit to Isaiah Bowman
    • Pre-Revolutionary Land Use Patterns and Concepts of Ownership
    • Open-Source Micro-Franchising: A Distributed Distribution Method for Incubating Crowdsourced Content
    • The Geography of Long Tail Economics-(Perhaps this one actually is killing the record store).
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    Open-Source Geography: Revolutionizing Learning by Crowdsourcing a Textbook

    June 21st, 2008

    I am currently applying for Geography Adjunct Teaching positions in the Washington DC Metropolitan Area. For more information about my teaching philosophy, please my recent blogpost about building an effective student-professor relationship.

    Open-Source Geography is a new concept in education in which a class of students write their own Geography textbook. This idea is in accordance with my belief that a student’s work has value beyond the classroom and uses a blog as an Instructional Technology. Consider for the following reasons: » Read more: Open-Source Geography: Revolutionizing Learning by Crowdsourcing a Textbook

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    Where is Margarittaville? Parrothead Songs in Google Earth

    June 18th, 2008

    Thanks to Jim for his analysis and for letting me use his findings for this post. If you would like to perform your own analysis on the location of Margarittaville, click this link to open to Google Earth file. If you do not have GoogleEarth, download it here.

    One of the things I really enjoyed about teaching was students with good ideas and the passion to pursue them. Along came Jim, a former student and current friend, who came up with the best Geography projects I saw during my short tenure. I think what made this project special was innovative use of technology, in this case GoogleEarth, coupled with his personal passion.

    ACADEMIC ADVICE: Research papers don’t have to boring. Pick a topic thats interesting and execute your research with passion and innovation. Consider Jim as your case study. Jim is a self-described ParrotHead; a Jimmy Buffet fan. As a fan of Buffet’s entire catalog, he began to note the geographical nature of the lyrics and titles of the songs. So, for his project, he gathered latitudes and longitudes for each mention of a place in a Jimmy Buffet song. In doing so, though he was not able to pinpoint the exact location of MargarittaVille, he was able to identify the general area. Even though this was something of personal interest to him, he pursued the topic like an academic. Below are some results:

    Where is Margarittaville and what is the change in Latitude?

    Update: Frank at the Google Earth Blog sent a few comments.

    It’s certainly a cool concept. I am a bit of a Buffet fan myself. Although the list of placemarks is lengthy – I think he should open up the collection for input from other Parrotheads. For example, “Volcano” is all about Montserrat – and he didn’t placemark it. And, “Three Mile Island” is specifically mentioned in that song – and it isn’t marked. It would be neat to post the collection at the Google Earth Community and see if folks would add to it. Another thing that could be done is to add audio clips, or even video clips to placemark descriptions.

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    Towards a Localized Content Aggregator

    June 17th, 2008

    I am seeking to gain institutional support from my employer for blogging in local government. As I am still building my case and trying to explain the concept of link-building and content aggregators for developing a robust informational ecosystem, I am realizing the need for some sort of content aggregator that is localized.

    When talking about content aggregators, I mean all those web-based, Web 2.0 applications listed in the “Share This” link above. Of course the most common are

    Do any of these content aggregator services have localization capabilities? A Digg-like system for aggregating stories whose audience are the community in Arlington County, VA (for example) would be fantastic. Functionality enabling content aggregation and search for blog posts pertinent to Arlington would be very beneficial to Arlington and to local governments across the country in general.

    Tagging with “Arlington” is a temporary solution, but it may not capture all geographical entities (keywords) within Arlington:

    • Communities (colloquially named)
    • Communities (officially recognized)
    • Zipcodes
    • Counties
    • States

    Identifying stories by IP address also has its limitations as the aggregator could easily pick up stories from surrounding jurisdictions in the Metropolitan Washington DC Area. And, as far as I can tell, geotagging web content, apart from photos, has not quite caught on yet. I see some potential there though.

    Social Networking sites (Facebook, MySpace, Friendster) perhaps do the best in this arena. However, FaceBook’s neighborhood application, as far as I can tell, will only allow you to reside in one neighborhood at a time. Does anyone have any suggestions for how to accomplish such a task once FaceBook opens its code and allows application hosting on individual websites. How about with other Open-Social tools?

    In the meantime, I will have to rely on my RSS-reader to aggregate my content for me. This webpage provides links to all the RSS-enabled feeds in Arlington County that I could find.

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    The Role of Geographic Information Systems as Instructional Technology

    June 12th, 2008

    I wrote this for my PhD application to University of Virginia Curry School of Education’s Instructional Technology Program in 2006. For personal reasons, I had to leave Charlottesville but am considering submitting this application again.

    When reflecting upon my career since earning my Master of Science in the Geographic and Cartographic Sciences from George Mason University’s Department of Geography in 1998, there is a commonality in the diverse positions I have held. That is, my favorite role in each position has been one who explains things. Whether it be how to make a map, how to interpret the results of statistical analysis, how to explain a methodology or merely explaining the technical capabilities and limitation of a new technology, in many ways I have always been a teacher. The teaching position at Piedmont Virginia Community College (PVCC) has formalized that role. » Read more: The Role of Geographic Information Systems as Instructional Technology

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