Difference between revisions of "SOCR Cartography Project"

From SOCR
Jump to: navigation, search
(See also: added a link to ANTS: Advanced Normalization Tools (ANTs))
m (Text replacement - "{{translate|pageName=http://wiki.stat.ucla.edu/socr/" to ""{{translate|pageName=http://wiki.socr.umich.edu/")
 
(13 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==[[SOCR]] Project - Development of the [[SOCR]] Cartography Applet/Interface==
+
==[[Available_SOCR_Development_Projects | SOCR Project]] - Development of the [[SOCR]] Cartography Applet/Interface==
  
===Project Goals===
+
===Project goals===
[[Image:SOCR_CartographyChartIcon_USA.png|150px|thumbnail|right| SOCR Cartographic Charts]]
+
[[Image:SOCR_Cartography_Fig2aaa.png|150px|thumbnail|right| SOCR Cartographic Charts]]
  
 
To develop an agile and functional Java interface and an applet that integrates available [[SOCR]] resources (e.g., [[SOCR_EduMaterials_ChartsActivities | SOCR Charts]]) and provide the means to enter geo-political data and construct proportional cartography maps. In these maps, the sizes of different geographic regions, such as countries, provinces, continents, etc., appear proportional to the data provided by the user. The new '''SOCR Cartographic Charts''' will use the fundamental [[SOCR]] development principals and be accessible via the [[SOCR]] web-server. The image to the right illustrates an example of a cartographic map of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA USA], where states are drawn approximately proportional to the square footage per capita.
 
To develop an agile and functional Java interface and an applet that integrates available [[SOCR]] resources (e.g., [[SOCR_EduMaterials_ChartsActivities | SOCR Charts]]) and provide the means to enter geo-political data and construct proportional cartography maps. In these maps, the sizes of different geographic regions, such as countries, provinces, continents, etc., appear proportional to the data provided by the user. The new '''SOCR Cartographic Charts''' will use the fundamental [[SOCR]] development principals and be accessible via the [[SOCR]] web-server. The image to the right illustrates an example of a cartographic map of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USA USA], where states are drawn approximately proportional to the square footage per capita.
Line 9: Line 9:
 
Many of the [[SOCR_EduMaterials_ChartsActivities | SOCR Charts]] provide advanced tools for computational and graphical exploratory data analysis. Typical geo-political maps represent the world in a flat 2D Euclidean space where the North Pole looks huge and the equator appears small (Gastner and  Newman, 2004). Data obtained for different geographic, political or regional locales may be used to morph the standard world atlases into cartographic maps that represent the areas, colors or glyphs of different regions according to the (multi-modality) data. Such maps are called '''data-driven-cartographic maps'''.
 
Many of the [[SOCR_EduMaterials_ChartsActivities | SOCR Charts]] provide advanced tools for computational and graphical exploratory data analysis. Typical geo-political maps represent the world in a flat 2D Euclidean space where the North Pole looks huge and the equator appears small (Gastner and  Newman, 2004). Data obtained for different geographic, political or regional locales may be used to morph the standard world atlases into cartographic maps that represent the areas, colors or glyphs of different regions according to the (multi-modality) data. Such maps are called '''data-driven-cartographic maps'''.
  
==Project Specifications==
+
==Project specifications==
 
* Review the references below.
 
* Review the references below.
 
* Develop the computational model for handling multi-modal data (e.g., [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GDP GDP], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_size population size], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income average income], [[SOCR_Data_Dinov_021808_ConsumerPriceIndex3Way | CPI]], etc.) The user should be able to map these data to specific cartographic features (e.g., region area, size, color, glyphs, etc.)
 
* Develop the computational model for handling multi-modal data (e.g., [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GDP GDP], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_size population size], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income average income], [[SOCR_Data_Dinov_021808_ConsumerPriceIndex3Way | CPI]], etc.) The user should be able to map these data to specific cartographic features (e.g., region area, size, color, glyphs, etc.)
 
* Plan the extension of [[SOCR_EduMaterials_ChartsActivities | SOCR Charts]] and [[SOCR_MotionCharts | SOCR Motion Charts]] to design and implement this new infrastructure.
 
* Plan the extension of [[SOCR_EduMaterials_ChartsActivities | SOCR Charts]] and [[SOCR_MotionCharts | SOCR Motion Charts]] to design and implement this new infrastructure.
 
* Test and validate the new '''SOCR Cartographic Charts''' with real data and deploy to [[SOCR]] production server.
 
* Test and validate the new '''SOCR Cartographic Charts''' with real data and deploy to [[SOCR]] production server.
 +
 +
==Variable ''mapping''==
 +
There should be several user-specifiable protocols for mapping multivariate data! We can use a drop-down list to select a predefined variable-mapping protocol, and these may allow plug-ins. One approach would be to allow multivariate data to be mapped into different map-sector (region) appearance characteristics – for instance you can use a mapping like this:
 +
* variable1 = affects region warping (expansion or shrinkage)
 +
* variable2 = affects region color
 +
* variable3 = affects region shading
 +
* variable4 = affects region pattern
 +
* variable5 = affects region border-patters (thickness, color, appearance or line-style)
 +
* etc.
 +
 +
==Use-cases==
 +
* The first use-case is the user loads the geometry and the metadata files. The applet allows the user to specify a mapping between the variables (meta-data) and the Blob-locations (X,Y), the Blob-size, and the Blob-color, and then renders the blobs (discs with appropriate appearance) for each shape (simple closed curve) on the GIS map.
 +
 +
* The second use-case is the user again loads the geometry and the metadata files. The applet allows the user to specify a mapping between 1 variable in the meta-data, and a pair of 2D coordinates, (X,Y) locations, which are typically indicative of a longitude and latitude and should be inside or outside of each shape in the geometry file. Then the user wants to morph/transform the GIS map according to the variable values so that the areas of all regions in the GIS shape to be scaled proportionally to the variable of interest. Later we may include colors mapped to second variable.
 +
 +
==SOCR Cartography Applet==
 +
* [[Help_pages_for_SOCR_Cartography| SOCR Cartography Help page]]
 +
* [http://socr.ucla.edu/htmls/SOCR_Cartograhy.html SOCR Cartography Java Applet]
  
 
== See also==
 
== See also==
 +
* [https://github.com/cambecc/earth Earth Wind and Ocean currents Map]
 +
* [hint.fm/wind/ Interactive Windmap]
 +
* [http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_national/stress_index/ Interactive Economic Stress Index Map]
 +
* [http://rosuda.org/mondrian/ Mondrian Java-based GIS data-visualization system]
 
* [http://openmap.bbn.com/ OpenMap]
 
* [http://openmap.bbn.com/ OpenMap]
 
* [http://alov.org/ ALOV]
 
* [http://alov.org/ ALOV]
Line 21: Line 43:
 
* [http://deegree.sourceforge.net/ Deegree]
 
* [http://deegree.sourceforge.net/ Deegree]
 
* [http://www.geotools.org/ GeoTools]
 
* [http://www.geotools.org/ GeoTools]
* {http://sourceforge.net/projects/advants/ Advanced Normalization Tools (ANTs)] can be used for the warping of one SVG/GIS map to fit in the user-specified sizes of each region.
+
* [http://sourceforge.net/projects/advants/ Advanced Normalization Tools (ANTs)] can be used for the warping of one SVG/GIS map to fit in the user-specified sizes of each region.
 +
* [http://wiki.stat.ucla.edu/socr/uploads/b/b8/Cartography_Constructing_GIS_Maps_ATT.pdf Constructing GIS Maps in Splus/R Manual (see page 10+)]
 +
* [http://scapetoad.choros.ch ScapeToad]
 +
 
 +
==Data==
 +
The applets should allow the user to specify 2 types of data:
 +
: ''Geometry data'' - containing the shapes of the geography/GIS maps. These data are typically presented in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shapefile Shape (*.shp) binary file format], see examples below.
 +
: ''Meta-data'' - the auxiliary quantitative data in either [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shapefile#Shapefile_attribute_format_.28.dbf.29 DBF attribute file format], or in text/ASCII file format:
 +
<center>
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
|-
 +
! Longitude(X)|| Latitude(Y) || Variable1 || ... || Variable_N
 +
|-
 +
| -120.23 || 32.45 || 11.23 || ... || 17
 +
|-
 +
| ... || ... || ... || ... || ...
 +
|-
 +
| -121.23 || 31.45 || 17.31 || ... || 10
 +
|}
 +
</center>
 +
 
 +
===Examples of data===
 +
* [http://www.census.gov/geo/www/cob/bdy_files.html 2000 US Census data] and [http://www.census.gov/geo/www/cob/co2000.html#shp California Counties Shape Data]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
Line 33: Line 77:
 
*[[SOCR_ProposalSubmissionGuidelines]]
 
*[[SOCR_ProposalSubmissionGuidelines]]
  
{{translate|pageName=http://wiki.stat.ucla.edu/socr/index.php?title=SOCR_Cartography_Project}}
+
"{{translate|pageName=http://wiki.socr.umich.edu/index.php?title=SOCR_Cartography_Project}}

Latest revision as of 15:23, 3 March 2020

SOCR Project - Development of the SOCR Cartography Applet/Interface

Project goals

SOCR Cartographic Charts

To develop an agile and functional Java interface and an applet that integrates available SOCR resources (e.g., SOCR Charts) and provide the means to enter geo-political data and construct proportional cartography maps. In these maps, the sizes of different geographic regions, such as countries, provinces, continents, etc., appear proportional to the data provided by the user. The new SOCR Cartographic Charts will use the fundamental SOCR development principals and be accessible via the SOCR web-server. The image to the right illustrates an example of a cartographic map of the USA, where states are drawn approximately proportional to the square footage per capita.

Background

Many of the SOCR Charts provide advanced tools for computational and graphical exploratory data analysis. Typical geo-political maps represent the world in a flat 2D Euclidean space where the North Pole looks huge and the equator appears small (Gastner and Newman, 2004). Data obtained for different geographic, political or regional locales may be used to morph the standard world atlases into cartographic maps that represent the areas, colors or glyphs of different regions according to the (multi-modality) data. Such maps are called data-driven-cartographic maps.

Project specifications

  • Review the references below.
  • Develop the computational model for handling multi-modal data (e.g., GDP, population size, average income, CPI, etc.) The user should be able to map these data to specific cartographic features (e.g., region area, size, color, glyphs, etc.)
  • Plan the extension of SOCR Charts and SOCR Motion Charts to design and implement this new infrastructure.
  • Test and validate the new SOCR Cartographic Charts with real data and deploy to SOCR production server.

Variable mapping

There should be several user-specifiable protocols for mapping multivariate data! We can use a drop-down list to select a predefined variable-mapping protocol, and these may allow plug-ins. One approach would be to allow multivariate data to be mapped into different map-sector (region) appearance characteristics – for instance you can use a mapping like this:

  • variable1 = affects region warping (expansion or shrinkage)
  • variable2 = affects region color
  • variable3 = affects region shading
  • variable4 = affects region pattern
  • variable5 = affects region border-patters (thickness, color, appearance or line-style)
  • etc.

Use-cases

  • The first use-case is the user loads the geometry and the metadata files. The applet allows the user to specify a mapping between the variables (meta-data) and the Blob-locations (X,Y), the Blob-size, and the Blob-color, and then renders the blobs (discs with appropriate appearance) for each shape (simple closed curve) on the GIS map.
  • The second use-case is the user again loads the geometry and the metadata files. The applet allows the user to specify a mapping between 1 variable in the meta-data, and a pair of 2D coordinates, (X,Y) locations, which are typically indicative of a longitude and latitude and should be inside or outside of each shape in the geometry file. Then the user wants to morph/transform the GIS map according to the variable values so that the areas of all regions in the GIS shape to be scaled proportionally to the variable of interest. Later we may include colors mapped to second variable.

SOCR Cartography Applet

See also

Data

The applets should allow the user to specify 2 types of data:

Geometry data - containing the shapes of the geography/GIS maps. These data are typically presented in Shape (*.shp) binary file format, see examples below.
Meta-data - the auxiliary quantitative data in either DBF attribute file format, or in text/ASCII file format:
Longitude(X) Latitude(Y) Variable1 ... Variable_N
-120.23 32.45 11.23 ... 17
... ... ... ... ...
-121.23 31.45 17.31 ... 10

Examples of data

References


"-----


Translate this page:

(default)
Uk flag.gif

Deutsch
De flag.gif

Español
Es flag.gif

Français
Fr flag.gif

Italiano
It flag.gif

Português
Pt flag.gif

日本語
Jp flag.gif

България
Bg flag.gif

الامارات العربية المتحدة
Ae flag.gif

Suomi
Fi flag.gif

इस भाषा में
In flag.gif

Norge
No flag.png

한국어
Kr flag.gif

中文
Cn flag.gif

繁体中文
Cn flag.gif

Русский
Ru flag.gif

Nederlands
Nl flag.gif

Ελληνικά
Gr flag.gif

Hrvatska
Hr flag.gif

Česká republika
Cz flag.gif

Danmark
Dk flag.gif

Polska
Pl flag.png

România
Ro flag.png

Sverige
Se flag.gif