Searching for "Naive Geography." – sorted by Relevance.
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Naive Geography
- Naive Geography by Max J. Egenhofer and David M. Mark National Center for Geographic Information
- Cited by 78 (15 self) – Add To MetaCart
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Naive Geography
- M. Egenhofer and D. Mark Naive Geography COSIT 95, Semmering, Austria, in: A. Frank and W. Kuhn
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Human Conceptions of Spaces: Implications for Geographic Information Systems
- ), and map space. Such a categorization is an important part of Naive Geography, a set of theories of how
- Cited by 9 (2 self) – Add To MetaCart
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Ontology: Buzzword or Paradigm Shift in GI Science?
- . • Worboys investigates proximity. Where Smith and Mark consider only objects of a naïve geography, one can
- Cited by 5 (0 self) – Add To MetaCart
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Structuring Wayfinding Tasks With Image Schemata
- -Sense Geographic Knowledge and Naive Geography 9 2.1.1 Common-Sense Knowledge and GIS 9 2.1.2 Qualitative Reasoning
- Cited by 4 (2 self) – Add To MetaCart
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Metrics and Topologies for Geographic Space
- that deviate considerably from metric spaces, and that topologies can still be constructed. 2. Naive geography
- Cited by 7 (1 self) – Add To MetaCart
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Qualitative Spatial Representation and Reasoning: An Overview
- , qualitative. Arguably, the next generation GIS will be built on concepts arising from Naive Geography [65
- Cited by 108 (12 self) – Add To MetaCart
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Toward User Oriented Semantic Geographical Information Systems
- metaphor). The study of these ways of experiencing the world is relevant to the emergent Naive Geography
- Cited by 1 (1 self) – Add To MetaCart
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Notes on the timely presentation of route related information
- wayfinding information about a specific route at a specific time. This work is part of the effort of naïve
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Using Ontologies for Integrated Geographic Information Systems
- and knowledge-based GIS. Egenhofer and Mark (1995) introduce Naive Geography, a body of knowledge that captures
- Cited by 45 (4 self) – Add To MetaCart

