NCGIA Core Curriculum in Geographic Information Science
URL: "http://www.ncgia.ucsb.edu/giscc/units/u020/u020.html"
Unit 020 - Maps as Representations of the World
by Judy M. Olson
Department of Geography, Michigan State University
olsonj@pilot.msu.edu
DRAFT - comments invited
This unit is part of the NCGIA
Core Curriculum in Geographic Information Science. These materials
may be used for study, research, and education, but please credit the author,
Judy M. Olson, and the project, NCGIA Core Curriculum in GIScience.
All commercial rights reserved. Copyright 1998 by Judy M. Olson.
Your comments on these materials are welcome. A link to an evaluation
form is provided at the end of this document.
Advanced Organizer
Unit Topics
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This unit considers maps as representations and contrasts maps with other
representations of the world. It also contrasts the representational
view with other views of maps.
Unit 020 - Maps as Representations of the World
1. Introduction
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The representational view of maps: conceptualizes maps as marks
on paper that stand for definable things on the earth's surface.
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Definition of (geographic) map almost always includes the term representation
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map...1 a: a representation usu. on a flat surface of the
whole or a part of an area b: a representation of the celestial
sphere or a part of it 2: something that represents with a
clarity suggestive of a map... (Webster's)
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The term "map," however, in non-geography uses does not necessarily refer
to a representation but to how things are arranged or how they relate to
one another
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... 3: the arrangement of genes on a chromosome -- called
also genetic map [italics in source] 4: FUNCTION
5a [which reads:] a mathematical correspondence that assigns exactly one
element of one set to each element of the same or another set
(Webster's definition of map, continued)
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For whatever reason, at geographic scales, "map" means a representation
of the earth and not earth's patterns themselves. And it usually
refers to a graphic representation, although the term "map" can be used
more broadly to to refer to any representation of geographic space.
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To reach a graphic representation, there must be a mental conception (or
representation) of the world. It determines how we map, and maps
in turn influence the mental representation.
2. Other representations of the world
Maps are not the only representation of the world; others
include:
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air photos
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satellite imagery
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snapshots
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those from space most obviously represent the earth but
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those of smaller areas, even everyday snapshots, represent some part of
the earth as well
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drawings and artwork
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words
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verbal description is an integral part of how we learn about the world
and think about it (see unit 006 "Human Cognition
of the Spatial World")
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tables
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digital coordinate data with attributes
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(see unit 008, "Representing the Earth Digitally")
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Maps are the representations most readily and universally identified with
geography
3. The uniqueness of the map among representations
of the world
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content as well as area shown is selective
(unlike air photos, satellite imagery, snapshots)
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maker has control over emphasis
(unlike air photos, satellite imagery, snapshots)
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emphasis is on spatial relations
(unlike drawings and artwork, in which spatial relations
support some other message)
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it is an analogue of what is represented
(unlike words, tables, and digital data)
4. Other views of maps
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as communication devices
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emphasis is on transmitting knowledge from source to recipient
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as artifacts reflecting history, culture, and techology
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a T in O map reflects beliefs of the Middle Ages and the technology of
the time for making graphic representations
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as political documents
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the choices of what maps are made and what is included in them are political
decisions as much as scientific ones (Harley, 1989)
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creators of features on the earth
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the "Green Line" in Beruit was literally a green line on a map that noted
where the division would be, not a representation of something already
there
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as tools
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emphasis on what can be done with them
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NOTE: None of these views is at odds with maps as representation
5. The representational view as the "scientific"
view
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"objective" model of the world in the sense that
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rules are applied
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the map is subject to verification and is replicable
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caution: a modifier before "map" can negate that scientific view
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mental maps are "representations"
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can be subjected to scientific inquiry but are not scientific documents
as such
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sketch maps
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the modifier suggests the departure from the scientific
6. The representational view as the "data
storage" view
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Representation suggests correspondence between marks and referents
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Map is "successful" if mark/referent relationship is logical
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Communication, use, functionality, etc. need not come in under a strict
representational view
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Such a strict view is seldom taken; efficacy of maps from user point of
view esp. important
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(see unit 006 on "Human Cognition of the Spatial
World")
7. Representation as the unifying
element in Geographic Information Science
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Historically, the areas of cartography, GIS, and remote sensing had no
unifying name
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Geog Info Science is a relatively new name for this area
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They have long been lumped together, however, often referred to as "techniques"
(an unfortunate term for a collection of such rich areas)
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They differ from other subfields in geography, however, because they deal
with representation
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Geog Info Science does not deal with representation in narrow sense of
that term, but representation and its implications, which are many, diverse,
and rich
8. Types of maps
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Type of map affects how and what we represent
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The most general categories are
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general reference
shows many different things; can see where specific objects
are relative to one another
user generally is looking to see where a specific feature
is located relative to others
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thematic
shows a distribution
user generally wants to see pattern
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There is actually a continuum of maps from general reference to thematic
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many maps fit somewhere in between the extremes
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Diagram shows roughly where selected map types
fit in reference-thematic continuum and how type of map is related
to scale
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Map type is not just characteristics of the map but can be determined by
use, e.g.,
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can look at distribution of major roads on a general-reference
atlas map
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can find specific location of observation units (say, counties)
on a thematic map
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Can classify maps in other ways: by content (climate, socio-economic...),
form (dot, choropleth, animated...), display technology (electronic,
paper,...), production technology (manual, automated,...),
scale (large, medium, small), resolution (county, state,...), and
on and on.
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The reference/thematic division is the most general and perhaps the most
related to representation issues
9. Elements of Representation
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Some major determinants of how a feature/distribution/space will be represented
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Spatial form of the object
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point
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line
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area
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surface
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volume
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Spatial form of the distribution
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clustered
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spread out with some clustering
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smooth and continuous
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non-smooth
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What kind of change is involved
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none (time slice, single viewpoint, etc.)
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time
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viewpoint
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cartographic form
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geographic process
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Conceptual measurement involved
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qualitative
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quanitative
ordered
ordinal
interval
ratio
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Relationship between variables if more than one is shown on thematic map
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parts and wholes (e.g., total population and percentages in different
age groups)
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(special case: 3-component composition, e.g., urban, rural, empty land
percentages)
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counts and characteristics of what if counted (e.g., total population
and average income)
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functional (e.g., education and income)
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composited variables (e.g., water contamination susceptibility)
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Graphic marks available
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point
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line
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area
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Attributes of these marks: visual variables
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size
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shape
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color value (lightness/darkness)
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color hue (green, red, blue,...)
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color saturation (dull blue, vivid blue,...)
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texture
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orientation
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General idea is to use the graphic marks and visual variables in analagous
fashion of some sort
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Generalization is inevitably involved in any representation of the world,
maps included
(see unit 030 on "Abstraction and Incompleteness")
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Good representation vs. bad representation
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No "best" way, but better and worse ways
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Judgement of better and worse takes us beyond representation itself to
uses of maps and map effectiveness
10. Relevance to GIS
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GIS output is most often a map
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people produce more maps than ever now that GISs are available
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Representational issues are very important for that reason
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need for cartographic principles and understanding is increased by the
availability of GIS
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GIS is helping to broaden the forms of maps we can feasibly produce
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Some map issues are particularly relevant in GIS
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Boolean overlay maps were far less common before GIS; they are a frequently-produced
form now
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we need to build good representational defaults into GIS programs
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what we do with the results of GIS generally involves representation
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although visualization has a separate meaning from GIS, GIS has been instrumental
in bringing visualization into geographic information science
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visualization is representation for purposes of discovery
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the study of maps as tools in scientific study (discovery), as opposed
to their presentational use, has been influenced by GIS
11. Exam and Discussion Questions
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Discuss the representational view of maps and compare to other potential
viewpoints. Are those other viewpoints generally complementary or
conflicting? Can you think of any examples that might differ from
what is "generally" the case?
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Explain why the representational view of maps might be called the "scientific"
view. The "data storage" view.
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What are some of the determinants of how phenomena are represented on maps?
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What does "visual variable" mean? What are the visual variables?
12. References
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Dent, Borden D. 1996. Cartography: Thematic Map Design,
4th ed. Wm. C. Brown Publishers, Dubuque, Iowa. A thorough
look at thematic mapping; widely-used text in college-level thematic cartography
courses.
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Harley, J. B., 1989. "Deconstructing the map." Cartographica
26(2): 1-20. A post-modernist view of maps.
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Robinson, Arthur H., Joel L. Morrison, Phillip C. Muehrcke, A Jon Kimerling,
Stephen C. Guptill. 1995. Elements of Cartography, 6th
ed. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York. A general cartography
textbook widely used in college-level courses.
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Woodward, David. 1992. "Representations of the World,"
chapter 4, pp. 50-73, in Ronald F. Abler, Melvin G. Marcus, and Judy M.
Olson, eds., Geography's Inner Worlds: Pervasive Themes in Contemporary
American Geography, Rutgers University Press, New brunswick, New Jersey.
Representation as a theme in geography that cuts across vitually all subdisciplines.
We are very interested in your comments and suggestions for improving this
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Citation
To reference this material use the appropriate variation of the following
information:
-
Judy M. Olson (1998). Maps as Representations of the World, NCGIA Core
Curriculum in GIS, National Center for Geographic Information and Analysis,
University of California, Santa Barbara, Unit 020, http://www.ncgia.ucsb.edu/giscc/units/u020/u020.html,
posted December 23, 1998..
The correct URL for this page is: http://www.ncgia.ucsb.edu/giscc/units/u020/u020.html.
First posted: December 23, 1998. Last
revised: December 23, 1998.
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