Cartography
ordinal
a measurement that is a hierarchy of rank; objects are defined in an order that permits comparison in a general sense
total data
an attribute that is collected at a location
map percipient
anyone who gains. spatial knowledge by looking at a map
discrete data
associated with data counts or totals, the data are uniquely associated to a singular spatial location, no matter how it defined
nonspatial data
attribute or descriptive characteristics of data
volume data
attributes that exist over a 3-D extent of a continuous surface
geographic data
facts about which conclusions can be drawn; chosen to describe geographic phenomena
processing errors
miscalculations or transformations of data through computer applications
design error
mistakes made by the cartographer in the selection of thematic map type, their symbols, and other map characteristics
isarithmic map
planimetric graphic representation of a 3-D volume
general purpose map
reference maps that show natural and man made features of general interest
continous form
variables the areal and exist everywhere. (ex: temperature or barametric pressure) lie within the same area of study
node
a point defined on a geographic space or a series of points
observation
a single entity or place normally displayed as a row in an attribute table
data measurement
an attempt to structure observations about reality. can be grouped into categories: nominal, ordinal, interval, or rational measurements.
map author
anyone wishing to convey a spatial message
symbol types
classes as point, line, or area symbols. may be 2-D or 3-D
map use
comprises map reading, analysis, and interpretation
data form
contextual characteristics that incude identification as either quantitative or qualitative, discrete or continuous, and total or derived data
metadata
data about data; data sets that describe a dataset's spatial extent
typology of map symbols
description of map symbols based on cross-tabulation of measurement scales and symbol types
qualitative
descriptive characteristics that describe the inherent nature of a feature
spatial data
displays characteristics of location, size, or amount that allows for the visualization of patterns within data
dot map
dots represent the distribution
geographical phenomena
elements of reality that have spatial attributes
FIPS code
federal information processing standards used to identify every country, state, city, ect where data is collected
choropleth map
form of statistical mapping used to portray discrete data by enumeration units
source error
found in the data collection, compilation, and data entry procedures
line data
generated by the collection of information as applied along a linear feature or path
map
graphic representation of the milieu
nominal scaling
simplest level of data measurement
cartography
somewhat broader in scope than mapmaking; the study of all subjects that are concurrent with maps including their history, reading and use, and collection
visual variables
symbols to communicate to the map reader
ratio
the measurement uses an obsolute datum for numerical comparisons
point data
a geographic location with a set of geospatial coordinates matched to a set of attributes
enumeration unit
administrative areas to which attribute data is associated. examples are countries, states, ect...
map design
aggregate of all thought processes that the map author goes through during the abstraction phase
mapmaking
also called mapping. all steps of the process of producing a map
flow map
amount of movement along a linear path is stressed
map scale
amount of reduction that takes place. ratio of map to earth
map analysis
map use activity in which the map user recognizes patterns
map interpretation
map user attempts to explain map patterns
area data
may be applied to an entire area as a quantity that is assumed to exist uniformily over an entire area. (ex: people per sq kilometer)
abstract symbols
may represent anything; usually take the form of geometrical shapes like circles or squares
interval
measurement scales that have no natural origin; any beginning point may be used. ex: fahrenheit scale
mental maps
mental images having spatial attributes
quanititative
numerical values used as attributes that measured positional sequences
derived data
permits the comparisons of observations through data manipulation to normalize the data so as to either adjust for the impact of area/size or to represent the data as a rate or percentage
classification
placing objects into groups having identical or similar features; helps organize material for communication
nominal
the simplest level of data measurement, sometimes considered a qualitative measurement to be descriptive
cartographic process
transformation of unmapped data into map form
cartographic abstraction
transformational process in which map author selects and organizes material to be mapped
cartographic generalization
transformational process of abstraction involving selection, classification, simplification, and symbolization.
proportional symbol map
type of quantitative thematic map in which point data are represented by a symbol whos size varies with data values
map reading
user simply determining what is displayed
attribute data
values or characteristics associated with a point, line, or area.