Table of Content
ContributorsPART I: Spatio-Temporal Reasoning: GIS and Computational Science Perspectives1. A.G. Cohn, et al.: Exploiting Temporal Continuity in Qualitative Spatial Calculi2. Michael F. Worboys: A Generic Model for Spatio-Bitemporal Geographic Information3. Andrew U. Frank: Different Types of "Times" in GIS4. N.W.J. Hazelton: Some Operational Requirements for a Multi-Temporal 4-D GIS5. Christopher R. Weber: The Representation of Spatio-Temporal Variation in GIS and Cartographic Displays: The Case for Sonification and Auditory Data Representation6. Nicholas R. Chrisman: Beyond the Snapshot: Changing the Approach to Change, Error and Process7. John A. Kelmelis: Process Dynamics, Temporal Extent, and Causal Propagation as the Basis for Linking Space and TimePART II: Spatial and Temporal Cognition8. Helen Couclelis: Aristotelian Spatial Dynamics in the Age of Geographic Information Systems9. Richard A. Block: Psychological Time and the Processing of Spatial Information10. Scott M. Freundschuh: The Relationship Between Geographic Scale, Distance, and Time as Expressed in Natural Discourse11. Daniel R. Montello: A New Framework for Understanding the Acquisition of Spatial Knowledge in Large-Scale Environments12. Barbara Tversky and Holly A. Taylor: Acquiring Spatial and Temporal Knowledge from LanguagePART III: Spatial and Temporal Behaviors in Social Science Contexts13. Pip Forer: Geometric Approaches to the Nexus of Time, Space and Microprocess: Implementing a Practical Model for Mundane Socio-Spatial Systems14. C. Stephen Smyth: A Representational Framework for Geographic Modeling15. Stephen D. Stead: Temporal Dynamics and Geographical Information Systems16. Irene Campari: Analyzing Temporal Factors in Urban Morphology Development17. John Odland: Longitudinal Analysis of Migration and Mobility Spatial Behavior in Explicitly Temporal ContextsEpilogue18. Stephen C. Hirtle: The Cognitive Atlas: Using GIS as a Metaphor for MemoryIndex