Geography Reference
In-Depth Information
References
1. Appleyard, D.: Why buildings are known. Environ. Behav. 1 (2), 131-156 (1969)
2. Aristotle: Physics. eBooks@Adelaide. The University of Adelaide, Adelaide (350BC)
3. Couclelis, H.: Aristotelian spatial dynamics in the age of GIS. In: Egenhofer, M.J., Golledge,
R.G. (eds.) Spatial and Temporal Reasoning in Geographic Information Systems, pp. 109-118.
Oxford University Press, New York (1998)
4. Couclelis, H., Golledge, R.G., Gale, N., Tobler, W.: Exploring the anchorpoint hypothesis of
spatial cognition. J. Environ. Psychol. 7 (2), 99-122 (1987)
5. Daniel, M.P., Tom, A., Manghi, E., Denis, M.: Testing the value of route directions through
navigational performance. Spatial Cognit. Comput. 3 (4), 269-289 (2003)
6. Dey, A.K.: Understanding and using context. Pers. Ubiquit. Comput. 5 (1), 4-7 (2001)
7. Dijkstra, E.W.: A note on two problems in connexion with graphs. Numer. Math. 1 , 269-271
(1959)
8. Downs, R.M., Stea, D.: Image and Environment. Aldine Publishing Company, Chicago (1973)
9. Fellbaum, C. (ed.): WordNet: An Electronic Lexical Database.
The MIT Press, Cambridge
(1998)
10. Frank, A.U.: The rationality of epistemology and the rationality of ontology. In: Smith, B.,
Broogard, B. (eds.) Rationality and Irrationality. Hölder-Pichler-Tempsky, Vienna (2000)
11. Frank, A.U., Raubal, M.: Formal specification of image schemata: a step towards interoper-
ability in geographic information systems. Spatial Cognit. Comput. 1 (1), 67-101 (1999)
12. Freksa, C.: Qualitative spatial reasoning. In: Mark, D.M., Frank, A.U. (eds.) Cognitive
and Linguistic Aspects of Geographic Space. NATO ASI Series D: Behavioural and Social
Sciences, pp. 361-372. Kluwer, Dordrecht (1991)
13. French, R.M.: Subcognition and the limits of the turing test. Mind 99 (393), 53-65 (1990)
14. French, R.M.: Moving beyond the turing test. Comm. ACM 55 (12), 74-77 (2012)
15. Galton, A.: Fields and objects in space, time, and space-time. Spatial Cognit. Comput. 4 (1),
39-68 (2004)
16. Gärdenfors, P.: Conceptual Spaces. The MIT Press, Cambridge (2000)
17. Gärling, T., Böök, A., Lindberg, E.: Adults' memory representations of the spatial properties
of their everyday physical environment. In: Cohen, R. (ed.) The Development of Spatial
Cognition, pp. 141-184. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale (1985)
18. Gigerenzer, G., Goldstein, D.G.: Reasoning the fast and frugal way: models of bounded
rationality. Psychol. Rev. 103 (4), 650-669 (1996)
19. Goodchild, M.F.: Formalizing place in geographical information systems. In: Burton, L.M.,
Kemp, S.P., Leung, M.C., Matthews, S.A., Takeuchi, D.T. (eds.) Communities, Neighborhoods,
and Health: Expanding the Boundaries of Place, pp. 21-35. Springer, New York (2011)
20. Grice, P.: Logic and conversation. Syntax Semantics 3 , 41-58 (1975)
21. Han, X., Byrne, P., Kahana, M.J., Becker, S.: When do objects become landmarks? A VR study
of the effect of task relevance on spatial memory. PLoS ONE 7 (5), e35940 (2012)
22. Kahneman, D.: Thinking, Fast and Slow. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York (2011)
23. Klippel, A., Hansen, S., Richter, K.F., Winter, S.: Urban granularities: a data structure for
cognitively ergonomic route directions. GeoInformatica 13 (2), 223-247 (2009)
24. Knauff, M.: Space to Reason: A Spatial Theory of Human Thought. MIT Press, Cambridge
(2013)
25. Kuhn, W.: Modeling the semantics of geographic categories through conceptual integration.
In: Egenhofer, M.J., Mark, D.M. (eds.) Geographic Information Science. Lecture Notes in
Computer Science, vol. 2478, pp. 108-118. Springer, Berlin (2002)
26. Lakoff, G., Johnson, M.: Metaphors We Live By. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago
(1980)
27. Lakoff, G.: Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal about the Mind. The
University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1987)
28. Lynch, K.: The Image of the City. The MIT Press, Cambridge (1960)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Search WWH ::




Custom Search