Contemporary American cartographic research: a review and prospective |
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Authors: | Keith C. Clarke J. Michael Johnson Tim Trainor |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Geography, UC Santa Barbara, CA, USAkclarke@geog.ucsb.edu;3. Department of Geography, UC Santa Barbara, CA, USA;4. U.S. Census Bureau (retired), Laurel, MD, USA |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTWe review recent developments in cartographic research in North America, in the context of informing the 29th International Cartographic Conference, and 18th General Assembly in 2019. The titles of papers published since 2015 in four leading cartographic journals yielded a corpus of 245 documents containing 1109 unique terms. These terms were analyzed using Latent Dirichlet Allocation and by visual analytics to produce 14 topic groups that mapped onto five classes. These classes were named as information visualization, cartographic data, spatial analysis and applications, methods and models, and GIScience. The classes were then used as themes to discuss the recent cartographic literature more broadly, first, to review recent trends in the research and to identify research gaps, and second, to examine prospects for new research over the next 20 years. A conclusion draws some broad findings from the review, suggesting that cartographic research in the future will be aimed less at dealing with data, and more at generating insight and knowledge to better inform society about global challenges. |
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Keywords: | Cartography research literature visual analytics content analysis Latent Dirichlet Allocation |
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