Visualizing Point Data
Oliver Lichte
lichte at ICBM.DE
Fri Feb 3 08:37:15 PST 2006
Hi Bill,
if you are using MapScript you could request the frequency of indiviuals at
the concerning positions from data-base insteed of plotting symbols for each.
Then generate star-glyphs with a jag for each concerning individual or bins
of them. Star-glyphs are originially used to visualize multi-dimensional
data, but why not using it for one-dimension.
Just an idea.
Regards,
Oliver
Am Freitag, 3. Februar 2006 08:06 schrieb Bill Binko:
> Hi everyone,
>
> I posted a fairly specific question to the GDAL-dev list (and more on IRC)
> the other day, asking for input on how to do Kernel Density mapping using
> an OGR data source and sending the raster back through GDAL to be
> displayed through Mapserver.
>
> I got some good responses, one of which was: are you sure that's what you
> want? Well, to be honest, I don't know. So I'm posting a more general
> question here, hoping that someone in this larger audience has solved the
> problem I'm facing.
>
> What I'm trying to do is visualize point data (stored in PostGIS, but that
> can change) so that users can determine where the points are concentrated,
> even while zoomed out. One caveat is that the points can be coincident
> (identical Lat/Long).
>
> For example, I'd use this with include recent real estate sales data -
> condos in the same building have the same shape, but both sales should
> count. Similarly, in a customer counting scenario, two customers with the
> same address (even only to the building level) will geocode to the same
> lat/long.
>
> When Mapserver serves up Point layers directly, the results can be quite
> disappointing (and misleading). In Mapserver, the last Point to be drawn
> on any spot will just hide the previous points, often hiding multiple data
> points.
>
> Similarly, when you zoom out on a point diagram, there are two options:
> either you set the symbol to have a max size (so that eventually, they
> become "less than clear"), or you keep the symbol size constant,
> eventually obliterating the background with huge blobs of overlapping
> points.
>
> When I tried to tackle this problem, I turned to a Real Estate Geography
> book I have (written by professor Thrall at my alma mater)
> http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0195076362/sr=1-2/qid=1138949940/ref=sr_1_
>2/104-4827941-6490312?%5Fencoding=UTF8
>
> There, he is discussing Site Selection and Customer Spotting methods,
> and he discusses the Kernel Density method of generating a surface map
> showing where the customers live. The discussion is brief, but the GDAL
> folks pointed me to two tools (parts of R and GRASS respectively) that can
> take points and generate kernel surfaces. With some magic, contour maps,
> and other visualizations could be pushed through GDAL and into Mapserver.
>
> However, with further inspection, these methods all work on distance
> between customers, which causes a problem with coincident points.
>
> I am thinking that this problem must have been solved by someone out in
> this audience, so at this point, I'm very open to suggestions.
>
> I am very willing (and fairly able) to implement any custom software the
> solution my require. I have considered filters between GDAL and OGR, or
> stand alone processing that generates the needed data. I'm also very
> happy to feed it back to the community, if there's interest.
>
> (So, basically, I will trade working code for modeling/GIS/statistics
> knowledge if anyone's interested :)
>
> Thanks,
>
> Bill
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