Academic literature on the topic 'Critical mapping'

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Journal articles on the topic "Critical mapping"

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Herb, Guntram H., Jouni Häkli, Mark W. Corson, Nicole Mellow, Sebastian Cobarrubias, and Maribel Casas-Cortes. "Intervention: Mapping is critical!" Political Geography 28, no. 6 (August 2009): 332–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo.2009.09.005.

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Yates, Darran. "Critical timing in mapping olfaction." Nature Reviews Neuroscience 15, no. 6 (May 9, 2014): 349. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nrn3754.

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Crampton, Jeremy W. "Online Mapping and Critical GIS." Cartographic Perspectives, no. 39 (June 1, 2001): 46–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.14714/cp39.639.

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Skyer, Michael E. "Critical Cartography: Mapping Deaf Research." American Annals of the Deaf 164, no. 1 (2019): 158–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/aad.2019.0013.

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McAleese, Ray. "Concept Mapping A Critical Review." Innovations in Education and Training International 36, no. 4 (November 1999): 351–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1355800990360411.

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Babrauskas, Vytenis. "Arc Mapping: A Critical Review." Fire Technology 54, no. 3 (February 26, 2018): 749–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10694-018-0711-5.

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Schramm, Severin, Alexander F. Haddad, Lawrence Chyall, Sandro M. Krieg, Nico Sollmann, and Phiroz E. Tarapore. "Navigated TMS in the ICU: Introducing Motor Mapping to the Critical Care Setting." Brain Sciences 10, no. 12 (December 18, 2020): 1005. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci10121005.

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Navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) is a modality for noninvasive cortical mapping. Specifically, nTMS motor mapping is an objective measure of motor function, offering quantitative diagnostic information regardless of subject cooperation or consciousness. Thus far, it has mostly been restricted to the outpatient setting. This study evaluates the feasibility of nTMS motor mapping in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting and solves the challenges encountered in this special environment. We compared neuronavigation based on computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We performed motor mappings in neurocritical patients under varying conditions (e.g., sedation or hemicraniectomy). Furthermore, we identified ways of minimizing electromyography (EMG) noise in the interference-rich ICU environment. Motor mapping was performed in 21 patients (six females, median age: 69 years). In 18 patients, motor evoked potentials (MEPs) were obtained. In three patients, MEPs could not be evoked. No adverse reactions occurred. We found CT to offer a comparable neuronavigation to MRI (CT maximum e-field 52 ± 14 V/m vs. MRI maximum e-field 52 ± 11 V/m; p = 0.6574). We detailed EMG noise reduction methods and found that propofol sedation of up to 80 mcg/kg/h did not inhibit MEPs. Yet, nTMS equipment interfered with exposed pulse oximetry. nTMS motor mapping application and use was illustrated in three clinical cases. In conclusion, we present an approach for the safe and reliable use of nTMS motor mapping in the ICU setting and outline possible benefits. Our findings support further studies regarding the clinical value of nTMS in critical care settings.
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Correia dos Santos, João, and Miguel Mira da Silva. "Mapping Critical Success Factors for IT Outsourcing." International Journal of Enterprise Information Systems 11, no. 1 (January 2015): 62–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijeis.2015010105.

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During the last decades, IT Outsourcing gained considerable management attention and is considered a strategic decision used to promote success on its variable dimensions, like: cost reduction, quality improvement, access to new technologies, among others. The existing literature presents many studies on IT Outsourcing. However, there are few studies from the provider's perspective. Therefore, the objective is to focus on providers' critical success factors and their relationships in IT Outsourcing contracts. To analyse this subject a qualitative approach based on cognitive mapping process was applied. Cognitive or causal maps are widely employed in problem-structuring, since they permit a rich representation of ideas, through the modelling of a complex network of actions. This approach is innovative compared to the traditional quantitative methods used. As a result, they were able to map a network of means and ends and in parallel were found new success factors like service standardization, price flexibility, cost management and service catalogue, which allowed obtaining new insights into the structure of today's IT Outsourcing contracts.
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Bernard, Catherine, and Ansgar Nünning. "Introduction: Mapping Critical Theories, Meeting Intellectual Styles." European Journal of English Studies 6, no. 3 (December 2002): 247–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1076/ejes.6.3.247.14837.

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O’Regan, Philip, and David O’Donnell. "Mapping intellectual resources: insights from critical modernism." Journal of European Industrial Training 24, no. 2/3/4 (March 2000): 118–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/03090590010321089.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Critical mapping"

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Traynor, Catherine Mary. "Mapping neutrality : critical geographies of The Hague." Thesis, University of Leicester, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2381/39949.

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This thesis takes the reader on an emotional journey, through offices, buildings, streets, cities, countries, past and present, to explore what makes things neutral. It addresses a question currently lacking in the discipline, that if geographies are essentially emotional-affective, material, geopolitical and organised (if fluid), is there such thing as a geography of neutrality? Based on a case study of the World Forum Area of The Hague, and specifically a war crimes courtroom, headquarters building and International Zone, it shows how various forms of neutrality are peopled and placed. By doing so, it also confronts what constitutes "The Hague International City of Peace and Justice." The research was autoethnographic, involving semi-structured interviews, walking tours, observation and texts. Developing current analytical debates in geography, including emotions and affects, architecture, critical geopolitics and organisational anthropology, the thesis reveals three distinct yet overlapping socio-spatial forms, namely neutrality-as-competence, international-as-neutral and neutrality-as(un)organised. These three 'neutralities' matter politically since they fuel and challenge, liberal democracy, sovereignty and power relations. They also matter theoretically, as they uncover a complex relationship between absence and presence, in the constitution of a recognizable entity. Neutralities are an achievement of staged and unstaged significance along with staged and unstaged insignificance. Through the deliberate and inadvertent enactment of a lack of certain elements as much as a supply of others, intricate 'neutral' practices produce power(less) (un)organisations, that can justify political action and inaction, intimately and globally. With showcase trials performing emotional control, architecture downplaying its importance, and coherency that appears without strategy, 'The Hague International City of Peace and Justice' is one such multiscalar, organisational effect. Nevertheless, it contains people 'at the coalface,' negotiating neutrality's inherent contradictions, continually stretching its meanings and practices. Future work could tell their stories to enrich geographies of peace (McConnell, Williams and Megoran 2014).
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Maras, Karen Elizabeth Art History &amp Art Education College of Fine Arts UNSW. "Mapping children's theory of critical meaning in visual arts." Publisher:University of New South Wales. Art History & Art Education, 2008. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/41294.

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Through the lens of a realist conception of artworks as artefacts, this research investigates the underlying ontological constraints governing children’s aesthetic understanding in art. Challenging structural conventions of research into aesthetic development in art, a realist philosophical framework provides a neutral space within which the ontological basis for children's aesthetic concepts of pictorial meaning and value can be analysed, and developmental differences mapped. The study employs an analytical schema which brings together analytical tools borrowed from Feldman's ‘ontic dumping’ and Wollheim's twofolded ‘seeing-in.’ This schema is used to classify qualitative changes in concepts of pictorial value and meaning in three groups of children aged 6, 9, and 12, and two teachers, as employed in the experimental curation of an exhibition of portrait paintings. The curatorial policy developed by children from each group, in justification of their choice of eight pictures and accompanying exhibitions, are interpreted using quantitative and qualitative methods. Characteristic-to-defining shifts from na??ve accounts to more autonomous aesthetic judgements of value are identified relative to the ontological stance children adopted in their critical reasoning about the portraits they chose. Findings include differences in the level of conceptual integration in justification of portraits chosen, differences in the breadth and autonomy of identity brought to bear in choices of portraits, but few differences in the representational abstraction of the images chosen by different age groups. The authenticity of the experimental tasks, as well as the rich characterisation of the developmental differences described in the study have significance for pedagogical explanations of critical practice in art education.
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Andersson, Karl. "Mapping out dependencies in network components in critical infrastructure." Thesis, Linköpings universitet, Programvara och system, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-143981.

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Companies that operate with critical infrastructure face a growing threat from cyber-attacks while at the same time the development in the business is rapidly moving towards a higher level of digitalization. A common type of system in critical infrastructure is supervisory control and data acquisition systems, these systems have properties that can affect their security and will therefore serve as the basis for this thesis work. To stay protected despite systems changes, companies need to make risk assessments in order to analyze how changes will affect the overall system. One thing that is important to focus on is dependencies within the system, this means that not only interaction among computers and networks are concerned but instead a more holistic view of the system need to be considered. This thesis aims to aid the process of a future risk assessment by providing a methodology to be used as a preparatory step before a risk assessment by describing the current situation of the system. This is done by evaluating two system modeling approaches, and also by proposing a number of perspectives that each provides different kind of information about the system’s dependencies. These perspectives are then evaluated by creating system models and dependency graphs, and discussing the outcomes with experts in a utility company to find out their applicability. According to the experts, the proposed perspectives have promising properties that can be useful in future risk assessments as well as in other scenarios. Moreover, the evaluated modeling approaches got positive comments during evaluation and are considered to serve their purpose.
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Tulloch, Scott. "Mapping U.S. Civic Engagement Discourse: A Geo-Critical Rhetorical Wandering." Fogler Library, University of Maine, 2008. http://www.library.umaine.edu/theses/pdf/TullochS2008.pdf.

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Dodge, Martin. "Understanding cyberspace cartographies : a critical analysis of Internet infrastructure mapping." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2008. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1444150/.

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For thousands of years, people have been creating maps of the world around them as a means of understanding, navigating and controlling space. Cyberspace is the pre-eminent terra incognita of the twenty-first century and a wide range of maps and map-like visualisations have been produced to comprehend it. Many different aspects of cyberspace have been mapped, from the physical infrastructure, the data flows and customer statistics, to the emergent patterns of Web hyperlinks and the social structures of online forums. This thesis provides a discussion of the nature of these maps and visualisations, recognising them as complex socio-technical visual images open to multiple connotative interpretation, and imbued with political power and embedded in a wider socio-cultural milieu. The work is situated theoretically within contemporary cultural analyses of cartography, employing a hermeneutic epistemology and a non-progressive categorisation of cyberspace mapmaking practices into distinct, but overlapping and contested modes. The research questions tackled by the thesis are threefold, involving auditing how Internet infrastructures have been mapped, how these maps work semiotically and what is the nature of power they have to do work in the world. The thesis is an empirically-focused interpretative approach applied to an important mode of cyberspace cartographies: those that map Internet infrastructures. These maps give a fascinating picture of what the Internet looks like, and, significantly, they also provide rich insights into how different interest groups want the Internet to look. The goal of the analysis is to understand both the design connotations of the cartographic signs and the political imaginings of maps of the Internet infrastructure and this proceeds via two detailed case studies. The first case study focuses on the connotative meaning and power of statistical mapping to represent the nature of the globalisation of Internet connectivity. The second case study critiques marketing maps that sell infrastructure access and are intimately bound up in promoting the notion of global network reach.
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Kleynhans, Ilse. "A critical appraisal of regional geotechnical mapping in South Africa." Pretoria : [S.n.], 2005. http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-08122005-111838.

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Liu-Devereux, Pauline Carol. "Galleries and drift : mapping undermined landscapes." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10036/3283.

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This is a creative/critical project, a collection of narratives inspired by critical discourse that map a local landscape and chart a personal topography. As a result of interdisciplinary study, particularly in the area of cultural geography and map making, I found new ways to explore ideas about Cornwall’s heritage, her undermined landscape and expand upon issues raised in my MA dissertation. Recognising the instability and partiality of maps provided insight and mapping became method as newly revealed pathways and subtly shifting perspectives inspired fresh narratives which challenge stereotypical images of Cornwall and reveal the sometimes dark realities of rurality. The more personal narratives in this collection reveal a different undermined landscape: ideas about romantic constructions and inheritance led to explorations of nostalgia, memory and identity. Life events became life writing and many of these narratives reflect a search for direction and for a missing person: the artist I once was. But there are other disappearances in these narratives and the final chapter gives an account of family events that had to be recorded but which raise ethical questions that life writers cannot ignore. We must take responsibility for the way we write about vulnerable subjects and recognise what this writing tells us about ourselves: that, as Nancy K. Miller has suggested, by exposing our lives to others through life writing, we too become vulnerable subjects. The essay accompanying these narratives reflects upon process and finds ways of giving an account of the writer writing. It uncovers contemporary theories that are embedded in the narratives and I describe it as an orouboros, a creature that continuously eats its own tail. Like the text it subjects to scrutiny, the essay is a life narrative, an autobiographical act that merges creative and critical thinking and this amalgamation has been my aim since my studies began.
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Farmer, Elizabeth A. "A critical evaluation of remote sensing based land cover mapping methodologies." Thesis, Cranfield University, 2008. http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/3485.

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A novel, disaggregated approach to land cover survey is developed on the basis of land cover attributes; the parameters typically used to delineate land cover classes. The recording of land cover attributes, via objective measurement techniques, is advocated as it eliminates the requirement for surveyors to delineate and classify land cover; a process proven to be subjective and error prone. Within the North York Moors National Park, a field methodology is developed to characterise five attributes: species composition, cover, height, structure and density. The utility of land cover attributes to act as land cover ‘building blocks’ is demonstrated via classification of the field data to the Monitoring Landscape Change in the National Parks (MLCNP), National Land Use Database (NLUD) and Phase 1 Habitat Mapping (P1) schemes. Integration of the classified field data and a SPOT5 satellite image is demonstrated within per-pixel and object-orientated classification environments. Per-pixel classification produced overall accuracies of 81%, 80% and 76% at the field samples for the MLCNP, NLUD and P1 schemes, respectively. However, independent validation produced significantly lower accuracies. These decreases are demonstrated to be a function of sample fraction. Object-orientated classification, exemplified for the MLCNP schema at 3 segmentation scales, achieved accuracies approaching 75%. The aggregation of attributes to classes underutilises the potential of the remotely sensed data to describe landscape variability. Consequently, classification and geostatistical techniques capable of land cover attribute parameterisation, across the study area, are reviewed and exemplified for a sub-pixel classification. Land cover attributes provide a flexible source of field data which has been proven to support multiple land cover classification schemes and classification scales (sub-pixel, pixel and object). This multi-scaled/schemed approach enables the differential treatment of regions, within the remote sensing image, as a function of landscape characteristics and the users’ requirements providing a flexible mapping solution.
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Whitlock, Wade. "The Politics of Invisibility." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195152.

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Rather than offering a traditional interpretation of what constitutes a spatial queer politics, which Brown and Knopp (2006) describe as "claiming space," this dissertation seeks instead to explore a Foucauldian politics of disappearing, of incoherency, and illegibility. I call this the politics of invisibility, describing a queer politics that questions visibility at every avenue and that is extremely critical of the ways that queer bodies are often made less complex, indeed less visible, when "gays and lesbians" are incorporated more and more into the mainstream. The work does this through three different papers. First, it lays down the theory of the politics of invisibility through a Foucauldian analysis of the changing nature of heteronormativity since queer theory's origin in the early 1990's. Second, it asks whether new directions in mapping gays and lesbians based on problematic census data from the 1990 and 2000 censuses should be reconsidered in light of this changing heteronormativity. Third, it explores the radical potential of a gay male subculture that is striving to become more visible and by doing so ruptures the taken-for-granted no-tions of how traditional forms of masculinity should be interpreted in a queer theoretical framework.
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Wilmott, Clancy. "Living the map : mobile mapping in post/colonial cities." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2017. https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/living-the-map-mobile-mapping-in-postcolonial-cities(31208be6-9620-4774-9fa7-7607c0bc8f54).html.

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This thesis is concerned with mobile mapping practices in Sydney and Hong Kong. Since the development of mobile media technology, there has been widespread proliferation of geo-locative, quasi-cartographic mapping practices in which people use applications (apps) on their mobile phones to narrate and navigate their way through urban spaces. This has raised questions within scholarly communities about the impact that these new technologies are having on everyday practices and everyday lives. As such, this thesis seeks to contribute to a growing field of knowledge surrounding the transformation of wayfinding, navigational and spatial mapping in the wake of these developments. Focusing an empirical investigation in two post/colonial cities - Sydney and Hong Kong - it draws on ethnographic, archival and geographical data in order to situate mobile mapping in an everyday context. Building upon Foucault's work on order (2002b), knowledge (2002a) and discipline (1995), this thesis seeks to address the issue of power-knowledge relations within and without mobile mapping practices as political and generative contestations over the meaning of space, the potentiality of practice and the indeterminacy of the past. It does so by considering an over-arching discourse of cartographic reason, best articulated by Farinelli (1998) and Olsson (1998) as a rationalist, universalist and geometrical approach to spatial understanding. Moving beyond the Cartesian interpretation of cartographic reason, it argues that in an increasingly digitised and monadic world, analyses of cartographic discourse must expand into an investigation of the role of Leibnizian binary systems, universal characteristics and elasticity. As such, this thesis engages three heuristic lenses - space, technology and people - with which to understand the empirical material from different perspectives. It argues that digital mobile mapping practices can be understood as expanded and transformative descendants of the rationalist, universalist and scientific impulses that have characterised cartographic reason since the Enlightenment. However, where continuity can be traced across many different cartographic and mapping practices, as the power of cartographic reason continues to reassert authority and territorialise space and knowledge, equally, the contestations which where borne of initial and early colonial encounters continue to generate contestation, conflict and hauntings.
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Books on the topic "Critical mapping"

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Martin, Dodge. Mapping: Critical concepts in geography. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an Informa business, 2015.

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Left hemisphere: Mapping critical theory today. New York: Verso, 2013.

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Centre, Bhabha Atomic Research. Flux mapping system for AHWR critical facility. Mumbai: Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, 2007.

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Crampton, Jeremy W. Mapping: A critical introduction to cartography and GIS. Malden, Mass: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.

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Crampton, Jeremy W. Mapping: A critical introduction to cartography and GIS. Malden, Mass: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.

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Crampton, Jeremy W. Mapping: A critical introduction to cartography and GIS. Malden, Mass: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.

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Mapping race: Critical approaches to health disparities research. New Brunswick, N.J: Rutgers University Press, 2013.

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Crampton, Jeremy W. Mapping: A critical introduction to cartography and GIS. Malden, Mass: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010.

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Schuster, Pamela McHugh. Concept mapping: A critical-thinking approach to care planning. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis Co., 2002.

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Concept mapping: A critical-thinking approach to care planning. 2nd ed. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Critical mapping"

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Futch, Valerie A. "Mapping." In Encyclopedia of Critical Psychology, 1125–31. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5583-7_179.

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Muschara, Tony, Ron Farris, and Jim Marinus. "Critical Step Mapping." In Critical Steps, 109–20. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003220213-7.

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Cooper, David. "Critical Literary Cartography: Text, Maps and a Coleridge Notebook." In Mapping Cultures, 29–52. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137025050_2.

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Perkins, Chris. "Critical cartography." In The Routledge Handbook of Mapping and Cartography, 80–89. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2018.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315736822-8.

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Spieler, Sophie. "2. Mapping the Critical Landscape." In The Wealthy, the Brilliant, the Few, 73–83. Bielefeld, Germany: transcript Verlag, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/9783839457290-010.

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Davies, Philip R. "Mapping Palestine." In A New Critical Approach to the History of Palestine, 299–316. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019. |: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429052835-18.

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Gough, Brendan. "Critical Social Psychologies: Mapping the Terrain." In The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Social Psychology, 3–14. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-51018-1_1.

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Král, Françoise. "Mapping the Invisible: Critical Perspectives on Invisibility." In Social Invisibility and Diasporas in Anglophone Literature and Culture, 19–41. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137401397_2.

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Mill, W. "Critical Loads Mapping in Poland: Lessons Learned." In Acid Reign ’95?, 2547–52. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0864-8_111.

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Grangeat, Amélie, Julie Sina, Vittorio Rosato, Aurélia Bony, and Marianthi Theocharidou. "Human Vulnerability Mapping Facing Critical Service Disruptions for Crisis Managers." In Critical Information Infrastructures Security, 100–110. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71368-7_9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Critical mapping"

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Caprio, M. A. "Experiments on critical point nuclei." In MAPPING THE TRIANGLE: International Conference on Nuclear Structure. AIP, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1517932.

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Iachello, F. "Critical Point Symmetries In Nuclei And Other Quantum Systems." In MAPPING THE TRIANGLE: International Conference on Nuclear Structure. AIP, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1517930.

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Taisch, M., and J. Shao. "Critical mapping of sustainable index methodologies." In 2013 IEEE International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management (IEEM). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ieem.2013.6962607.

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Sagiv, Amir, Netanel Polonsky, Oren Boiman, Lior Shoval, Michael Ben-Yishai, and Shmoolik Mangan. "IntenCD: mask critical dimension variation mapping." In Photomask and NGL Mask Technology XV, edited by Toshiyuki Horiuchi. SPIE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.793103.

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Vipin, Kizheppatt, Shanker Shreejith, Suhaib A. Fahmy, and Arvind Easwaran. "Mapping Time-Critical Safety-Critical Cyber Physical Systems to Hybrid FPGAs." In 2014 IEEE International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems, Networks, and Applications (CPSNA). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cpsna.2014.14.

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Antonio, Erik Aceiro, Fabiano Cutigi Ferrari, and Sandra Camargo Pinto Ferraz Fabbri. "A Systematic Mapping of Architectures for Embedded Software." In 2012 Second Brazilian Conference on Critical Embedded Systems (CBSEC). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cbsec.2012.22.

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Kasauli, Rashidah, Eric Knauss, Benjamin Kanagwa, Agneta Nilsson, and Gul Calikli. "Safety-Critical Systems and Agile Development: A Mapping Study." In 2018 44th Euromicro Conference on Software Engineering and Advanced Applications (SEAA). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/seaa.2018.00082.

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Kang, Shin-haeng, Hoeseok Yang, Sungchan Kim, Iuliana Bacivarov, Soonhoi Ha, and Lothar Thiele. "Static Mapping of Mixed-Critical Applications for Fault-Tolerant MPSoCs." In the The 51st Annual Design Automation Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2593069.2593221.

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Qu, Xinyuan, Jiacun Li, Wenji Zhao, Xiaoli Zhao, and Cheng Yan. "Research on Critical Techniques of Disaster-Oriented Remote Sensing Quick Mapping." In 2010 International Conference on Multimedia Technology (ICMT). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icmult.2010.5631433.

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White, C. G., M. G. Nielsen, and R. Hayward. "Lessons Learned Mapping Critical Pressure Pipelines: City of Ottawa Case Studies." In Pipelines 2017. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784480885.009.

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Reports on the topic "Critical mapping"

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Yin, P., K. Cao, J. Q. Liu, and S. Y. Ye. Seabed mapping: critical needs and potential application in China offshore. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/305942.

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Machida, Yuichi, and Anindya Dutta. Mapping Critical DNA Sequence Elements Required for Amplification of erbB2 in Breast Cancer. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada416606.

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Machida, Yuichi, and Anindya Dutta. Mapping Critical DNA Sequence Elements Required for Amplification of erbB2 in Breast Cancer. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada406150.

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Sinclair, Samantha, and Sandra LeGrand. Reproducibility assessment and uncertainty quantification in subjective dust source mapping. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), August 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/41523.

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Accurate dust-source characterizations are critical for effectively modeling dust storms. A previous study developed an approach to manually map dust plume-head point sources in a geographic information system (GIS) framework using Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) imagery processed through dust-enhancement algorithms. With this technique, the location of a dust source is digitized and recorded if an analyst observes an unobscured plume head in the imagery. Because airborne dust must be sufficiently elevated for overland dust-enhancement algorithms to work, this technique may include up to 10 km in digitized dust-source location error due to downwind advection. However, the potential for error in this method due to analyst subjectivity has never been formally quantified. In this study, we evaluate a version of the methodology adapted to better enable reproducibility assessments amongst multiple analysts to determine the role of analyst subjectivity on recorded dust source location error. Four analysts individually mapped dust plumes in Southwest Asia and Northwest Africa using five years of MODIS imagery collected from 15 May to 31 August. A plume-source location is considered reproducible if the maximum distance between the analyst point-source markers for a single plume is ≤10 km. Results suggest analyst marker placement is reproducible; however, additional analyst subjectivity-induced error (7 km determined in this study) should be considered to fully characterize locational uncertainty. Additionally, most of the identified plume heads (> 90%) were not marked by all participating analysts, which indicates dust source maps generated using this technique may differ substantially between users.
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Sinclair, Samantha, and Sandra LeGrand. Reproducibility assessment and uncertainty quantification in subjective dust source mapping. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), August 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/41542.

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Abstract:
Accurate dust-source characterizations are critical for effectively modeling dust storms. A previous study developed an approach to manually map dust plume-head point sources in a geographic information system (GIS) framework using Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) imagery processed through dust-enhancement algorithms. With this technique, the location of a dust source is digitized and recorded if an analyst observes an unobscured plume head in the imagery. Because airborne dust must be sufficiently elevated for overland dust-enhancement algorithms to work, this technique may include up to 10 km in digitized dust-source location error due to downwind advection. However, the potential for error in this method due to analyst subjectivity has never been formally quantified. In this study, we evaluate a version of the methodology adapted to better enable reproducibility assessments amongst multiple analysts to determine the role of analyst subjectivity on recorded dust source location error. Four analysts individually mapped dust plumes in Southwest Asia and Northwest Africa using five years of MODIS imagery collected from 15 May to 31 August. A plume-source location is considered reproducible if the maximum distance between the analyst point-source markers for a single plume is ≤10 km. Results suggest analyst marker placement is reproducible; however, additional analyst subjectivity-induced error (7 km determined in this study) should be considered to fully characterize locational uncertainty. Additionally, most of the identified plume heads (> 90%) were not marked by all participating analysts, which indicates dust source maps generated using this technique may differ substantially between users.
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Langenkamp, Max, and Melissa Flagg. AI Hubs: Europe and CANZUK. Center for Security and Emerging Technology, April 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51593/20200061.

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U.S. policymakers need to understand the landscape of artificial intelligence talent and investment as AI becomes increasingly important to national and economic security. This knowledge is critical as leaders develop new alliances and work to curb China’s growing influence. As an initial effort, an earlier CSET report, “AI Hubs in the United States,” examined the domestic AI ecosystem by mapping where U.S. AI talent is produced, where it is concentrated, and where AI private equity funding goes. Given the global nature of the AI ecosystem and the importance of international talent flows, this paper looks for the centers of AI talent and investment in regions and countries that are key U.S. partners: Europe and the CANZUK countries (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom).
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Maksud, A. K. M., Khandaker Reaz Hossain, Sayma Sayed, and Amit Arulanantham. Mapping of Children Engaged in the Worst Forms of Child Labour in the Supply Chain of the Leather Industry in Bangladesh. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), July 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/clarissa.2021.005.

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This mapping of children in the worst forms of child labour (WFCL) in the leather sector of Bangladesh was conducted in May–August 2020. WFCL are not always obvious and, without better understanding of where, why and how it is happening, the exploitation and abuse of children in the workforce in Bangladesh will continue. This mapping provides a detailed assessment of where children are working in the leather supply chain in Bangladesh, what they are doing, how they came to be doing it and what their conditions of work and experiences are. Furthermore, and critically, it evidences the children’s perceptions of themselves and others as child labourers – the jobs and areas of the sector that they feel comprise WFCL, and the jobs they feel are the most difficult or dangerous to do and that children should not have to do.
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de Caritat, Patrice, Brent McInnes, and Stephen Rowins. Towards a heavy mineral map of the Australian continent: a feasibility study. Geoscience Australia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2020.031.

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Heavy minerals (HMs) are minerals with a specific gravity greater than 2.9 g/cm3. They are commonly highly resistant to physical and chemical weathering, and therefore persist in sediments as lasting indicators of the (former) presence of the rocks they formed in. The presence/absence of certain HMs, their associations with other HMs, their concentration levels, and the geochemical patterns they form in maps or 3D models can be indicative of geological processes that contributed to their formation. Furthermore trace element and isotopic analyses of HMs have been used to vector to mineralisation or constrain timing of geological processes. The positive role of HMs in mineral exploration is well established in other countries, but comparatively little understood in Australia. Here we present the results of a pilot project that was designed to establish, test and assess a workflow to produce a HM map (or atlas of maps) and dataset for Australia. This would represent a critical step in the ability to detect anomalous HM patterns as it would establish the background HM characteristics (i.e., unrelated to mineralisation). Further the extremely rich dataset produced would be a valuable input into any future machine learning/big data-based prospectivity analysis. The pilot project consisted in selecting ten sites from the National Geochemical Survey of Australia (NGSA) and separating and analysing the HM contents from the 75-430 µm grain-size fraction of the top (0-10 cm depth) sediment samples. A workflow was established and tested based on the density separation of the HM-rich phase by combining a shake table and the use of dense liquids. The automated mineralogy quantification was performed on a TESCAN® Integrated Mineral Analyser (TIMA) that identified and mapped thousands of grains in a matter of minutes for each sample. The results indicated that: (1) the NGSA samples are appropriate for HM analysis; (2) over 40 HMs were effectively identified and quantified using TIMA automated quantitative mineralogy; (3) the resultant HMs’ mineralogy is consistent with the samples’ bulk geochemistry and regional geological setting; and (4) the HM makeup of the NGSA samples varied across the country, as shown by the mineral mounts and preliminary maps. Based on these observations, HM mapping of the continent using NGSA samples will likely result in coherent and interpretable geological patterns relating to bedrock lithology, metamorphic grade, degree of alteration and mineralisation. It could assist in geological investigations especially where outcrop is minimal, challenging to correctly attribute due to extensive weathering, or simply difficult to access. It is believed that a continental-scale HM atlas for Australia could assist in derisking mineral exploration and lead to investment, e.g., via tenement uptake, exploration, discovery and ultimately exploitation. As some HMs are hosts for technology critical elements such as rare earth elements, their systematic and internally consistent quantification and mapping could lead to resource discovery essential for a more sustainable, lower-carbon economy.
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