Temporal Dynamics of Place
Type: Virtual Paper
Day: 3/1/2022
Start Time: 5:20 PM
End Time: 6:40 PM
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Organizer(s):
Kevin Sparks
, Patrizia Sulis
, Jesse Piburn
, Marie Urban
Chairs(s):
Kevin Sparks, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Description:
Despite variation in population, climate, economics, politics, and culture, everyone around the world shares the same time constraints. No country or city has more time in a day (or in a week) than anyone else. Yet, the time-dependent activity patterns of when people interact with public, private, and commercial locations change across space and across spatial scales, from neighborhoods to countries. How late in the day people are active and when businesses open/close differ from country to country and city to city. The temporal dynamics of a place demonstrates a unique reflection of the complex social, economic, and cultural interactions of humans at that location. While we recognize that temporal dynamics differ across geographies, there is a need to identify and discuss datasets that capture unique perspectives of temporal dynamics for places around the world. In addition, we must investigate and develop a comprehensive understanding of how the temporal patterns of a place are created, disrupted, evolve, and to what extent those temporal patterns influence the social, cultural, and economic aspects of that place. Finally, it is vital to highlight the impact of temporal dynamics of places on human geography, population modeling, mobility, land use, building and transportation science.
Presentation(s), if applicable
Yuanshuo Xu, Zhejiang University; SHRINKING CITIES IN URBANIZED CHINA: DYNAMIC TIME-SERIES CLUSTERING |
Victoria Pinoncely, ; Drawing Insights from the Past: Analyzing Historical Planning Processes through the Lens of Path Dependence in Saint-Etienne and Sheffield |
Marco Millones Mayer, University of Mary Washington; GECM: geospatial environmental change monitoring, a software package to detect trends and abrupt change in earth observation time series. |
Ping Yin, University of Mary Washington; Mobility before and during pregnancy and its relationships with birth outcomes among Twitter users |
Ronald Horvath, ; Relations between Timeplace and Placetime of Temperature Change |
Non-Presenting Participants Agenda
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Temporal Dynamics of Place
Description
Virtual Paper
Contact the Primary Organizer
Kevin Sparks - sparksk16@gmail.com