home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- GLOSSARY OF TERMS
- =================
-
- The purpose of this tutorial is to provide definitions for a number of
- terms used within this Guide. Most of these terms are commonly used words
- or phrases which have taken on a more precise technical meaning in one of
- the areas spanned by the OzGIS system. Technical terms have been
- borrowed from the jargon of statistics, data processing, computer software
- and hardware, cartography, and graphic arts. Because of the diversity of
- these disciplines, it is unlikely that a potential OzGIS user will have
- developed a level of expertise in each. This glossary should provide most
- of the information necessary for communicating the basic concepts of
- OzGIS.
-
- The glossary is available on-line, and is accessed by typing 'G' to a menu
- selection request.
-
- Area - 1) A measurement of the size of a geographical region whose shape is
- displayed on the OzGIS monitor. 2) An arbitrary portion of the face
- of the monitor.
-
- Attribute - A general term for the variable associated with a set of
- geographic zones, lines or sites to be processed by OzGIS.
- Attributes may be variates, statistics or simply data collected for each
- item. Note that the modes of display for an attribute are usually
- referred to as "single variate" or "bi-variate". See also Variate and
- Statistic.
-
- Background - The informationless area displayed on the monitor around a map
- and its associated components. Usually given a user selected, neutral
- colour such as black or white.
-
- Bit - A unit of information representing the value (either 1 or 0) of a
- single binary digit.
-
- Bivariate - A display of the relative distribution of two different sets
- of statistics on the same map. It must be noted that no relationship
- between the two statistics is implied by the display. For example, if
- the distribution of little old ladies is displayed simultaneously with
- the distribution of cricket players, the result is not a display of the
- distribution of little old ladies who play cricket. See also Variate.
-
- Boundary - A set of lines displayed on the monitor to represent the edges
- of polygons defined to the system. Often the same as zone edges.
-
- Byte - A group of eight bits. See also Bit.
-
- Catchment - The region of influence around a site e.g. suburbs around a
- shopping centre where most of the customers live.
-
-
- Character - A single symbolic pattern which may be displayed on either the
- monitor or terminal. It may be alphabetic, numeric, or punctuational,
- as the normal symbols encountered on a typical typewriter keyboard, or a
- special symbol generated for display as an entity, such as a square root
- symbol.
-
- Choropleth Map - A map portraying the values of an attribute averaged over
- data collection units (or zones) and represented by a symbol covering
- the entire unit. A map displayed by OzGIS represents the zones by a
- uniform colour.
-
- Class - A convenient subdivision of the total range of values of a
- particular statistical variate. Classes are usually chosen to make
- computations or analyses less labourious, or to make the results of such
- analyses more obvious or meaningful. For example, the range of a set of
- values might be divided into ten equal classes in order to highlight
- items in the top ten percent. See also Variate, Class Boundary, Class
- Interval and Class Number.
-
- Class Boundary - The special values of variates which determine the upper
- and lower limits of the range of a class. See also Class.
-
- Class Interval - The range of variate values between the upper and lower
- limits of the class. See also Class.
-
- Class Number - A cardinal number assigned to each class into which a
- particular statistical range has been divided. Conventionally, the
- class whose members have the lowest magnitude is assigned number 1, with
- class numbers increasing uniformly as the magnitude of class values
- increases. See also Class.
-
- Colour - One of the combinations of blue, green, and red which may be
- specified for display on the monitor. The total number of colours
- available depends on the display system.
-
- Colour Space - The range of colours which may be specified for display on
- the colour monitor. Since the colours are specified as values of blue,
- green, and red, it is convenient to think of the colour space as a cube
- located on a standard three dimensional coordinate system. Black is
- placed at the origin, with each of the x, y and z axes representing
- blue, green, and red, respectively. The range of possible values is 0.0
- to 1.0 on each axis of the cube.
-
- Continuous Colour - A method of representating statistical values
- associated with map zones by graduating zone colours to correspond with
- changes in statistical value. From a user defined, or default, sequence
- of colours, OzGIS generates the intermediate colours to provide a
- 12 colour graduated path through the colour space. The statistic to be
- represented is quantized into 12 equal value classes, and the classes
- are assigned colours from the generated colour sequence. This allows
- small changes in statistical value to be represented by subtle changes
- in colour, while large changes in value may be visually observed as
- significant colour differences.
-
-
- Controller - A general term applied to a piece of intermediate equipment in
- the data path between the electrical signals of a processor and their
- physical realization in a peripheral device. Within OzGIS, the term
- will most often be used for the Color Display Controller.
- It will be used to a lesser extent to describe interface controllers for
- the various disc and tape drives.
-
- Coordinate - One of a pair of numbers which designates the location of a
- geographic point with respect to another known point. Geographic files
- for entry into the system under OzGIS must have their points
- specified in appropriately scaled and formatted coordinates. The
- coordinates specified by the user are converted by OzGIS for display
- on the monitor. On the monitor screen, the origin is in the lower left
- hand corner of the viewing area. The coordinates of a point on the
- monitor screen are specified by their distance right and up from the
- origin
-
- Crosshair Cursor - A pair of lines at right angles to each other which is
- displayed on the monitor to designate the location of a certain point of
- interest. Under most circumstances, the location of the crosshair
- cursor may be controlled by movements of the mouse. See also Box
- Cursor, and Joystick.
-
- Data - Numerical values associated with certain physical phenomena, such as
- 128 cm long, 14 years old, or 43 kangaroos. As a generality,
- OzGIS was not designed to handle data, but rather the statistics
- derived from data, such as average length, medium age, or number of
- kangaroos per hectare. See also Statistics.
-
- Decile - One of the nine data values which divide the range of a variate
- into ten equal sized classes. See also Quantile and Percentile.
-
- Default - A set of parameters automatically selected by OzGIS in the
- absence of any stated preference by the user. The actual default
- parameters may be defined by the user in the users default file. For
- example, OzGIS may initially display a map by arbitrarily selecting
- zone colours from a palette of possible shades which the user selected
- previously. After this default colouring, the user may wish to change
- some particular zone colour to improve the appearance of the display.
-
- Disc - An electronic device for storing digital data on a rotating plate
- coated with magnetic material. See also Controller.
-
- Display - As a verb, the act of presenting information on the monitor or
- terminal for the purpose of visually communicating that information to
- the user. This includes all the procedures necessary to correctly
- present the information in a format suitable for both the equipment and
- the viewer. Example: "A map is displayed on the monitor, while a menu
- is displayed on the terminal".
-
-
- As a noun, the presentation which is visually perceived when a user
- looks at the screen of the monitor or terminal; the total information
- content on the screen. Examples: "The terminal display indicates the
- options possible now"; "This map display is too red". See also Monitor
- and Terminal.
-
- Display Elements - The components or items of a display on the OzGIS
- monitor; for example, legend, title, image map, boundaries, image
- symbols, histograms.
-
- Distribution - The manner in which a number of samples of data are spread
- across the range of possible values. May be a subjective statement,
- such as: "These data appear to have an even distribution". More often,
- some quantifiable measure will be given such as: "These data have a
- normal distribution with a mean of 40 and standard deviation of 3".
- Sometimes, distribution information will be presented in graphical form,
- such as a histogram or scatter diagram.
-
- Equal Value Quantization - A method of dividing the range of values of a
- statistical variate into a number of classes where the magnitude of the
- range of each class is the same. See also Class.
-
- Excluded Zone - A zone displayed on the map and coloured with a special
- shade indicating that it has not been used for quantization or has been
- omitted from the area of interest.
-
- File - A number of data items grouped together and considered as a unit for
- convenience of storage and retrieval by a computer. Within OzGIS,
- such files are stored as distinct entities on disk. Files are
- identified by media designation, name, and type. The OzGIS user
- normally supplies only the file name, but the storage media may also be
- specified. The file type is supplied by the system. The same name may
- be used for files of different types, but within a particular type, no
- two files may have the same name.
-
- Frequency - A statistical term referring to the number of members of a
- population falling into a specified class. See also Class.
-
- Geographic Data - Digitized map data which are referenced to a geographic
- (or spatial) coordinate system, usually a map projection.
-
- Graphics - Data which can be displayed on the monitor in terms of lines
- points and text, as opposed to colouring and filling regions of the
- screen. Used to refer to geographic and symbol data.
-
- Histogram - A type of bar graph in which vertical rectangles are erected on
- the horizontal axis with the height of each bar representing the
- frequency, and the width representing the corresponding class interval,
- for each of the classes of a particular variate. OzGIS can display
- such statistical information on the monitor. See also Scatter Diagram,
- and Class.
-
-
- Information - The subjective knowledge which may be associated with an
- objective set of data. The ages and locations of children are data;
- the distribution of school age children is statistic; where the schools
- should be built is information. See also Data and Statistics.
-
- Interval - The numerical distance between the upper and lower limits of a
- class.
-
- Joystick - An electro-mechanical device which converts the positions of a
- small lever into electrical voltages. The voltages are further
- converted into digital signals which are used by the PDP11 to
- position various cursor patterns on the monitor screen. See also Box
- Cursor, and Crosshair Cursor.
-
- Legend - A display on the monitor which indicates the correspondence
- between the statistical values and their associated colours or symbols
- as defined for a particular map. The legend usually occupies
- approximately the rightmost one fifth of the viewing area of the monitor
- and has two general forms, single variate and bivariate. One type of
- single variate legend consists of a column of coloured rectangles beside
- which are numbers indicating the corresponding class boundaries for
- those colours. The other is a rectangular column with colours gradually
- changing from top to bottom, and an upper and lower number indicating
- the range across which the "Continous Colour" varies. The bivariate
- legend consists of a 45 degree parallelogram divided left to right and
- up and down into coloured smaller parallelograms. A set of numbers
- along the left side indicates the class boundaries of the primary
- variate, while similar numbers across the upper side indicate the
- secondary variate class boundaries.
-
- Line - This term has three special meanings within OzGIS in addition to
- its normal English usage. (1) Any set of contiguous segments comprising
- the section of a zone boundary which has one zone on its right and a
- second zone on its left as part of a map. (2) Any contiguous set of
- segments as part of a graphics display. (3) A set of alpha-numeric
- characters meant to be displayed as one row on either the monitor or the
- terminal.
-
- Location - The position of a datum point, or pixel, on the monitor screen.
- This is given by its x and y coordinates, with the origin in the lower
- left hand corner. The range of values depends on the display system.
-
- Lookup Table (LUT) - A table in the display system which can modify the
- value in memory for display purposes.
-
- Map - Geographic data which can be displayed on the monitor by colouring
- and filling regions of the screen or as lines or symbols.
-
- Map Projection - Refers to the coordinate system used for processing the
- display of a map.
-
-
- Markers - Special characters or symbols which may be displayed on the
- monitor to identify locations of points. For example, aircraft
- symbols to indicate the location of airports. Different sized markers
- are used to show the classification of site attribute data.
-
- Mean - The arithmetic average of a set of data values.
-
- Memory - A portion of the OzGIS hardware used for the storage of data
- by the altering of the electrical state of the appropriate circuitry.
-
- Menu - An itemized list of alternative actions which might be selected
- within OzGIS. Menus are displayed on the terminal. The terminal
- keyboard is used to enter selections from the options listed on the
- menu. The sequence of menu items which is selected controls the "flow"
- of the OzGIS program through its various tasks.
-
- Monitor - The electronic equipment, resembling a colour television
- receiver, on which maps and graphics are displayed.
-
- Nested Means - A quantization method in which classes are generated by
- dividing each variate range into two classes about the mean for that
- range. For example, the central class limit is set at the overall mean,
- then the upper and lower classes are each divided at the means of the
- two parts, giving four classes. This process may be repeated, giving
- eight classes.
-
- Operating System - Computer software provided to facilitate usage of the
- various computer resources available within the OzGIS system.
-
- Overlay - As a noun, overlay refers to graphic data written on top of the
- existing display. This is displayed on the monitor as though placed
- between the previous display and the viewer. Overlays generally are
- entered in the refresh memory in single bit planes.
- As a verb, overlay refers to the act of adding graphics data to a
- display by putting it "on top of" the previous display.
-
- Palette - An array of coloured rectangles which is displayed on the monitor
- at certain stages of OzGIS. The palette shows a range of colours
- which are available for selection by the user. Palettes are held as
- files within OzGIS. Several palette files are provided as part of
- the software package.
-
- Parameter - A general term referring to a physical characteristic which may
- be measured or quantified in some way, even though the precise value of
- that measurement may be unknown in specific instances. For example, age
- is a parameter of human beings.
-
- Percentile - One of the set of 99 values which divide the range of a
- statistic into 100 equal sized classes.
-
- Peripherals - Items of auxillary equipment added to a computer to enhance
- its performance. These include such items as disc drives, tape drives,
- and printers.
-
-
- Pixel - The smallest, individually controllable, element (or cell)
- displayed as dots of colour on the monitor's screen. The monitor area
- is made up of lines of pixels. For each pixel, there is a corresponding
- location in the refresh memory for storing the data value associated
- with that pixel. This location is the smallest datum area which can be
- individually controlled by the software. See also Image and Location.
-
- Point - A geographic feature which, for display purposes, may be described
- by only indicating its location as an x and y coordinate.
-
- Polygon - A geographic area described by the line segments forming its
- boundary and the zone name which forms its surface. One or more
- polygons may be combined to form a zone.
-
- Presentation Maps - A set of maps prepared for rapid display on the
- monitor.
-
- Primary Variate - The set of statistical values characterized by a common
- name which is displayed on any given single variate map. Two such sets
- of values are displayed on a bivariate map. The primary variate is
- named at the top of the title, and its colour values are indicated in
- the rows of the legend. See also Variate.
-
- Processor - The hardware which executes the procedural and computational
- tasks specified by OzGIS. The standard OzGIS processor is a
- Digital Equipment Corporation minicomputer, the VAX.
-
- Projection - The representation of a physical shape on the screen of the
- monitor according to a fixed mathematical coordinate system. Normally,
- a projection in OzGIS terms will refer to a method for presenting
- maps of geographic areas. See also Map Projection.
-
- Quantile - Any of the specific values which divide the range of a statistic
- into equal sized classes. Some values have other special terms, i.e.,
- if the range is divided into four classes, the boundary values are
- called quartiles. See also Percentile.
-
- Quantify - To assign a number or quantity to an otherwise unnumbered
- entity. In particular, to assign a class number to a statistical value
- or zone name.
-
- Quantization - The process of assigning class numbers to zones according to
- the value of the statistic for that zone. Viewed the other way,
- quantization is the process of putting zones into classes.
-
- Quartile - One of the three data values which divide the range of a variate
- into four equal sized classes. See also Quantile and Percentile.
-
- Raster - a term applied to image data. In particular data handled on a
- line basis.
-
-
- Refresh Memory - The portion of the hardware (within the display
- controller) which holds the digital data necessary to continuously
- regenerate the colour monitor display. The cathode ray tube (CRT) of
- the monitor produces its display by electrically stimulating various
- phosphorus based compounds deposited on its face. The colours thus
- produced fade rapidly with time and must be continually "refreshed".
- The data necessary to perform this refresh correctly is stored in the
- refresh memory.
-
- Region - A designated portion of a map displayed on the monitor. A region
- consists of one or more zones or parts of zones defined in some way
- (e.g. a circular region centered at a point on the map). The concept of
- a region is important when the displayed map consists of several
- geographic areas. In this context, a region consists of a window
- (geographic area) and its displayed viewport on the screen (screen
- area). See also Area.
-
- Save - To store on disc (or magnetic tape) all the pertinent data regarding
- a map displayed on the monitor. The maps which are "saved" can later be
- fully regenerated with all details preserved.
-
- Scatter Diagram - A two dimensional plot of points whose x and y
- coordinates are the values of the individual variates associated with
- those points. Scatter diagrams are displayed on the monitor in
- conjunction with bivariate maps. In this instance, each map zone is
- assigned a point on the diagram. The y-coordinate of the point
- corresponds to the value of the primary variate for that zone as
- displayed on the map. The x-coordinate of the point has a similar
- relationship to the secondary variate. In addition, the point will be
- coloured the same as its associated map zone. Scatter diagrams provide
- a visual method of assessing the correlation between the two variates
- displayed on the map.
-
- Secondary Variate - The second set of statistical values which are
- displayed (along with a primary variate) on the map. The
- secondary variate is named at the bottom of the title. See also Primary
- Variate.
-
- Segment - A set of connected straight lines defined to OzGIS by
- specifying the coordinates of their starting, intermediate, and end
- points, along with the names of the two zones on either side of the
- lines. Consequently, segments must represent a portion, or all, of the
- boundary between two zones. See also Line and Boundary.
-
- Site - A geographic location that has associated attribute data. A site is
- defined by a name and fixed location e.g. a site could be a city or a
- retail store.
-
- Standard Deviation - A statistical measure of the dispersion amongst a set
- of measured values. The standard deviation is mathematically equivalent
- to the positive square root of the variance of the sample on which the
- statistic is based.
-
-
- Statistics - A general term referring to: 1) The branch of mathematics
- involved with performing certain analytical calculations regarding
- various relationships among sets of numerical data, and 2) The numerical
- results of such calculations. The height of an individual is data; the
- average height of a group is a statistic.
-
- Status - The present condition of the software and hardware system,
- especially as to its progress toward the completion of the tasks at
- hand. The status messages are displayed as a response to
- typing interpretation of various abbreviated messages displayed on the
- terminal. The status messages are displayed as a response to typing an
- "S" command.
-
- Terminal - An item of hardware comprising a keyboard for entering commands
- to the processor, and some means for the processor to return
- alpha-numeric messages to the user. The standard OzGIS terminal is
- the Digital Equipment Corporation VT100. This contains the necessary
- keyboard, and a cathode ray tube for displaying processor generated
- messages. Some OzGIS installations may also have a printer terminal
- for providing a permanent copy of the messages on paper.
-
- Territory - a zone which has been formed by amalgamating bas zones e.g. sales
- territories formed from postcodes.
-
- Text - Combinations of characters which may be specified by typing at the
- terminal. Lines of text may be displayed on either the terminal or the
- monitor in various fonts. See also Character, and Line.
-
- Time Lapse Maps - A formatted set of maps concerning a geographic area and
- certain statistics associated with it as they have been collected over
- time. Time lapse files are used to display the time related changes in
- the statistical data by rapid and periodic changes in map colours
- corresponding to the statistics. For example, variations in population
- density, as recorded by the 1971, 1976, and 1981 census data, could be
- shown by changing the colours of the displayed map at one second
- intervals corresponding to the 3 sets of data.
-
- User - The person who is interactively controlling the OzGIS system at
- the terminal.
-
- Value - The number associated with a particular statistical item, as
- opposed to the colour associated with that item. For example, the zone
- might be coloured red to indicate four to ten beer drinkers per pub in
- that zone. The actual value of the statistic might be 9.4 beer drinkers
- per pub.
-
- Variate - A measurable quantity which may take on any of the values within
- a given range, and which has associated with it a specified probability
- function describing the manner in which the permissible values are
- likely to occur. See also Bivariate, Primary Variate, and Secondary
- Variate.
-
- Viewport - The rectangular area of the colour monitor face selected for
- displaying a specified item.
-
- Window - The rectangular portion of a geographic map which is selected for
- display on the colour monitor.
-
-
- Zone - A geographic area which is to be considered as a spatial unit. A
- zone is defined in terms of one or more polygons which form it.
- Statistically, a zone is defined in terms of a single value for each
- variate in question. This relationship of one variate value per defined
- geographic zone allows zones to be completely and uniformly coloured in
- a map display. See also Polygon and Variate.
-
- Zone Name - An alphanumeric designation attached to the various
- computerized data associated with a zone. The zone name facilitates for
- the processor the task of relating various data items to the proper
- zones.