The document discusses mental maps and how humans organize geographic information in their minds. It explains that mental maps are psychological representations of environments that allow us to navigate and understand places. The document prompts readers to draw a simple map of their hometown from memory to illustrate features of their mental map. Analyzing these maps reveals insights into individuals' geographic knowledge and spatial thinking. The document emphasizes that identifying gaps in our knowledge is important for developing understanding through asking questions. It outlines five common types of geographic questions that can be answered using geographic information systems (GIS).
2. Illustrate how we think geographically every
day with mental maps and to highlight the
importance of asking geographic questions.
humans are inherently spatial organisms, and
in order for us to live in the world, we must
first somehow relate to it. Enter the mental
map.
3. Mental or cognitive maps are psychological tools that we
all use every day.
As the name suggests, mental maps are maps of our
environment that are stored in our brain.
We rely on our mental maps to get from one place to
another, to plan our daily activities, or to understand and
situate events that we hear about from our friends, family,
or the news.
Mental maps also reflect the amount and extent of
geographic knowledge and spatial awareness that we
possess.
To illustrate this point, pretend that a friend is visiting you
from out of town for the first time.
Using a blank sheet of paper, take five to ten minutes to
draw a map from memory of your hometown that will help
your friend get around.
5. What did you choose to draw on your map?
Is your house or where you work on the map?
What about streets, restaurants, malls,
museums, or other points of interest?
How did you draw objects on your map?
Did you use symbols, lines, and shapes?
Are places labeled?
Why did you choose to include certain places
and features on your map but not others?
What limitations did you encounter when
making your map?
6. First, it illustrates what you know about where you live. Your
simple map is a rough approximation of your local
geographic knowledge and mental map.
Second, it highlights the way in which you relate to your local
environment. What you choose to include and exclude on
your map provides insights about what places you think are
important and how you move through your place or
residence.
Third, if we were to compare your mental map to someone
elses from the same place, certain similarities emerge that
shed light upon how we as humans tend to think spatially and
organize geographical information in our minds.
Fourth, this exercise reveals something about your artistic,
creative, and cartographic abilities. In this respect, not only
are mental maps unique, but also the way in which such maps
are drawn or represented on the page is unique too.
7. What similarities are there on each map?
What are some of the differences?
Which places or features are illustrated on the
map?
From what you know about Los Angeles, what
is included or excluded on the maps?
What assumptions are made in each map?
At what scale is the map drawn?
8. Each map is probably an imperfect representation
of ones mental map, but we can see some
similarities and differences that provide insights
into how people relate to this place, maps, and
more generally, the world.
First, all maps are oriented so that north is up.
Though only one of the maps contains a north
arrow that explicitly informs viewers the
geographic orientation of the map, we are
accustomed to most maps having north at the
top of the page.
Second, all but some map identify some
prominent features and landmarks in the area.
For instance, railway station, towns, junctions ,
bridges etc.
9. What you include and omit on your map, by
choice or not, speaks volumes about your
geographical knowledge and spatial
awarenessor lack thereof.
Recognizing and identifying what we do not
know is an important part of learning.
It is only when we identify the unknown that
we are able to ask questions, collect
information to answer those questions,
develop knowledge through answers, and
begin to understand the world where we live.
10. Filling in the gaps in our mental maps and, more generally,
the gaps in our geographic knowledge requires us to ask
questions about the world where we live and how we relate
to it.
Such questions can be simple with a local focus (e.g.,
Which way is the nearest hospital?) or more complex with
a more global perspective (e.g., How is urbanization
impacting biodiversity hotspots around the world?).
The thread that unifies such questions is geography.
For instance, the question of where? is an essential part
of the questions Where is the nearest hospital? and
Where are the biodiversity hotspots in relation to cities?
Being able to articulate questions clearly and to break
them into manageable pieces are very valuable skills when
using and applying a geographic information system.
11. Though there may be no such thing as a
dumb question, some questions are indeed
better than others.
Learning how to ask the right question takes
practice and is often more difficult than
finding the answer itself.
However, when we ask the right question,
problems are more easily solved and our
understanding of the world is improved.
There are five general types of geographic
questions that we can ask and that GIS can
help us to answer.
12. Questions about geographic location:
Where is it?
Why is it here or there?
How much of it is here or there?
Questions about geographic distribution:
Is it distributed locally or globally?
Is it spatially clustered or dispersed?
Where are the boundaries?
Questions about geographic association:
What else is near it?
What else occurs with it?
What is absent in its presence?
13. Questions about geographic interaction:
Is it linked to something else?
What is the nature of this association?
How much interaction occurs between the
locations?
Questions about geographic change6:
Has it always been here?
How has it changed over time and space?
What causes its diffusion or contraction?
14. These and related geographic questions are
frequently asked by people from various areas of
expertise, industries, and professions.
For instance, urban planners, traffic engineers,
and demographers may be interested in
understanding the commuting patterns between
cities and suburbs (geographic interaction).
Biologists and botanists may be curious about why
one animal or plant species flourishes in one place
and not another (geographic
location/distribution).
Epidemiologists and public health officials are
certainly interested in where disease outbreaks
occur and how, why, and where they spread
(geographic change/interaction/location).
15. A GIS can assist in answering all these
questions and many more. Furthermore, a GIS
often opens up additional avenues of inquiry
when searching for answers to geographic
questions. Herein is one of the greatest
strengths of the GIS.
While a GIS can be used to answer specific
questions or to solve particular problems, it
often unearths even more interesting
questions and presents more problems to be
solved in the future.