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Chapter 1
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Human Geography | How people affect the world |
| Geography | The spatial study of people, place, space, and environment. |
| Globalization | Processes heightening interactions, increasing interdependence, and deepening relations across country borders |
| fieldwork | Observations researchers make of physical and cultural landscapes with a focus on seeing similarities and differences. |
| patterns | Description of the spatial distribution of a human or physical phenomenon (e.g., scattered or concentrated) |
| physical geography | One of the two major divisions of geography; the spatial analysis of physical phenomena, including climate, environmental hazards, weather systems, animals, and topography. |
| spatial distribution | Physical locations of geographic phenomena, usually shown on a map. |
| pandemics | An outbreak of a disease that spreads worldwide. |
| epidemic | Widespread, rapid diffusion of disease among a people in a particular location or region at a particular time. |
| spatial perspective | Looking at where things occur, why they occur where they do, and how places are interconnected. |
| Geographic concepts | Mental categories used to organize and analyze the world spatially. |
| Location | Position on Earth, including both absolute location and relative location (one of the five themes of geography). |
| absolute location | Precise location of a place, usually defined by latitude and longitude. |
| Relative location | The location of a place or attribute in reference to another place or attribute. |
| location theory | Understanding the distribution of cities, industries, services, or consumers with the goal of explaining why places are chosen as sites of production or consumption. |
| human–environment interactions | the reciprocal (mutually affecting each other) relationship between humans and the physical world |
| environmental determinism | Set of theories that use environmental differences to explain everything from intelligence to wealth. |
| hearth | Area or place where an idea, innovation, or technology originates. |
| possibilism | Theory in geography that humans, not environment, shape culture. |
| carrying capacity | The idea that land can hold a measurable amount of plant and animal life. |
| Cultural ecology | Study of the historical interaction between humans and environment in a place, including ways humans have modified and adapted to environment. |
| Political ecology | An approach to studying human-environment interactions in the context of political, economic, and historical conditions operating at multiple scales. |
| region | Area of Earth identified as sharing a formal, functional, or perceptual commonality that makes it different from regions around it |
| formal region | Area of land with common cultural or physical traits. |
| cultural trait | A learned belief, norm, or value passed down through generations in a culture. |
| functional region | Area of land defined as sharing a common purpose in society. |
| node | Connection point in a network, where goods and ideas flow in, out, and through the network. |
| Perceptual regions | Area of land that an individual perceives as being similar. |
| vernacular region | a perceptual region that has such strong significance to the people in the perceptual region that it becomes the lens through which they see their world and a way people identify themselves. |
| place | Uniqueness of a location (one of the five themes of geography). |
| sense of place | Infusing a place with meaning as a result of experiences in a place. |
| perceptions of places | How a place is envisioned. |
| Movement | Mobility of people, goods, and services across Earth (one of the five themes of geography). |
| Diffusion | Spread of an idea, innovation, or technology from its hearth to other people and places. |
| Spatial Interaction | Degree of connectedness or contact among people or places. |
| Distance | How far away things are |
| Accessibility | Ease of flow between two places. |
| Connectivity | Position of a place or area relative to others in a network. |
| time–distance decay | The likelihood of a trait or innovation diffusing decreases the farther away in time or distance it moves from the origin (hearth). |
| Expansion diffusion | The spread of an idea or innovation from its hearth across space without the aid of people moving. |
| contagious diffusion | Spread of an idea or innovation from one person or place to another person or place based on proximity. Specific type of expansion diffusion. |
| hierarchical diffusion | Spread of an idea or innovation from one person or place to another person or place based on a hierarchy of connectedness. Specific type of expansion diffusion. |
| Stimulus diffusion | A process of diffusion where two cultural traits blend to create a distinct trait. |
| Relocation diffusion | Spread of an idea or innovation from its hearth by the act of people moving and taking the idea or innovation with them. |
| cultural landscape | The visible human imprint on the landscape. |
| sequent occupance | imprints left on the cultural landscape by a series of successive societies. Each society contributed to the cumulative cultural landscape. |
| Scale | Geographical scope (local, national, or global) in which we analyze and understand a phenomenon. |
| rescale | Changing the geographical scope at which a problem is addressed by engaging decision makers and gatekeepers at another scale. |
| Context | The physical and human geographies creating the place, environment, and space in which events occur and people act. |
| Cartography | The art and science of making maps. |
| Reference maps | Maps showing absolute location of places and geographic features. |
| Thematic maps | A map that tells a story, typically showing the degree of some attribute or the movement of a geographic phenomenon using map symbols. |
| global positioning system( GPS) | Satellite-based system for determining the absolute location of places or geographic features. |
| mental maps | Maps of an area made from memory or experience by individuals or groups (also known as cognitive maps). |
| activity spaces | Places within the rounds of daily activity. |
| terra incognita | Areas on maps that are not well defined because they are off limits or unknown to the map maker. |
| Remote sensing | A method of collecting data or information through the use of instruments (e.g., satellites) that are physically distant from the area of study. |
| Geographic information systems (GIS) | A system of computer hardware and software designed to show, analyze, and represent geographic data (data that have locations). |
| Culture | Group of belief systems, norms, and values practiced by a people. |
| culture complex | A group of interrelated cultural traits, such as prevailing dress codes and cooking and eating utensils. |