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Auteur White Roger |
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Calibration d'un automate cellulaire : le modèle de Dublin, basé sur l'activité, et à grille variable / Frémond Maxime
Titre : Calibration d'un automate cellulaire : le modèle de Dublin, basé sur l'activité, et à grille variable Type de document : mémoire, rapport de stage Auteurs : Frémond Maxime ; Cécile Tannier, Direction/Jury ; White Roger, Direction/Jury Année de publication : 2010 Importance : 52 p. Note générale : Université de Franche-Comté Langues : Français (fre) Tags : Automate cellulaire modele de Dublin Laboratoire : Inconnu Type : Thèse, mémoire Publication de Théma : Non Calibration d'un automate cellulaire : le modèle de Dublin, basé sur l'activité, et à grille variable [mémoire, rapport de stage] / Frémond Maxime ; Cécile Tannier, Direction/Jury ; White Roger, Direction/Jury . - 2010 . - 52 p.
Université de Franche-Comté
Langues : Français (fre)
Tags : Automate cellulaire modele de Dublin Laboratoire : Inconnu Type : Thèse, mémoire Publication de Théma : Non Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Section Disponibilité 4435 MAS.I.2010.FRE Livre Centre de Documentation Disponible Modeling cities and regions as complex systems / White Roger
Titre : Modeling cities and regions as complex systems : From theory to planning applications Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : White Roger, Auteur ; Guy Engelen, Auteur ; Inge Uljee, Auteur Editeur : MIT Press Année de publication : 2015 Importance : 330 p. ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-262-02956-8 Langues : Anglais (eng) Tags : city planning regional planning modeling Résumé : Cities and regions are highly complex but ordered systems. They are thus best understood by modelling within the framework of the theory of complex, self-organizing systems. This theory suggests that fractal structure is a signature of self-organized systems, and that systems that are far from thermodynamic equilibrium have open futures. These two phenomena have important consequences for the calibration and validation of realistic models, with the open futures phenomenon raising fundamental methodological issues that are addressed in the book. The models themselves are cellular automata (CA) based, because CA are inherently spatial, high resolution, and dynamic. The basic model focuses on land use change, using multiple urban land use classes, with the dynamics driven by linked demographic, economic, and natural system models. Subsequently, a zone-based model of the spatial dynamics of population and economic activity is inserted to constrain the CA model regionally. Ultimately, the dynamics of population and economic activity are modelled together with land use in an activity based variable grid CA which captures spatial interaction effects at all scales, not just local, and permits multiple activities on a single cell. These models show how the complex but ordered urban and regional structure emerges; thus they constitute an advance in urban theory. They also provide a platform that planners can use to investigate the likely effectiveness of proposed plans and policies. Applications to a number of cities and regions are discussed, and applications to Flanders, implemented as part of the official planning process, are described in detail. Publication de Théma : Non Modeling cities and regions as complex systems : From theory to planning applications [texte imprimé] / White Roger, Auteur ; Guy Engelen, Auteur ; Inge Uljee, Auteur . - MIT Press, 2015 . - 330 p.
ISBN : 978-0-262-02956-8
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Tags : city planning regional planning modeling Résumé : Cities and regions are highly complex but ordered systems. They are thus best understood by modelling within the framework of the theory of complex, self-organizing systems. This theory suggests that fractal structure is a signature of self-organized systems, and that systems that are far from thermodynamic equilibrium have open futures. These two phenomena have important consequences for the calibration and validation of realistic models, with the open futures phenomenon raising fundamental methodological issues that are addressed in the book. The models themselves are cellular automata (CA) based, because CA are inherently spatial, high resolution, and dynamic. The basic model focuses on land use change, using multiple urban land use classes, with the dynamics driven by linked demographic, economic, and natural system models. Subsequently, a zone-based model of the spatial dynamics of population and economic activity is inserted to constrain the CA model regionally. Ultimately, the dynamics of population and economic activity are modelled together with land use in an activity based variable grid CA which captures spatial interaction effects at all scales, not just local, and permits multiple activities on a single cell. These models show how the complex but ordered urban and regional structure emerges; thus they constitute an advance in urban theory. They also provide a platform that planners can use to investigate the likely effectiveness of proposed plans and policies. Applications to a number of cities and regions are discussed, and applications to Flanders, implemented as part of the official planning process, are described in detail. Publication de Théma : Non Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Section Disponibilité 01151001943471 A20.WHI Livre Centre de Documentation Sorti jusqu'au 16/12/2024