ScholarGate
Asistente

Comparar métodos

Revisa los métodos seleccionados uno junto a otro; las filas que difieren aparecen resaltadas.

Multi-Criteria Site Selection×Accessibility Analysis×
CampoUrban StudiesHuman Geography
FamiliaMCDMProcess / pipeline
Año de origen20061959
Autor originalJacek Malczewski (GIS-MCDA synthesis); Thomas Saaty (AHP weighting)Walter G. Hansen
TipoSpatial multi-criteria decision analysis for siting facilities or land usesSpatial index of the ease of reaching opportunities from a location
Fuente seminalMalczewski, J. (2006). GIS-based multicriteria decision analysis: a survey of the literature. International Journal of Geographical Information Science, 20(7), 703–726. DOI ↗Hansen, W. G. (1959). How accessibility shapes land use. Journal of the American Institute of Planners, 25(2), 73–76. DOI ↗
AliasGIS-MCDA, Weighted Overlay Suitability, AHP Site Suitability, Spatial Multi-Criteria EvaluationHansen Accessibility, Gravity Accessibility Measure, Potential Accessibility, Spatial Accessibility Index
Relacionados44
ResumenMulti-criteria site selection combines multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) with geographic information systems to choose where to locate a facility or land use when many, often conflicting, spatial criteria matter at once. Synthesized as GIS-based MCDA by Jacek Malczewski, it standardizes each criterion layer to a common scale, assigns the criteria importance weights — frequently via Saaty's Analytic Hierarchy Process — and combines them through weighted overlay to produce a suitability surface that ranks every candidate location. The method makes an inherently messy, value-laden siting decision explicit, reproducible, and auditable.Accessibility analysis measures how easily opportunities — jobs, shops, clinics, parks — can be reached from a given location, combining the attractiveness (size) of destinations with the cost of travelling to them. The gravity-based formulation introduced by Walter Hansen in 1959 sums the opportunities at all destinations, each discounted by a distance-decay function of travel cost, producing a single accessibility score per origin that has become a foundational concept in transport geography and urban planning.
ScholarGateConjunto de datos
  1. v1
  2. 2 Fuentes
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 Fuentes
  3. PUBLISHED

Ir a la búsqueda Descargar diapositivas

ScholarGateComparar métodos: Multi-Criteria Site Selection · Accessibility Analysis. Recuperado el 2026-06-24 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare