Cartogram Construction
A cartogram is a map in which the area of each region is rescaled so that it is proportional to some variable — population, votes, GDP — rather than to its true geographic size. The aim is to correct the visual bias of ordinary maps, where large but sparsely populated regions dominate the eye while small, populous ones nearly vanish, by making each region as big as the quantity it represents. Cartogram construction is the family of techniques that produce these value-by-area maps, ranging from contiguous density-equalizing diffusion to non-contiguous circle and rectangle methods, each balancing the accuracy of areas against the recognizability of shapes.
手法の全文を読む
無料アカウントでログインすると、このセクションを読めます。
手法マップ
関連する手法の近傍 — ノードを選択して探索できます。
出典
- Gastner, M. T., & Newman, M. E. J. (2004). Diffusion-based method for producing density-equalizing maps. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 101(20), 7499–7504. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0400280101 ↗
このページの引用方法
ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Cartogram Construction (Value-by-Area Mapping). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/ja/human-geography/cartogram-construction
どの手法を選ぶ?
この手法を最も近い類縁の手法と並べ、両者を見比べてください — ライブラリは本を机の上に並べるだけ。選ぶのはあなたです。
- Choropleth ClassificationHuman Geography↔ 比較
- Dasymetric MappingHuman Geography↔ 比較
- Flow Mapping AnalysisHuman Geography↔ 比較
- Spatial Gini Concentration IndexHuman Geography↔ 比較