231:, where, during the 1970s he worked on zone design methodology, for regional based administration, and for the analysis of socio-economic data in geographical and planning contexts. During the same period he developed a way to estimate death or kill rates of various nuclear bombing strategies evolving computerised techniques for identifying locations with the highest concentration of something. In the 1980s he pioneered the use of
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192:. It contains tables of data, maps, aerial and ground level photographs, diagrams, statistical analysis, considerable description and details of two surveys (one about tourism which Openshaw aimed at tourists in Dunbar, and another about agriculture which Openshaw aimed at farmers). It may be that there is more than one copy of this thesis produced in 1968 and submitted to
113:. He worked on geographical information systems, analysis technology and models. He debated the direction geography should take putting forward a view that the subject needed an applied and scientific edge that harnessed the growing power of computers to make positive impacts to help us avoid and mitigate risk and cope better with disasters.
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Openshaw strove to remove human bias from the scientific process and was a strong believer in human-competitive machine intelligence. In the late 1980s and through the 1990s he worked to develop automated geographical analysis tools and "geographical explanation machines", which aimed to assist human
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no. : D10191/74. The thesis submitted to
Newcastle University was completed in December 1973. It was compiled over several years (and for at least the latter part) whilst Openshaw worked in the Planning Department at Durham County Council. Openshaw wrote an abstract of the thesis and kept it
196:, but it would not be surprising for Openshaw to have kept a copy. A copy is stored with other artefacts of Openshaw's in a collection called "The Stan Openshaw Collection" the physical manifestation of which resides for the time being at the
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in 1993. Openshaw had directed the CCG for seven years until he had a stroke and finally retired in 1999 . Because of his severe medical condition/sequelae, Openshaw struggled to communicate verbally and got around from 1999.
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conference which was hosted at the
University of Leeds in 1997. The event was a great success and initialised a series of international conferences that is still on-going (see the
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In 1996, as the World Wide Web began to blossom, Openshaw encouraged a growing global community of computational geographers to meet for a first international
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503:"University of Leeds The Reporter Issue 474, 3 December 2001 Professor Stanley Openshaw Article (following Openshaw's official retirement)"
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In 2012 at the GISRUK conference in
Lancaster a special session was arranged to celebrate his work and geographical career.
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Openshaw, S., Turton, I. (2000) High performance computing and the art of parallel programming: An introduction for |-
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Stan
Openshaw's Old School of Geography Web Page Retrieved from the Internet Archive Way Back Machine
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and his work aimed to automate aspects of geographical research and reduce subjectivity in
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Stillwell, J.C.H, Geertman S., Openshaw, S. (1999) Geographical information and planning
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Openshaw's research career blossomed in the
Department of Town and Country Planning at
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It may require cleanup to comply with
Knowledge (XXG)'s content policies, particularly
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The
Application of Evolutionary Computing Techniques to Spatial Interaction Modelling
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School of
Architectural Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
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Openshaw, S., Carver, S., Fernie J. (1989) Britain's nuclear waste: siting and safety
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Openshaw, S., Steadman, P., Greene, O. (1983) Doomsday: Britain after nuclear attack
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with his copy of the work. The abstract has now been reproduced on-line on his
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Openshaw, S., Openshaw, C. (1997) Artificial intelligence in geography
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524:"GISRUK 2012 Special Session in Celebration of Stan Openshaw's Work"
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researchers in the formation of hypotheses about the causes of
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Intelligent location optimisations (ILOs) in GIS environments
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to geography and demonstrated the predictive capabilities of
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Spatial
Analysis Techniques Applied to Local Crime Patterns
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Department of Geography, University of Newcastle upon Tyne
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Department of Geography, University of Newcastle upon Tyne
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techniques and the modelling and inference capabilities of
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Applications of Artificial Life Technologies to Geography
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Openshaw, S. (1978) Doomsday: Britain after nuclear attack
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technology for analysing networks of demand and supply.
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A major contributor to this article appears to have a
81:(10 August, 1946 – 19 May, 2022) was a British
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Openshaw, S. (1986) Nuclear power: siting and safety
294:Openshaw, S., Abrahart, R.J. (2000) Geocomputation
608:"Web version of Danny Dorling's 1991 PhD Thesis"
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250:and patterns in data. Openshaw introduced
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66:Learn how and when to remove this message
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372:School of Geography, University of Leeds
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418:The Visualization of Spatial Structure
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672:Academics of the University of Leeds
136:in 1983, as well as a fellow of the
587:"Young-Hoon Kim KNUE Home Web Page"
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692:Geographic information scientists
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85:. His last post was professor of
469:Emeritus Professor Stan Openshaw
236:geographical information systems
211:" PhD Thesis is archived at the
46:. Please discuss further on the
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677:Alumni of Newcastle University
566:"Stan Openshaw's PhD Web Page"
545:"The Stan Openshaw Collection"
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260:fuzzy logic
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233:multimedia
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217:microfilm
152:Education
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