On the Value of Sketch Maps

1955 ◽  
Vol 54 (8) ◽  
pp. 416-417 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert B. McNee
Keyword(s):  
1929 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 652
Author(s):  
Paul E. Jacob ◽  
Kullmer ◽  
Gerard
Keyword(s):  

1931 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 490-502 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. H. Feller

The Statute and Rules of the Permanent Court of International Justice are only remotely analogous to the detailed codes of civil procedure with which lawyers practising before municipal courts are familiar. The instruments governing the procedure of the Permanent Court are sketch maps rather than meticulously detailed charts for the procedural voyage. Nor is the body of tradition of international arbitral procedure sufficiently developed to furnish reliable guides in all circumstances. Of necessity, the practice of the court must develop out of the cases which come before it. The method of growth of its procedural law finds typical illustration in the question of the treatment, and, in particular of the amendment, of the conclusions of the parties.


Author(s):  
Andrew Curtis ◽  
Jacqueline W. Curtis ◽  
Jayakrishnan Ajayakumar ◽  
Eric Jefferis ◽  
Susanne Mitchell

2015 ◽  
pp. 586-598
Author(s):  
Sahib Jan ◽  
Angela Schwering ◽  
Jia Wang ◽  
Malumbo Chipofya

Sketch maps are externalizations of cognitive maps which are typically distorted, schematized, incomplete, and generalized. Processing spatial information from sketch maps automatically requires reliable formalizations which are not subject to schematization, distortion or other cognitive effects in sketch maps. Based on previous empirical work, the authors identified different sketch aspects such as ordering, topology and orientation to align and integrate spatial information from sketch maps with metric maps qualitatively. This research addresses the question how these qualitative sketch aspects can be formalized for a computational approach for sketch map alignment. In this study, the authors focus on the ordering aspect: ordering of landmarks and street segments along routes and around junctions. The authors first investigate different qualitative representations and propose suitable representations to formalize these aspects. The proposed representations capture qualitative relations between spatial objects in the form of qualitative constraint networks. The authors then evaluate the proposed representations by testing the accuracy of qualitative constraints between sketched objects and their corresponding objects in a metric map. The results of the evaluation show that the proposed representations are suitable for the alignment of spatial objects from sketch maps with metric maps.


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