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accessibility
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The opportunity for contact or interaction from a given point or location, in relation to other locations.
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capitalism
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form of economic and social
organization characterized by the profit motive and the control of the means of
production, distribution, and exchange of goods by private ownership.
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Cognitive distance
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The distance that people perceive to exist in a given situation
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Cognitive images (mental maps):
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Psychological representations of locations that are made up from
people's individual ideas and impressions of these locations.
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Cognitive space:
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Space defined and measured in terms of people's values, feelings,
beliefs, and perceptions about locations, districts, and regions.
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Distance-decay function
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The rate at which a particular activity or process diminishes with
increasing distance.
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Economies of scale
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Cost advantages to manufacturers that accrue from high-volume
production, since the average cost of production falls with increasing output.
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Formal region:
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groups of areal units that have a high degree of
homogeneity in terms of particular distinguishing features, such as religious
adherence or household income. (p. 32)
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Friction of distance
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The deterrent or inhibiting effect of distance on human activity. (
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Functional region:
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(sometimes referred to as nodal regions) regions within which,
while there may be some variability in certain attributes (religious adherence,
income), there is an overall coherence to the structure and dynamics of
economic, political, and social organization. (p. 32)
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geodemographic research:
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Uses census data and commercial data (such as sales data and property
records) about the population’s small districts in creating profiles of those
populations for market research. (p.7
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Geographical imagination
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The capacity to understand changing patterns, changing processes, and
changing relationships among people, places, and regions.
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Geographic information systems (GIS):
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Integrated computer tools for the handling, processing, and analyzing of
geographical data
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Global Positioning System:
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a system of satellites, which orbit the earth on
precisely predictable paths, broadcasting highly accurate time and locational
information. (p.23)
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globalization:
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the increasing interconnectedness of different
parts of the world through common processes of economic, environmental,
political, and cultural change.
(p. 10)
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