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Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography
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Page 1: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies

START 2004 Advanced InstituteIIASA, Laxenburg, Austria

Colin PolskyMay 12, 2004

Graduate School of Geography

Page 2: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

International Geographical Union (IGU) Task Force on Vulnerability

Page 3: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

I. What is spatially integrated social science?A. Qualitative dimensions

B. Quantitative dimensions

i. univariate

ii. multivariate

II. An example: Vulnerability to the Effects of Climate Change in the US Great Plains

Outline

Page 4: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 5: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Necessary and sufficient conditions to achieve objective of vulnerability studies:

• Flexible knowledge base• Multiple, interacting stresses• Prospective & historical• Place-based: local in terms of global• Explores ways to increase adaptive capacity

Source: Polsky et al., 2003

Page 6: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

What variables cluster in geographic space?

How do they cluster?

Why do they cluster?

Can you imagine any variables that are not clustered?

Page 7: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 8: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Southwark and Lambeth

Vauxhall

Cholera Deaths

1263 98

Households 40046 26107

John Snow, Cholera, & the Germ Theory of Disease

Page 9: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Source: Fotheringham, et al. (2000)

Page 10: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Criticisms of quantitative social science:

•discovering global laws•overly reductionist•place can’t matter•too deductive, sure of assumptions

Localized quantitative analysis:

•exploring local variations and global trends•holistic•place can matter•unabashedly inductive, questions assumptions

Page 11: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Source: Griffith and Layne (1999)

Page 12: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Spatial analysis (ESDA) is as valuable for hypothesis testing as for hypothesis suggesting… especially in data-sparse environments.

ESDA helps explain why similar (or dissimilar) values cluster in geographic space:

• Social interactions (neighborhood effects)• Spatial externalities• Locational invariance: situation where outcome

changes when locations of ‘objects’ change

Source: Anselin, 2004

Page 13: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

I. What is spatially integrated social science?A. Qualitative dimensions

B. Quantitative dimensions

i. univariate

ii. multivariate

II. An example: Vulnerability to the Effects of Climate Change in the US Great Plains

Outline

Page 14: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

“Steps” for Exploratory Spatial Data Analysis (ESDA):

1. Explore global/local univariate spatial effects

2. Specify & estimate a-spatial (OLS) model

3. Evaluate OLS spatial diagnostics

4. Specify & estimate spatial model(s)

5. Compare & contrast results

Page 15: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

What does spatially random mean?

Page 16: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Spatial autocorrelation:

Cov[yi,yj] 0, for neighboring i, j

or

“values depend on geographic location”

Is this a problem to be controlled & ignored

or

an opportunity to be modeled & explored?

Page 17: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Spatial regression/econometrics:

spatial autocorrelation reflects process through regression mis-specification

The “many faces” of spatial autocorrelation:

map pattern, information content, spillover effect, nuisance, missing variable surrogate, diagnostic, …

Page 18: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Univariate spatial statistics

Page 19: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Source: Munroe, 2004

Spatial Weights Matrices &Spatially Lagged Variables

Page 20: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Moran’s I statistic

Page 21: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Local Moran’s I statistic

Page 22: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 23: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Multivariate spatial statistics

Page 24: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

What you know, and what you don’t know…

y = X +

What you know

What you don’t know

Page 25: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

OLS assumptions:

• Var(ei) = 0

• no residual spatial/temporal autocorrelation

• errors are normally distributed• no measurement error• linear in parameters• no perfect multicollinearity

• E(ei) = 0

Page 26: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Ignoring residual spatial autocorrelation in regression may lead to:

• Biased parameter estimates

• Inefficient parameter estimates

• Biased standard error estimates

• Limited insight into process spatiality

Page 27: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

bias versus inefficiency

Source: Kennedy (1998)

Page 28: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Alternative hypothesis: there are significant spatial effects

Large-scale:• spatial heterogeneity

Small-scale:• spatial dependence

Null hypothesis: no spatial effects, i.e., y = X + works just fine

y = X + W +

y = Wy + X +

y = X + i , i=0,1

y = Xii + i , i=0,1

Page 29: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Large-scale:• spatial heterogeneity – dissimilar values clustereddiscrete groups or regions, widely varying size of observation units

Small-scale:• spatial dependence – similar values clustered“nuisance” = external to y~x relationship, e.g., one-time flood reduces crop yield, sampling error

“substantive” = internal to y~x relationship,e.g., innovation diffusion, “bandwagon” effect

Page 30: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

substantived iffus io n

biased p.e.'sincons is ten t p.e.'s

nuisanceig n o red fac to rsinef f ic ien t p.e.'sbiased s .e.e.'s

dependence

groupw ise he te r 'yreg io n a l varian ces

inef f ic ien t p.e.'s

spatia l regim esreg io n a l e ffec tsinef f ic ien t p.e.'s

heterogene ity

la te ra l

nes ted assoc ia tionssca la r varia tio n s

inef f ic ien t p.e.'sbiased s .e.e.'s

hierarchica l

SPA T IA L E F F EC T S

Which Alternative Hypothesis?

observationally equivalent

Page 31: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

I. What is spatially integrated social science?A. Qualitative dimensions

B. Quantitative dimensions

i. univariate

ii. multivariate

II. An example: Vulnerability to the Effects of Climate Change in the US Great Plains

Outline

Page 32: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

“Economic Scene:A Study Says Global Warming May Help U.S. Agriculture”

8 September 1994

Page 33: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Agricultural land value = f (climatic, edaphic, social, economic)

Ricardian Climate Change Impacts Model

Page 34: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Source: Mendelsohn, et al. (1994:768)

Climate Change Impacts: Agricultural Land Values

Page 35: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

The US Great Plains

Page 36: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Great Plains wheat yields & seeded land abandoned: 1925-91

Source: Peterson & Cole, 1995:340

Page 37: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 38: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Source: Polsky (2004)

Page 39: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

1992 AG LAND VALUE78 - 195197 - 290291 - 369370 - 503504 - 2417

States.shpddd

dddd

Land Value, 1992

Random?

Page 40: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Local Moran’s I Statistics, 1969-92

Page 41: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 42: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 43: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 44: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 45: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 46: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

spatial lag/GHET model:

y = Wy + X + i , i=0,1

Page 47: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

Source: Polsky (2004)

Page 48: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.
Page 49: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

% chg $/acre, 1982-36 - -3-3 - 11 - 55 - 88 - 19

% chg $/acre, 1974-38 - -5-5 - 33 - 88 - 1414 - 47

Space, Time & Scale: Climate Change Impacts on Agriculture

Source: Polsky, 2004

% chg $/acre, 1974-38 - -5-5 - 33 - 88 - 1414 - 47

% chg $/acre, 1982-36 - -3-3 - 11 - 55 - 88 - 19

Page 50: Spatial Analysis & Vulnerability Studies START 2004 Advanced Institute IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria Colin Polsky May 12, 2004 Graduate School of Geography.

end


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