Title: The Three Things in Life?
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2The Three Things in Life?
3Expertise in Geography What Is It?
Roger M. Downs June 6, 2012
4An expert is a man who has made all of the
mistakes, which can be made, in a very narrow
field. Neils Bohr
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11The Nature of Expertise
--experts not special people
12The Nature of Expertise
--experts not special people --lengthy
experience deliberate practice
13The Nature of Expertise
--experts not special people --lengthy
experience deliberate practice --naïve-expert
continuum
14The Nature of Expertise
--experts not special people --lengthy
experience deliberate practice --naïve-expert
continuum --knowledge differs in breadth depth
underlying patterns principles
15The Nature of Expertise
--experts not special people --lengthy
experience deliberate practice --naïve-expert
continuum --knowledge differs in breadth depth
underlying patterns principles --problem
solving strategies differ in speed, flexibility,
accuracy
16The Nature of Expertise
--experts not special people --lengthy
experience deliberate practice --naïve-expert
continuum --knowledge differs in breadth depth
underlying patterns principles --problem
solving strategies differ in speed, flexibility,
accuracy --domain specific
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19William Bunge Theoretical Geography (1962)
20Antecedents in Cognitive Science
- F. C. Bartlett memory problem solving
21F. C. Bartletts Sectional Maps (1932)
22You set out from the point marked S and your aim
is to get to a spot somewhere to the N.W. Choose
which road to start on, and when you have got as
far as you can on this plan you will be given
another sectional map, and so on until you get to
the final map on which the place you want to
reach will be marked O. At any stage you can, if
you wish, go back to the starting point or to
some position short of the starting-point.
23Antecedents in Cognitive Science
- F. C. Bartlett memory problem solving
- Alan Lesgold expertise medical imaging
24Alan Lesgold
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26Antecedents in Cognitive Science
- F. C. Bartlett memory problem solving
- Alan Lesgold expertise medical imaging
- Alan Newell problem solving (Tower of Hanoi
problem)
27Alan Newell the Tower of Hanoi Problem
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29Antecedents in Geography
- Armin Lobeck what maps dont tell us
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31Antecedents in Geography
- Armin Lobeck what maps dont tell us
- Walter Christaller how I discovered central
place theory
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33Antecedents in Geography
- Armin Lobeck what maps dont tell us
- Walter Christaller how I discovered central
place theory - Brian Harley the silences of maps
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37Jeremy Anderson
38Railway Line
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41Road
42Road
43Kink in the Road
--if unique therefore not repeated, then road
continues in straight line
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45Kink in the Road
--if unique therefore not repeated, then road
continues in straight line --if recurring
therefore repeated property of space, then road
will not continue in straight line
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49River
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55tt
t
Bunges Actual and Predicted Map
56Villages
57Villages
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59Town
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63Types of Inferences Levels of Expertise
- 1. rail line relatively simple
641
65Types of Inferences Levels of Expertise
- 1. rail line relatively simple
- 2. kink in road more challenging because of
multiple possibilities
662
2
2
67Types of Inferences Levels of Expertise
- 1. rail line relatively simple
- 2. kink in road more challenging because of
multiple possibilities - 3. stream system stream order topography
knowledge of theory of fluvial processes
683
69Types of Inferences Levels of Expertise
- 1. rail line relatively simple
- 2. kink in road more challenging because
multiple possibilities - 3.stream system stream order topography
knowledge of theory of fluvial processes - 4. villages lattices knowledge of central place
theory
704
71Geographic Completion Strategies
--Decompose into functional elements
72Geographic Completion Strategies
--Decompose into functional elements --Look for
patterns in elements
73Geographic Completion Strategies
--Decompose into functional elements --Look for
patterns in elements --Look for exceptions
deviations
74Geographic Completion Strategies
--Decompose into functional elements --Look for
patterns in elements --Look for exceptions
deviations --Extrapolate interpolate pattern
elements
75Geographic Completion Strategies
--Decompose into functional elements --Look for
patterns in elements --Look for exceptions
deviations --Extrapolate interpolate pattern
elements --Look for connections among patterns
76Geographic Completion Strategies
--Decompose into functional elements --Look for
patterns in elements --Look for exceptions
deviations --Extrapolate interpolate pattern
elements --Look for connections among
patterns --Modify patterns expectations, what
makes sense, aesthetics
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78Because of its unique propertiesparticularly its
rating scale and method of recording gameschess
offers cognitive psychologists an ideal task
environment in which to study skilled
performance. It has been called a Drosophila, or
fruit fly, for cognitive psychology Neil
Charness 1991
79 Geodrosophila
80Characteristics of Tasks
--ecologically valid rich, challenging,
interesting
81Characteristics of Tasks
--ecologically valid rich, challenging,
interesting --meaningful to accessible by
people with varying levels of expertise
82Characteristics of Tasks
--ecologically valid rich, challenging,
interesting --meaningful to accessible by
people with varying levels of expertise
--amenable to use of thinking aloud protocols
83Candidates for Tasks
--cartography identifying types of map
projections
84Candidates for Tasks
--cartography identifying types of map
projections --physical human geography
reading landscapes
85Candidates for Tasks
--cartography identifying types of map
projections --physical human geography
reading landscapes --geomorphology linking maps
cross sections
86Candidates for Tasks
--cartography identifying types of map
projections --physical human geography
reading landscapes --geomorphology linking maps
cross sections -- GIS Where is Waldo?
87The Bottom Line
In order to understand the nature, development ,
fostering of geographic expertise, we need a
set of geographic Drosophila.
88Expertise as the Missing Piece
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92An expert is someone who knows some of the worst
mistakes that can be made in his subject and who
manages to avoid them. Werner Heisenberg
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