The Dictionary of Human Geography

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complete sets of joint and marginal posterior
distributions may be constructed by thissimu-
lationmethod. Starting from the (diffuse)
prior distributions, the conditional distribu-
tions of theu-parameters are sampled using
randomsampling(hence the ‘Monte Carlo’
part of the name) and these sampleduvalues
are then brought together with the data to
estimate the likelihood. This information is
then used to update the conditional distri-
butions, and the process is repeated many
hundreds or thousands of times, gradually
building up samples representing the posterior
distribution. The sampling at any stagetis
based on updating from the conditionals at
timet1, and hence it is a (first-order)mar-
kov chain process. This remarkable method
can be developed for very complicated models
with many parameters and difficult structures,
and is being used in many disciplines. Models
in bothspatial econometrics andmulti-
level modellingmay now be estimated by
these Bayesian methods.
Bayesian methods have been applied in
several areas of geographical andspatial an-
alysis. The specific version of ‘empirical
Bayes’ estimation is widely used in spatial
interpolation and in disease mapping and spa-
tialepidemiology. Other applications include
population and economic forecasting, crime
‘hotspot’ modelling, and hierarchical Bayes
estimation to lend insight into the problem
ofecological inference. Brunsdon (2001)
provides a case-study using MCMC in a Baye-
sian model predicting school performance fig-
ures for pupil-tests. Inspatial econometrics,
Bayesian methods, both numerical integration
and MCMC, have been used to estimate
models with spatialendogeneityand more
complicated forms (Hepple, 1995; LeSage,
1997). The geographer Peter Congdon has
written two major statistical texts on Bayesian
statistical modelling (Congdon, 2001). Opin-
ions still differ about the role of subjective
prior information, but modern Bayesian
methods are one of the fastest developing
areas of quantitative analysis. lwh


Suggested reading
Withers (2002).


behavioural geography A sub-discipline
emphasizing the psychological underpinnings
of individual spatial behaviour; in particular,
the cognitive and decision-making processes
that intervene between a complex environment
and human action. In its earliest expression this
work was more humanistic, exemplified in the


historical musings of J.K. Wright in the 1940s
(Keighren, 2005), and the influential essays of
Lowenthal (1961) and Brookfield (1969) on
environmentalexperience andperception.
While this tradition led into humanistic
geography, behavioural geography was typi-
cally more formal and analytic, drawn into
thepositivistparadigm oflocational analy-
sis. Its characteristic question was: Given the
assumption of rational behaviour, why did an
actual location or pattern of spatial behaviour
depart from an optimal form? (Seelocation
theory.) The answer was seen to be a product
ofdecision-making, and notably the human
tendency to have only incomplete information,
to make imperfect choices, and to be satisfied
with sub-optimal options. Applications in-
cluded Wolpert’s (1964) study of Swedish
farmers and Pred’s (1967) analysis of indus-
trial location. In each instance, behaviour was
seen to besatisficingrather than optimizing
as predicted, for decision-makers were not
only incapable but even unwilling to com-
promise other values in order to maximize
their utility functions. Similar work examined
the journey to shop, and showed again how,
both in terms of retail location and shopping
behaviour, cognitive variables intervened to
complicate geographically rational behaviour
(seeretailing). A particular emphasis was
upon preference structures in spatial behav-
iour, modelling such topics as place utility
and residential search. The most celebrated
work was conducted by Peter Gould and his
students who examined themental maps,or
preference surfaces, within different countries
held, usually by students, and which might
permit the prediction of subsequentmigra-
tion(Gould and White, 1993 [1974]).
One of the most interesting and applied
aspects of behavioural geography was work
examining human perception ofenvironmen-
tal hazards. Typically, this research ad-
dressed itself to a seemingly anachronistic
location decision. Why did people or industry
locate in unpredictable sites such as flood-
plains or areas of earthquake or avalanche
hazard? How was such irrational behaviour to
be explained? The pioneering work by Robert
Kates and Gilbert White on floodplain hazards
inspired many subsequent studies, which
included increasing methodological sophisti-
cation. For example, Saarinen’s (1966)
innovative study of the perception of drought
hazard by farmers on the Great Plains postu-
lated the existence of a distinctive personality
disposition, which he explored using the
thematic apperception test, a personality

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BEHAVIOURAL GEOGRAPHY

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