Personal Information
Entreprise/Lieu de travail
Lexington, KY United States
Profession
Associate Professor
Secteur d’activité
Education
Site Web
www.matthew-w-wilson.com
À propos
Matthew W. Wilson, PhD, is Associate Professor of Geography at the University of Kentucky and Visiting Scholar at the Center for Geographic Analysis at Harvard University. He co-founded and co-directs the New Mappings Collaboratory which studies and facilitates new engagements with geographic representation. His research in critical GIS draws upon STS and urban political geography to understand the development and proliferation of location-based technologies, with particular attention to the consumer electronic sector. He has previously taught at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, and his current research examines mid-20th century, digital mapping practices.
Mots-clés
critical gis
geography
gis
mapping
foursquare
mobility
map
technoculture
digital geographies
design
social media
big data
community
attention
practice
mobile device
mobile computing
spatial knowledge
user-generated content
geoweb
discipline
technoscience
sts
internet
crowley
where 20
vgi
collaboration
art
participation
muncie
standardization
categorization
object
transduction
space
indicators
data
cartography
cyborg
mobile technology
city
urban
objectivity
googlemaps
neogeography
emerging media
Tout plus
Présentations
(11)Documents
(2)Personal Information
Entreprise/Lieu de travail
Lexington, KY United States
Profession
Associate Professor
Secteur d’activité
Education
Site Web
www.matthew-w-wilson.com
À propos
Matthew W. Wilson, PhD, is Associate Professor of Geography at the University of Kentucky and Visiting Scholar at the Center for Geographic Analysis at Harvard University. He co-founded and co-directs the New Mappings Collaboratory which studies and facilitates new engagements with geographic representation. His research in critical GIS draws upon STS and urban political geography to understand the development and proliferation of location-based technologies, with particular attention to the consumer electronic sector. He has previously taught at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, and his current research examines mid-20th century, digital mapping practices.
Mots-clés
critical gis
geography
gis
mapping
foursquare
mobility
map
technoculture
digital geographies
design
social media
big data
community
attention
practice
mobile device
mobile computing
spatial knowledge
user-generated content
geoweb
discipline
technoscience
sts
internet
crowley
where 20
vgi
collaboration
art
participation
muncie
standardization
categorization
object
transduction
space
indicators
data
cartography
cyborg
mobile technology
city
urban
objectivity
googlemaps
neogeography
emerging media
Tout plus