2004
DOI: 10.1111/j.1538-4632.2005.00605.x
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A Model of Contiguity for Spatial Unit Allocation

Abstract: We consider a problem of allocating spatial units (SUs) to particular uses to form ''regions'' according to specified criteria, which is here called ''spatial unit allocation.'' Contiguity-the quality of a single region being connected-is one of the most frequently required criteria for this problem. This is also one that is difficult to model in algebraic terms for algorithmic solution. The purpose of this article is to propose a new exact formulation of contiguity that can be incorporated into any mixed inte… Show more

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Cited by 146 publications
(87 citation statements)
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“…A number of spatial and thematic conditions are established for defining zones, and these may vary considerably from one field of application to the next. The main spatial constraints are integrity, compactness and contiguity, the latter being the priority criterion in zoning problems (Shirabe 2005).…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A number of spatial and thematic conditions are established for defining zones, and these may vary considerably from one field of application to the next. The main spatial constraints are integrity, compactness and contiguity, the latter being the priority criterion in zoning problems (Shirabe 2005).…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The following models have been developed within this line of research: integer linear programming (IP or ILP), which has been largely unsuccessful due to the difficulty of explicitly formalizing the contiguity constraint in algebraic terms; and mixed linear programming (MIP), which, from a computational point of view, is only efficient in problems involving sizes that are reduced, both in the number of basic units and in the number of zones to be generated. The most important MIP models are those created by Zoltners and Sinha (1983), applied to sales zone design; Cova and Church (2000) and Williams (2002), applied to land-use allocation or terrain acquisition; Shirabe (2005), used for generic zoning problems; and, finally, Solis et al (2009) and Rios-Mercado and Fernandez (2009), which is applied in designing commercial zones.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In such cases, multi-objective decision analysis (MODA) is used as the second basic technique of MCDM that generally generates optimal allocation alternatives using optimization techniques. MCDM is widely used for optimum land-use allocation in land-use planning (Bammi & Bammi, 1979;Gilbert et al, 1985;Chuvieco, 1993;Dokmeci et al, 1993;Grabaum & Meyer, 1998;Gabriel et al, 2006;Ligmann-Zielinska et al, 2008), in the determination of facility locations (Malczewski, 1991;Minor & Jacobs, 1994;Eastman et al, 1995;Maniezzo et al, 1998;Cheng et al, 2003), in land-allocation problem with a shape constraint such as compactness (Aerts & Heuvelink, 2002;Aerts et al, 2003), convexity and contiguity (Minor & Jacob, 1994;Williams, 2003;Shirabe, 2005) and environmental conflict analysis (Malczewski et al, 1997). Besides, Ogryczak (1995, 1996) discussed multiple criteria location problem with MCDA methods.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The connectivity of a network region is less developed in regionalization research but appears more often in research in transportation modeling (Li et al 2014a). Shape factors are considered extensively in the literature and are often related to a specific application setting (Shirabe 2005;Williams et al 2004). Li et al (2013) introduced the compactness measure of a shape based on the moment of inertia and presented the mathematical formalization.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%